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Last April I had to make the very hard decision to let my Black Lab go just one month shy of his 15th birthday.  Losing him really tore me up, and for the past year, my daughter and fellow Packer fan has been lobbying for another dog, even giving me a Packer dog tag for Christmas, with "Jordy" engraved on the front - he's long been her favorite Packer.  Unfortunately, the real Jordy left GB, but as of last week, I have another Jordy romping around the house.  I'd forgotten how much work puppies are, but I am really happy that we have a dog in the family again.

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RochNyFan posted:

Last April I had to make the very hard decision to let my Black Lab go just one month shy of his 15th birthday.  Losing him really tore me up, and for the past year, my daughter and fellow Packer fan has been lobbying for another dog, even giving me a Packer dog tag for Christmas, with "Jordy" engraved on the front - he's long been her favorite Packer.  Unfortunately, the real Jordy left GB, but as of last week, I have another Jordy romping around the house.  I'd forgotten how much work puppies are, but I am really happy that we have a dog in the family again.

Glad you decided to adopt another one. I've lost 4 dogs over the last 9 years, and I can't imagine life without one. I'm a Basset Hound guy myself, and I currently have 2: 1 is a Basset/English Pointer mix, and the other is a 3 year old special needs Basset that I adopted from Belly Rubs Basset Rescue in Tennessee.

MNPackman posted:
RochNyFan posted:

Last April I had to make the very hard decision to let my Black Lab go just one month shy of his 15th birthday.  Losing him really tore me up, and for the past year, my daughter and fellow Packer fan has been lobbying for another dog, even giving me a Packer dog tag for Christmas, with "Jordy" engraved on the front - he's long been her favorite Packer.  Unfortunately, the real Jordy left GB, but as of last week, I have another Jordy romping around the house.  I'd forgotten how much work puppies are, but I am really happy that we have a dog in the family again.

Glad you decided to adopt another one. I've lost 4 dogs over the last 9 years, and I can't imagine life without one. I'm a Basset Hound guy myself, and I currently have 2: 1 is a Basset/English Pointer mix, and the other is a 3 year old special needs Basset that I adopted from Belly Rubs Basset Rescue in Tennessee.

One of my neighbors is out walking his Basset every day.  His ears crack me up!  Can't imagine losing four dogs in such a short span...just losing my last one almost made me never want a dog again for fear of going through that again.  But the love and laughter they bring you makes it all worth it.  Good luck with your pups.

 

Some of you may remember my "Packer Pup" Bud - 140 pound 1/2 Rottweiler from about 15 years ago. Personality plus. He would calmly wear a "Bears Still Suck" cap on his head and a little cheese wedge on his nose. Still miss him.

Bud

Allie was in between and now we have Maggie. Hubby picked her up from someone near La Crosse about 3 years ago. We didn't know it at the time but she was our "rescue." You can't see the brindling on her very well but it's getting more pronounced (she's about 5-1/2 now.) So by checking dog books, I think she's part Tennessee Treeing Hound and probably black lab. One fantastic nose. (But gun shy.) Because of some of her issues, she will always be an outside dog but she's come a long way. What we are guessing, because of what she's shown fear, that she was beat the crap out of by some big guy in camo.  She's happy with us.

Maggie

I find that after we lose a dog, I can last about 3-4 months and then I'm "We need a dog."

Don't get me going on horses, LOL!

 

RochNyFan posted:

Last April I had to make the very hard decision to let my Black Lab go just one month shy of his 15th birthday.  Losing him really tore me up, and for the past year, my daughter and fellow Packer fan has been lobbying for another dog, even giving me a Packer dog tag for Christmas, with "Jordy" engraved on the front - he's long been her favorite Packer.  Unfortunately, the real Jordy left GB, but as of last week, I have another Jordy romping around the house.  I'd forgotten how much work puppies are, but I am really happy that we have a dog in the family again.

Sooo cuuute!

You love 'em to death...and they die and break your heart.

