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Hopes for a Rainbow Bridge

Kulindahr

Knox's Papa
JUB Supporter
50K Posts
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Location
on the foggy, damp, redneck Oregon coast
I've had to wait this long just to be able to think when writing.

On October 27, two weeks and three days after his fifteenth birthday, I took Bammer in to the vet to give him his final rest. He'd been losing weight and getting weaker even though his blood work showed all his organs were working fine and I was feeding him as much as he could eat; the vet said it looked like he had a non-malignant tumor that was sort of sucking the nutrition away. When one evening he fell over turning around and couldn't get back up, I knew I had to end it for him. He was getting pain meds but many evenings he lay in his big recliner and cried, so I knew he was hurting despite the meds and the vitamins and mineral nutrient pills.

Bammer with Knox, both know I'm up to something:

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That's in the "terminal room" at the vet. I took Knox along hoping it would help him through losing Bammer, and for support.

Bammer's final nap:

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They'd just removed the IV and he's sleeping, heart getting slower and slower. Knox insisted on sniffing the IV and each injection, then sniffed and licked Bammer a couple of times before he apparently decided that if Bammer was going to sleep then so would he.

The cardboard coffin the vet supplied just barely fit inside the wooden one I built from some thin plywood:
1672779814647.png

Due to circumstances he had to stay there in the coffin for almost another week. In that time I collected things to go in with him: a stick he brought back from the woods one day, some seashells from both ocean and bay, a rock from up the river from his final trip up there, one each of all the treats he liked, a small pillow I used to stick under his head when he fell asleep on the floor, the towel I used for a blanket over him when he fell asleep, a stick from out at his "best friend's" house near the beach.... The flowers are from the insurance office diagonally across the street from us. There are also a dozen peppermint candies under and around him, and another dozen went in before closing the coffin (they're a biodegradable alternative to mothballs for keeping critters from digging up a coffin), plus another dozen one by one as I filled his grave.

I took pictures when I buried him but I can't find them on my phone or the cloud backup!

Had a roaring fire in his honor that evening:

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Knox had his own way of reacting to the loss:
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Knocking things over and tearing things up. He also peed and pooped in the house for about ten days! He stopped when I took him out to Bammer's grave and sat with him and explained that Bammer isn't coming back, that Knox watched me build the coffin and put Bammer in it with some of his favorite things and sealed it and buried it, so Bammer is there under the ground, down below the decorative driftwood. I don't know if he recognized the spot where he last saw his "cranky old man" friend, but after that he started behaving again.

Since then I've planted a tree, two berry bushes, and a couple of ferns on his grave spot. As I get more plants from people who knew and loved him, they'll go out there, too (it's a low spot out where I do conservation work; low chosen because out in the dunes most rain runs downslope, which waters the low spots best).

If it wasn't illegal, I would have taken his big recliner chair out and burned it on top of his grave before planting anything; he'd peed and pooped both in it several times when he couldn't get up and head for the door and I couldn't move fast enough to help him. But I did pull some of the wood framing, which will go in a small fire near his grave once spring is here; I have some decorative grasses that prefer an alkaline soil so the ashes will help them.

- = - = - = - = -

Many thanks to my buddy Tony for help on several parts of the process, and many to Knox who licked tears from my face and in other ways let me know that he missed Bammer, too.
 
:cry:

A beautiful tribute to a beautiful friend. If you were just one eighth as caring and attentive to Bammer in life as you were in death, and I know that you were, then I have no doubt that your hearts will reunite on whatever spiritual plane you put your faith in. Bammer was such a lucky dog to have you!

Best of luck and many, many happy years to you and Knox.
 
Sorry for your loss. (*8*)

Like they say, he’s part of your life for only awhile but you’re there for his whole life. I’m sure he was happy for that.
 
I'm sorry to hear that you lost Bammer. :therethere:

Our pets give us the unconditional love we never get from other humans, and it breaks our hearts when we lose them.
 
I am sorry to learn that your beloved family member has died. It seems that you gave him the very best care and saw to his comfort in his final hours. My sincere condolences.
 
So sorry for your loss of a beloved companion.
 
I' sorry for your loss :cry: - I know how painful that is.
 
That's a beautiful tribute and memorial for for your beloved Bammer Kulindahr, it's a huge loss when we have to say goodbye to a faithful companion. I hope you and Knox enjoy many years of happy adventures together. (*8*):kiss:
 
Thanks to everyone!

Knox still checks the replacement recliner before jumping into, like maybe he thinks Bammer should be there.
And he's very good at licking up tears.

Come good weather I plan to hike with Knox up to the spot where I took the picture of Bammer that was my avatar so long and see how close I can reproduce that shot.
 
