Saturday, December 03, 2005
This is what happens to many factory-farmed production layers. They are debeaked so they can be kept in very close quarters, bunched up in tiny cages, and not peck each other (which they'd be likely to do out of frustration and overcrowding). A debeaked bird has an awfully hard time eating.
This hen is lucky - she fell out of one of those giant poultry trucks we've all seen on the highways and was rescued by a kind passerby.
Support healthy, sustainable, free-range farming - buy organic!
Monday, August 15, 2005
Saturday, July 16, 2005
Go! Go! Go! Jeff's a Montana boy and a dog lover....nuff said.
HT BB.
Jeff's dog, Ruby, died at age 13 in 2004...here's her obituary:
"Ruby, 13, beloved dog dies. She could eat anything. Known as much for her ability to eat virtually any matter as she was for her charm and personality. Ruby entered the afterlife with a head full of memories from her charmed life. Ruby and her constant companion (by whom she is survived) spent the majority of her years in the great state of Montana, where Ruby rubbed shoulders with members of the rock band Pearl Jam. She also managed to dig out some chocolate bars from the luggage of the bassist of the aforementioned rock band...on more than one occasion. She will also be remembered for devouring an entire steak that was cooked by none other than the famous grillmeister Mr. Mike Watt. An attendee of that particular soiree was unfortunate enough to place his steak in the near proximity of Ms. Ruby while taking a croquet shot.
She was a dedicated and loyal friend for her long life, and she will be missed by many. Loving monuments have been created in the companion's home. Donations may be made to the charity of your choice."
Tuesday, July 05, 2005
Thank God, because I love my truck!!
Now if it could just help with my gas bill...
Friday, July 01, 2005
Ever since she moved there, she's been saying to me that as soon as I saw it I'd want to move there too. She was right. I'm sure my boys (Athos left, Intrepid right)
would think it was just dandy to move up to Gold Country. Along with the rest of my critters. True, they have it pretty darn good right here at home, but it just seems better up there. I want to go.
Friday, May 27, 2005
It was a Thursday. Should have been like any Thursday, except my cat was dying. I had known since the day before that OJ didn’t have long. So it was earth day 2003 and I had to let my sweet girl go. The sun came out and she got to sit in the sun. She died in my lap, in the sun, with nothing but love surrounding her.
Then it was a Sunday, almost two years later. But five days before, the shock I felt when I came into my parents’ house and saw her lying in a huddled ball on the rug was beyond explanation. I reacted as a tech and immediately began administering fluids subcutaneously, then realized she needed more. I called my friend at emergency and off we went.
My parents didn’t understand the gravity of Spider’s condition. I felt horrible that I had let her stay with my parents. I know she was happier there, she didn’t want to live with all the animals here, but still, at that moment, and always, I knew that if she had been with me all along I would have noticed her sickness long before my parents did. I wish I had known.
I fought for her life for five days and then on Sunday she told me that she was done. I wished I could have realized it or heard her sooner -- she had lived a long and wonderful life – 19 years – but I was so caught up in feeling guilty that I didn’t want to see how sick she was and I felt compelled to try and get her back. She had been telling me, in her own way, that she was ready to go, but I couldn’t hear her over my own feelings of guilt and obligation. Finally, thankfully, I realized my girl didn’t want to come back, couldn’t come back, that she wanted to go, that she was ready. So I helped her go…she was Spider. She was one in a million. Spider Elliott.
Then another Thursday came. After years of worrying about various dogs with various conditions, suddenly Peanut was dying. It was something I was so unprepared for it was shocking. I knew she was sick. I had known that she had cancer since the end of January but she was doing so well I guess I was just hoping she’d live forever. She was 15 years old. She was my first dog and my best friend. My best little girl. She endured my bringing home many puppies, many kittens and many boyfriends and never failed to tell me what she thought about all of it…but she tolerated it nonetheless. What a good friend she was.
She died on Thursday May 5 just around noon. It was a cloudy day which I found very disturbing, because I think death is better suited for sunny days. But the sun came out just after she died, which Jerry pointed out. I noticed too.
So here I sit and sob and cry because I miss my Peanuttier so much. It’s such a hurt in my heart, a hole in my heart, not to have my Nutty here, not to ever hear her bark or see her face again. She is such a part of me I feel like something is missing now. I took her to be cremated and it was not so bad at the moment but looking back it was terrible. I had to leave her, the last time I would ever see my Peanut. The last time. Ever. I would ever see her. Ever. I just wish I could see her one more time.
I have her ashes back now, in a little cedar box. I can’t believe my Peanut is in that box, but I hope her spirit is surrounding me. Looking at the box that contains her ashes makes me very sad. Yet I look at it often.
Peanut marched into my life when I was 20 -- a fat little tan and white puppy with a black nose and a big attitude. Right around the time Intrepid, my horse, was born…his 15th birthday is tomorrow. It’s hard not to think about these landmarks after such a loss. Losing Peanut. Sounds silly because she had a silly name perhaps, but it fit her. She wasn’t silly, she was just The Nut. Nuttiest One. She was such a good dog.
The first name she had, that I knew of anyway, was Piggy, given to her by the college student in
The same college student who found her on the road 15 years ago called me the night after Peanut died. He had heard of her passing from his grandmother, who had heard from her daughter, his mother. He called to say how sorry he was. I was very touched by that.
Saturday, May 21, 2005
Anyway that is what she had. She had thoracic surgery at the tender size of under two lbs...successfully fixed the problem. Brave kitten! She had to continue being fed via her PEG tube (straight into her stomach) for many months to give her time to grow into her baggy esophagus (it was very stretched out from food backing up behind the constricted area) and for her esophagus to regain motility as much as possible....
Some time I'll post about the troubles along the way, and the horrid day when she was given a 50-x morphine overdose by an asinine tech....that was truly scary. But she survived it all, and is a big happy 12-lb cat who will turn two at the end of this year. As my vet friend Gary says, she has no business being alive, yet here she is, and Gary also says he hopes she will someday pull me from a burning building (or perform some similar act of heroicism to save my life) to repay me...but I don't think she will :-) Who cares, she is a happy cat and I love her.
Monday, February 21, 2005
I found my new little friend on the side of the road last week -- I was able to pick it up because it has an injured leg. Brought it home, now am turning into an obsessed rabbit fanatic, it's really fun. Bunny's temporary housing is that incredibly versatile and useful Vari-Kennel in my tackroom -- thank god for the giant Vari-Kennel! -- and I've already ordered a fancy hutch for more suitable living quarters. I'm fantasizing about the outdoor run that I'm sure somebody like my boyfriend or my father will eventually build for the rabbit, and also fantasizing about getting a companion for the bun - it's sure to be lonely all by him/herself. Since I don't know the sex of this rabbit, I figure I can play it safe and get a spayed or neutered bun through rabbit rescue. Just have to hope they like each other.........