keflaman
Well-known member
Sorry to hear the sad news and I know how much your heart is hurting right now. If it helps to know, I gave my dogs super long hugs tonight and a tiny slice of leftover sausage in memory of Nikki.
By far the hardest choice I have had to make. The vet said he had cancer and might only live another 2-3 weeks. It was beyond crying, I couldn't even make words come out.
He ate the best steak meal money could buy that night while I ate nothing.
Kevin - SORRY to hear that. Mrs E-tek was just saying that she had a Collie names Brandi growing up and now we have a Golden names Nikki! Maybe we're living a mirrored life!!
My 13 year Old Senna just died this year too. He was the best dog I ever had. I always hoped he would live long enough to teach our next dog a thing or two....
On a strange note - what's with the cat in that one picture....doesn't look too good. Just the picture I hope![]()

A couple years ago I had to have my Beagle Squirt put down - incredibly hard ;-( A couple months later we ended up with a Beagle mix puppy. My wife wasn't ready for a "replacement" , but I insisted as our remaining Beagle Rascal was so depressed I couldn't stand to see her mope around. So Peanut came into our lives and after the first vet visit left us shook up quite a bit - as fate would have it our new puppy had a LARGE hole in her heart and would not survive a year without surgury. Some people thought we were nuts spending the money (money we didn't have BTW) on something so frivalous as a "silly" animal. SO many asked us why we didn't take her back. I told them she wasn't a lamp with a crack in it - she was into the "fold" the first day she got here. It is those people I feel sorry for - for they have truely missed something very special in this life. Peanut is going on 2 years old now - smartest dog we've ever had and has amazingly breathed new life into our other 13 y/o beagle. Saving her was the best money I've spent in as long as I can remember. Somehow I think she knows - her behavior is amazing to say the least.
I hope you can move past this with as little pain as possible, but I realize that that is easier said than done. Never gets easier, but if it did that probably wouldn't be a good thing either. Hang on to those good memories - let them fill your mind.
A couple years ago I had to have my Beagle Squirt put down - incredibly hard ;-( A couple months later we ended up with a Beagle mix puppy. My wife wasn't ready for a "replacement" , but I insisted as our remaining Beagle Rascal was so depressed I couldn't stand to see her mope around. So Peanut came into our lives and after the first vet visit left us shook up quite a bit - as fate would have it our new puppy had a LARGE hole in her heart and would not survive a year without surgury. Some people thought we were nuts spending the money (money we didn't have BTW) on something so frivalous as a "silly" animal. SO many asked us why we didn't take her back. I told them she wasn't a lamp with a crack in it - she was into the "fold" the first day she got here. It is those people I feel sorry for - for they have truely missed something very special in this life. Peanut is going on 2 years old now - smartest dog we've ever had and has amazingly breathed new life into our other 13 y/o beagle. Saving her was the best money I've spent in as long as I can remember. Somehow I think she knows - her behavior is amazing to say the least.
I hope you can move past this with as little pain as possible, but I realize that that is easier said than done. Never gets easier, but if it did that probably wouldn't be a good thing either. Hang on to those good memories - let them fill your mind.
With Brandi, it will now be easier to take her with us different places if just to take a ride or take a walk. But when we do get another, I am fairly certain it will be a shelter dog. They deserve a chance to have a good home, even if only for a few years..
Let me ask this of others that have lost their beloved pets........what have you done with their remains? Do you bring them home to bury them, or let the vet take care of things?