I would point out one final thought.

Would you have traded a moment of the pain you have felt for a moment that you spent with Bammer?

I know after burying 7 much beloved feline companions that I wouldn't.

So how lucky you were to have had one another while on this earth.
 
I liked that dog. I'm sorry for your loss.

Even though we're a continent apart, I'm glad you're still in my world. My animal companion these days is a sassy little Senegal parrot named Roxie.
 
I would point out one final thought.

Would you have traded a moment of the pain you have felt for a moment that you spent with Bammer?

I know after burying 7 much beloved feline companions that I wouldn't.

So how lucky you were to have had one another while on this earth.
The hard part right now is sometimes I catch myself resenting Knox for not being Bammer.

But he showed real promise this morning: I was on the edge of a full-blown panic attack at the doctor's officer today and Knox got his paws on my knees and gave me a face bath.
Now if I could figure out how to get him to do that regularly!
 
I happened across your name in a a random old post and saw that you were Knox’s now, and so feared that this post must exist.

I’m very sorry to hear your news. We were all cheering for you and Bammer both when he went on his unfortunate grand adventure out alone in the forest, and so happy you got him back. Fifteen years is a lovely adventure for a dog, even if it feels a hundred years too short for such intrepid, magnificent creatures.

My dog made it to 13, and 12 ¾ of those were excellent years in pretty robust health. She did not get to slip away of a heart attack at home as the vet predicted, but in trying to judge the right moment to spare her any futile suffering, I’m certain she needed the last full day she had, ailments be damned by her verdict and mine. And I’m certain the decision the next morning was the right one. I know you’d have given as much thought to Bammer’s welfare.

We did walk one of her usual routes that evening, knowing that with legs and lungs we had the opportunity to do so and she’d have never understood why we wouldn’t.

May you have many happy memories and great new adventures with Knox. I’m wondering if you named him after John Knox. Anyway take care and thank you for posting your news.
 
I happened across your name in a a random old post and saw that you were Knox’s now, and so feared that this post must exist.

I’m very sorry to hear your news. We were all cheering for you and Bammer both when he went on his unfortunate grand adventure out alone in the forest, and so happy you got him back. Fifteen years is a lovely adventure for a dog, even if it feels a hundred years too short for such intrepid, magnificent creatures.

I was just reminded yesterday that a good friend who died when I was right there at his house was found with one hand on Bammer's head and the other on Knox (right up until I got him out of the chair and started CPR).

I've had a couple of nightmares about Bammer's forest adventure; I also tend to panic a bit when Knox decides to wander.

My dog made it to 13, and 12 ¾ of those were excellent years in pretty robust health. She did not get to slip away of a heart attack at home as the vet predicted, but in trying to judge the right moment to spare her any futile suffering, I’m certain she needed the last full day she had, ailments be damned by her verdict and mine. And I’m certain the decision the next morning was the right one. I know you’d have given as much thought to Bammer’s welfare.

We did walk one of her usual routes that evening, knowing that with legs and lungs we had the opportunity to do so and she’d have never understood why we wouldn’t.

I don't think I ever posted here how in Bammer's last two months I went to the effort of taking him to each of the swimming holes he loved, to each of the beaches, and out into the woods again. His last trip with me was to a swimming hole where he walked so slowly I wanted to carry him but he was determined to walk on the river rock himself.

May you have many happy memories and great new adventures with Knox. I’m wondering if you named him after John Knox. Anyway take care and thank you for posting your news.

I didn't name him. Knox was one of a litter of six found in an abandoned house in Texas and the gal who picked them up for the shelter gave all of them names ending in X -- Dax, Jax, Dix, Knox . . .I don't recall the others. His doghouse in the yard is "Fort Knox" and his crate in the living room is "Knox Villa".

We were just out at Bammer's grave a few days ago and I was sad to see that the hemlock tree right in the center hadn't made it through our dry summer despite gallons of water I gave it, and two of the ferns appear to be dead as well. Once the rains start I'll replace them, and will keep doing so until some survive!
I also discovered that an Asian poppy had sprouted; it had to have arrived as a seed in one of the ferns that came from my friend's house.
 
Every single puppy hurts like hell when they die. All you can do is to give them the best life you know how. They know.
In the first picture, Bammer looks like it's time. Wilma gave me that look when she was 15 and a half. Her back legs just quit working. So we went driving around on a warm for January day to the vet. Because she loved looking at and barking at the various cows wandering around.

Knox looks like a pesty ball of love. :)

As Fred and Wilma and Dino got old and their food seemed to not work, I put them on Purina Puppy Chow. That helped for several months along with extra table scraps.
It's never easy.
Just remember the good times.
 
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