Lizzie (left) dropped dead of heart failure 2 years ago and I still cry when I think of her....Tyson is on his last legs...could be any week or month now...I'll cry again. 

I've cried 4 times in 20 years and all 4 times it was over dogs.IMG_0244

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Blair Kiel posted:

You love 'em to death...and they die and break your heart.

Lizzie (left) dropped dead of heart failure 2 years ago and I still cry when I think of her....Tyson is on his last legs...could be any week or month now...I'll cry again. 

I've cried 4 times in 20 years and all 4 times it was over dogs.IMG_0244

I hear you.  I dislocated and fractured both elbows in a second story fall from a ladder, and dislocated both shoulders in a skiing mishap and both times never shed a tear.  When my black lab was in his last week, I got weepy each time I walked him, knowing our time was coming to an end.  The last two days before putting him down, I openly cried in front of neighbors who stopped to pet him on our walks.  The biggest reason I considered not getting another dog was thinking of the time I would have to go through that again.

Lost our 14-year-old Golden Retriever named Jack when he had a stroke on Thanksgiving Day with the family at our house (I hate that holiday). First time ever I had to take a dog in to put it down. He licked my arm, snuggled up to it and I held him as the drugs took hold. When I came home, my German Shepherd Zeke smelled the shirt and just whimpered. He knew his brother was gone. 

One more story. Near the end he struggled with arthritis, and one Sunday afternoon he wouldn't get out of his house to go on a walk with Zeke. A couple days later when I got home from school after a long day--about 7 p.m.--he was dancing around near the back door, trying to tell me he was ready for the walk. I was just too wiped from a day of dealing with teens. A month later he was gone.

Ouch.

When we'd separate our dogs, even for a minute, they'd cry for each other.

When Lizzie went into cardiac arrest at the vet, we had Tyson with us (in other room with our daughter) She died on the table. We brought Tyson into the room to see her. He sniffed her.

We went home and he knew she was gone. Best thing we ever did was to let him see her after she'd passed. He knew she was gone.

Last edited by Blair Kiel

Our last mini Aussie was IMO the best dog ever....loved to chase and retrieve.  5 years ago on New Year's Day we took her for a run in the woods.  I threw a stick off the trail and she ran pell mell after it, jumped over a log and while coming down she impaled herself on a ponderosa pine stick which was buried in the ground.  The impact shoved the stick into her, collapsing her lung.  I was perhaps 20 feet away and I could hear the whoosh as the air left her lung.  She was a gamer and held on till we could get her to a holiday emergency vet.  They determined there was no hope. I held her till she was gone.

My wife and I and our grandkids still get choked up when we think of her.  We now have her great niece.  Also a great dog.

RIP Ruby.

Last edited by Pikes Peak

Good job Blair. As Jack struggled to stand after the stroke, Zeke was flipping out, and I just couldn't get him into the car to take him with Jack. 

Blair Kiel posted:

Ouch.

When we'd separate our dogs, even for a minute, they'd cry for each other.

When Lizzie went into cardiac arrest at the vet, we had Tyson with us (in other room with our daughter) She died on the table. We brought Tyson into the room to see her. He sniffed her.

We went home and he knew she was gone. Best thing we ever did was to let him see her after she'd passed. He knew she was gone.

Pikes Peak posted:

Our last mini Aussie was IMO the best dog ever....loved to chase and retrieve.  5 years ago on New Year's Day we took her for a run in the woods.  I threw a stick off the trail and she ran pell mell after it, jumped over a log and while coming down she impaled herself on a ponderosa pine stick which was buried in the ground.  The impact shoved the stick into her, collapsing her lung.  I was perhaps 20 feet away and I could hear the whoosh as the air left her lung.  She was a gamer and held on till we could get her to a holiday emergency vet.  They determined there was no hope. I held her till she was gone.

My wife and I and our grandkids still get choked up when we think of her.  We now have her great niece.  Also a great dog.

RIP Ruby.

Omg.....this is so incredibly sad.  Glad to hear you have another from her bloodlines.

RochNyFan posted:
Pakrz posted:

They get bigger.... ha!

