Good to see you here, Dan!
I'm still impressed you did that - and you survived!How did you move your crew all that distance?![]()
Good to see you here, Dan!
I'm still impressed you did that - and you survived!How did you move your crew all that distance?![]()
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"I don't know which weapons will be used in the third World war, but in the fourth, it will be sticks and stones" --- Albert Einstein.
Hi Dan (big waves). Great to see you back - sure miss your stories! As a teacher??? - my guess would be English lit maybe???? I was surprised to hear that you changed professions - and moved too. That must have been quite a feat, as I have a time handling 2 little fuzzbuttz just to go 7 miles or so to the vet!!!
Hope you're doing well health-wise too, as I remember you had some rather serious issues a few years ago. Hope you can find the time to drop in here once in a while.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Wolfy ~ Fuzzbutt #3My little dog ~ a heartbeatat my feet
Sparky the Fuzzbutt - PT's DOTD 8/3/2010
RIP 2/28/1999~10/9/2012Myndi the Fuzzbutt - Mom's DOTD - Everyday
RIP 1/24/1996~8/9/2013
Ellie - Mom to the Fuzzbuttz
To everything there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven.
Ecclesiastes 3:1The clock of life is wound but once and no man has the power
To know just when the hands will stop - on what day, or what hour.
Now is the only time you have, so live it with a will -
Don't wait until tomorrow - the hands may then be still.
~~~~true author unknown~~~~
Visited your web site. Each pet cat or dog is special in your eyes. Thank you for taking them in & caring for & loving them.![]()
Computer programming was fun and paid well; alas, it is a young man's game, and the heart attack I had in 2008 has forced me to back up. You'd think that teaching teenage miscreants would not be a step back but a step up, but truth be told, teaching is the best gig there is. I teach everybody's favorite subject, of course: math!
Everyone in my new town (population less than 500) knows who I am and what I did in moving my crew. For some reason no one has yet told me that I am crazy or a lunatic or anything like that. I moved here without having any idea where I would be staying or living. I knew that was a very chancy move (where do you find lodging for a crew the size of mine on such short notice?), but things worked out. I believe in miracles, and a lot of good luck and hard luck stories. If I was famous my story would be a good one to tell, but then again, who wants to know really how I pulled it off -- transporting that many dogs and cats in one move across two states? I did have the assistance of a good friend, Cliff, without whom I could not have pulled it off.
So did one of you take the cats & the other the dogs? I bet they all were in some kind of pet carriers. Maybe a pick up truck with a topper? Just guessing. You probably drove them in the cool of the night? Doing some more guessing.![]()
Good to hear from you Willow. Best of luck at your new Willow Oak!![]()
Forever in my heart...
Casey.Ginger.Corey.Mandy.Sassy
Lacey.Angel.Missy.Jake.Layla
Sorry for the late reply. I'm almost finished your web site. Some of it brought me to tears. I don't know how you do it, but you're astounding. I always call myself an ultimate dog lover, but I'm a gnat in your kingdom.
You never cease to amaze me. Thank you so much.
I've been Boooo'd!
No way. Some people cannot handle as many animals as I do. If all you are capable of effectively handling are one or two, then you are doing as much as I am. There are thousands of people who go out of their way to help others -- even much more than I. I wish I could take in homeless children, but living alone and being a single male certainly precludes that possibility. Thankfully there are those out there who do take in the unwanted human variety of animal. If everyone who is seeking a canine or feline pet would adopt from an animal shelter instead of buying from a puppy mill, there would still be hundreds of thousands of animals to be cared for.
Regarding the move, my friend Cliff was indispensable in our safe arrival to our new destination. We had a pickup truck and a 20-foot trailer and a car. I hauled my belongings in the car along with the two small dogs and one cat. The other cats we carried in the bed of the truck -- safely ensconced in carriers and one of those dog-training kennels -- all covered by a tarp to keep out the sun and wind. I constructed one large kennel on the 20-foot trailer out of 2" x 4" lumber, covered that with a tarp, and put the larger dogs in that.
Cliff and I started out before day break, and drove straight through. We managed to drive all day without incident, when within about an hour of our destination we threw a bearing on the trailer. After inspecting the wheel we decided to take a chance and proceed. About 30 minutes later the back right tire of the truck blew out! Fortunately everything held together, and we were able to change the tire and proceed.
We arrived safely (in the meantime I had managed to find some poor sap who agreed to let me rent his mobile home, knowing about my entourage) late into the night. Before going to bed I constructed a "fenced-in" area using the three dog kennels I had carried with me, and put the dogs there. I placed the cats in the bathroom, which thankfully was quite large. After seeing everyone safely put away and comfortable, with food and water, and cat litter, and with the sun peeping over the horizon, I put myself to bed.
After a day's rest, Cliff decided to return home. Within 30 minutes of his departure he called me to say that he while was in town gassing up he noticed something odd about the trailer. The wheel in which we had blown a bearing was missing! Somewhere between me and him the wheel had come off! What a close shave! If that wheel had come off with those dogs on it, the trailer would most likely have gone off the road or flipped. I still tremble at the thought.
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