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View Full Version : Loyal dog continues to attend mass at church where owner's funeral was held"


TroyGator
01-17-2013, 01:26 PM
http://l3.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/6_CFDG2O5TPVXoSemsAJFg--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7cT04NTt3PTYzMA--/http://media.zenfs.com/en/blogs/thesideshow/dog-mass-daily.jpg

http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/loyal-dog-attends-mass-church-funeral-153655088.html

Dreamliner
01-17-2013, 01:31 PM
Stories like this no longer amaze me. Knowing and loving dogs as I do, I've rather come to expect things like this.

gatorman_07732
01-17-2013, 01:36 PM
They are loyal dogs particularly speaking

OaktownGator
01-17-2013, 01:45 PM
Dogs are too good for us humans. We're lucky to have them.

bogeyfred
01-17-2013, 07:44 PM
Our priest would bring his dog to mass at the small church we attended. He would bark at anyone that came in after mass had started !

Juggernautz
01-17-2013, 08:49 PM
Dogs are too good for us humans. We're lucky to have them.

:yes:

peytiepie
01-18-2013, 04:47 AM
Dogs are too good for us humans. We're lucky to have them.

Agree 100%!

oragator1
01-18-2013, 05:37 AM
I said it in another thread a while back, but adopted dogs from bad circumstances know, in a real way they know and appreciate what you did for them. Their loyalty is something we humans can't even fathom.

jewood592
01-18-2013, 05:52 AM
I tell my wife all the time, we'd have 100 dogs if I had room for them. As it stands, we have 4:)

Kirby
01-18-2013, 11:49 AM
Watch the movie "Haichi" with Richard Gere. It will bring a tear to your eyes. Very similar to the above and based on a true story.

Dreamliner
01-18-2013, 11:54 AM
Our newest dog, our fourth, literally adopted us. He kept escaping the home where he was being neglected and camping out on our doorstep. We eventually met with his former owner and she agreed that we would provide a better home for the little guy. He's as happy as a clam and we literally cannot imagine never having had him.

gatorman_07732
01-18-2013, 11:59 AM
Our newest dog, our fourth, literally adopted us. He kept escaping the home where he was being neglected and camping out on our doorstep. We eventually met with his former owner and she agreed that we would provide a better home for the little guy. He's as happy as a clam and we literally cannot imagine never having had him.

Pretty cool...I'm getting ready to move on with another after having put down my last a few months ago.

Spurffelbow833
01-19-2013, 04:21 AM
My two little dachshund/Jack Russell mixes are littermates who are now 15 years old. They are nearly blind and deaf, but still quite content. One of them barks outdoors incessantly now that he can't hear, so I can't leave them outside for very long. Their housebreaking has pretty much come unraveled in the past few months. I know a lot of people draw the line there and put pets down when they start to lose control of their bodily functions, but I would no sooner have them put down then I would expect it to be done to an old person in a nursing home. They aren't suffering, and until they are, I will not act to end their lives. They're making me suffer a bit, but that's the bargain I signed up for when I adopted them as puppies. I don't have to please anyone but myself where they are concerned. I can replace the carpet when they're gone. I can't replace them.

They've kept me company many a day when there would have otherwise been nobody else there. I cannot imagine what it will be like coming home without them waiting for me, and I don't want to know.

Dreamliner
01-19-2013, 12:33 PM
My two little dachshund/Jack Russell mixes are littermates who are now 15 years old. They are nearly blind and deaf, but still quite content. One of them barks outdoors incessantly now that he can't hear, so I can't leave them outside for very long. Their housebreaking has pretty much come unraveled in the past few months. I know a lot of people draw the line there and put pets down when they start to lose control of their bodily functions, but I would no sooner have them put down then I would expect it to be done to an old person in a nursing home. They aren't suffering, and until they are, I will not act to end their lives. They're making me suffer a bit, but that's the bargain I signed up for when I adopted them as puppies. I don't have to please anyone but myself where they are concerned. I can replace the carpet when they're gone. I can't replace them.

They've kept me company many a day when there would have otherwise been nobody else there. I cannot imagine what it will be like coming home without them waiting for me, and I don't want to know.

Amen. And I find my dogs bodily functions no more disagreeable than my son's bodily functions when he was tiny. That is to say that they are MY dogs just like my son was MY son.

In fact, just last night, my favorite dog, Dugger, threw up all over my Lazy Boy. I literally had to spoon up a large bowl of 'food matter' but, because of who's vomit it was, I found it no more disagreeable than I found cleaning up after my small son.

I don't even give a damn about the Lazy Boy, really. I may have it cleaned when I get around to it. The companionship Dugger provides is worth a thousand such protein spills.

toon66
01-19-2013, 02:40 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/loyal-dog-attends-mass-church-funeral-153655088.html

Think a cat would do this? Not a chance.

Dreamliner
01-19-2013, 03:44 PM
Think a cat would do this? Not a chance.

Cats are great, but if you died it would just go looking for someone else who knows how to open a can.

gator1986
01-19-2013, 03:49 PM
I love dogs man... They literally are mans best friends

toon66
01-19-2013, 03:57 PM
Cats are great, but if you died it would just go looking for someone else who knows how to open a can.

I've known some women like that.:-)