Jax is a 2 year old English Lab and 96 pounds. 

Holy cow, he's a big boy!  How easy was he with training?  Any chewing problems?

No chewing problems at all.  Training was relatively easy but he listens to me far better than he does the wife.  

We have an underground fence that he strictly adheres to.... it's funny watching him freak people out though.  He loves people and charges towards the sidewalk like a raging bull... only to come to a screeching halt a few inches from the line of death.  Most are used to it by now.  

YATittle posted:

Lost our 14-year-old Golden Retriever named Jack when he had a stroke on Thanksgiving Day with the family at our house (I hate that holiday). First time ever I had to take a dog in to put it down. He licked my arm, snuggled up to it and I held him as the drugs took hold. When I came home, my German Shepherd Zeke smelled the shirt and just whimpered. He knew his brother was gone. 

I'm getting weepy reading these stories, thanks everyone   

When I was in Korea, I picked up a street dog and adopted her.  The army let me take her back to the states when my Korean tour was up.  We had her for 14 years and finally had to put her down. I cried as I dug a hole for her when we got back from the vet.  Like others, I was hesitant about getting another one, but finally did a year later.  Now, we have 3 dogs, including a Shiloh Shepherd whose on her last legs, and I'm dreading the near future with her.  Dogs are the best, though, and the time we spend with them is worth the grief we suffer when they're gone.

My first dog that I had I got in 1998 from the human society.  He was a half german shepherd and half border collie and he was by far the smartest dog I have ever been around.  We had a tradition for Packers games that he would get a beer before the game (yep I know that is supposed to be bad for dogs but he LOVED it)

One morning before work in 2013 I found him at the bottom of my stairs and he couldn't move.  The day before I had played my last game of Frisbee catch with him and the next day he had what the vet thought was a stroke or cancer that had paralyzed him suddenly.  So in a few short hours I went from one more game of fetch to putting him down.  The saddest thing of it all was my other dog as we are leaving the house sniffing him like he was saying goodbye and was crying when we left the house.

Dang I hate this thread

Blair Kiel posted:

Ouch.

When we'd separate our dogs, even for a minute, they'd cry for each other.

When Lizzie went into cardiac arrest at the vet, we had Tyson with us (in other room with our daughter) She died on the table. We brought Tyson into the room to see her. He sniffed her.

We went home and he knew she was gone. Best thing we ever did was to let him see her after she'd passed. He knew she was gone.

I will definitely remember that when one of our dogs goes.

Blair Kiel posted:

 We brought Tyson into the room to see her. He sniffed her.

We went home and he knew she was gone. Best thing we ever did was to let him see her after she'd passed. He knew she was gone.

Horses too. I did this when my oldest horse passed. Well, I didn't - hubby did because I was sobbing too hard. He took Ginger over so she knew Count was "gone."

Just got word from a friend that they had to put down their 15 year old beagle.  Elmer was almost more human than dog. I'm not kidding. When they would travel up North,  Elmer would be sound asleep in the back seat. But as soon as they turned onto U S 10 at Elsworth Elmer would be up bouncing around knowing he was getting fresh cheese curds. 

RochNyFan posted:
MNPackman posted:
RochNyFan posted:

Last April I had to make the very hard decision to let my Black Lab go just one month shy of his 15th birthday.  Losing him really tore me up, and for the past year, my daughter and fellow Packer fan has been lobbying for another dog, even giving me a Packer dog tag for Christmas, with "Jordy" engraved on the front - he's long been her favorite Packer.  Unfortunately, the real Jordy left GB, but as of last week, I have another Jordy romping around the house.  I'd forgotten how much work puppies are, but I am really happy that we have a dog in the family again.

Glad you decided to adopt another one. I've lost 4 dogs over the last 9 years, and I can't imagine life without one. I'm a Basset Hound guy myself, and I currently have 2: 1 is a Basset/English Pointer mix, and the other is a 3 year old special needs Basset that I adopted from Belly Rubs Basset Rescue in Tennessee.

One of my neighbors is out walking his Basset every day.  His ears crack me up!  Can't imagine losing four dogs in such a short span...just losing my last one almost made me never want a dog again for fear of going through that again.  But the love and laughter they bring you makes it all worth it.  Good luck with your pups.

 

Thanks bud! Things are going well. Here's a picture of the 2 of them:

Clara is the Basset/English Pointer(the white one). She lost her left eye when she was a young pup (before I had her), due to her chewing on a live electrical wire.

Jesse, (the brown one) I brought home on May 5th from a Tennessee rescue. He's had a rough start to his life: He's been shot (still has some BB's in him), and has some other injury, maybe hit by a car, which dislocated one of his pelvic bones, and it did not heal properly. As a result of this he has nerve damage on his backend, and leaks pee and poop, but I can deal with that, and I'm going to work with him to manage it.

 

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MNPackman posted:
RochNyFan posted:
MNPackman posted:
RochNyFan posted:

Last April I had to make the very hard decision to let my Black Lab go just one month shy of his 15th birthday.  Losing him really tore me up, and for the past year, my daughter and fellow Packer fan has been lobbying for another dog, even giving me a Packer dog tag for Christmas, with "Jordy" engraved on the front - he's long been her favorite Packer.  Unfortunately, the real Jordy left GB, but as of last week, I have another Jordy romping around the house.  I'd forgotten how much work puppies are, but I am really happy that we have a dog in the family again.

Glad you decided to adopt another one. I've lost 4 dogs over the last 9 years, and I can't imagine life without one. I'm a Basset Hound guy myself, and I currently have 2: 1 is a Basset/English Pointer mix, and the other is a 3 year old special needs Basset that I adopted from Belly Rubs Basset Rescue in Tennessee.

One of my neighbors is out walking his Basset every day.  His ears crack me up!  Can't imagine losing four dogs in such a short span...just losing my last one almost made me never want a dog again for fear of going through that again.  But the love and laughter they bring you makes it all worth it.  Good luck with your pups.

 

Thanks bud! Things are going well. Here's a picture of the 2 of them:

Clara is the Basset/English Pointer(the white one). She lost her left eye when she was a young pup (before I had her), due to her chewing on a live electrical wire.

Jesse, (the brown one) I brought home on May 5th from a Tennessee rescue. He's had a rough start to his life: He's been shot (still has some BB's in him), and has some other injury, maybe hit by a car, which dislocated one of his pelvic bones, and it did not heal properly. As a result of this he has nerve damage on his backend, and leaks pee and poop, but I can deal with that, and I'm going to work with him to manage it.

 

Ditto what BK said.  Those are two lucky pups.

I became highly attached to dogs as a young boy.  To be frank, there wasn't a whole lot of love coming my way from people.  But, I sure got it from the doggies.  I have been taking dogs for runs since I was 10 or 11 years old.

Brighty (first family dog, a female Weimaraner).

Bruiser and Browny Boots half Weimaraner.  Brighty accidentally got pregnant and my folks kept Browny and Bruiser.

Misty (Weimaraner) and Rascal (German Short Haired Pointer).  These were my mom's.

Max (German Short Haired Pointer and my first dog).

Tyler, my Chocolate Lab.

Rufus - don't know what he was!

Now I have Sandy, a German Short Haired.  Adopted her at 4.  Don't know what I would do without her.  She is 10 now and she has begun to show her age.

Such wonderful creatures.  So wonderful to have them around, but so painful to see them go.

We will all be reunited.

We have two pugs.  Two sisters we got from a rescue in Kansas.   They were abused and likely used to breed for puppy mills.  Just goes to show some real evil and bad people do exist in this world. 

We got them after we had to put down our other two dogs three years ago.  One of them had cancer and the other one was blind and dead and totally dependent on her.  It was a brutal experience as we had both of them for 13 years and they were such a fixture and presence for our family and daughters growing up. 

I’m not an emotional dude but you do get attached to those critters and it’s sad when they go. 

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