- May 17, 2009
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Catherine, I am so very sorry for your loss and can see why this must have been especially hard for you to deal with.... that chapter of life may seem over, however those chickens helped you and your daughter become who you are now. Even this sad episode is just another chapter and the story... of you is not done.
I suspect that raising them helped you once and may help you again, it is funny but very few people give up pets forever even after a heartbreaking episode such as Sassafras's passing. We just cannot help ourselves. I call it my need to save little souls.
I guess being in medicine and seeing the deaths of patients has made me focus of trying to save things I can... stray cats, injured birds, little chickies. Me giving them a decent life, seems to offset the hurt I feel not being able to save that patient I had die of a heart attack, or the teenager who died in that horrible motorcycle accident, or the lung transplant patient that did not make it....
Whatever the person's value system and good heart is from or for.... Our pets benefit...Right? And gosh so do we!
It has been 30 years since I have had a duck, many more since chickens, and some little voice very recently just said "you need chickens Nancy"... So here I am again. I was hurt once too... there is always hope... and one day maybe some new chicks will herald a new chapter for you... and then maybe not. But you are better for the experience....however harsh and sad it is right now. I am sure you know that. *smiles*
Rest in Peace Sassafras (I had a pilgrim goose named that... god I loved her
)
You are not alone and we are here.
Nancy
PS I for one would like to learn what to do right away in case this ever happens.... Maggots used in medicine are sterile flies raised in a lab, a FAR cry for anything outside. They are so rarely used. I have seem them used once in 37 years. This was a last ditch effort to save someone with flesh eating bacteria. It was not an easy thing to watch...trust me. This patient was in a coma and at deaths door. There is absolutely NO place for them on any living pet.
New topic Threehorses? Tell us?
I suspect that raising them helped you once and may help you again, it is funny but very few people give up pets forever even after a heartbreaking episode such as Sassafras's passing. We just cannot help ourselves. I call it my need to save little souls.
I guess being in medicine and seeing the deaths of patients has made me focus of trying to save things I can... stray cats, injured birds, little chickies. Me giving them a decent life, seems to offset the hurt I feel not being able to save that patient I had die of a heart attack, or the teenager who died in that horrible motorcycle accident, or the lung transplant patient that did not make it....
Whatever the person's value system and good heart is from or for.... Our pets benefit...Right? And gosh so do we!
It has been 30 years since I have had a duck, many more since chickens, and some little voice very recently just said "you need chickens Nancy"... So here I am again. I was hurt once too... there is always hope... and one day maybe some new chicks will herald a new chapter for you... and then maybe not. But you are better for the experience....however harsh and sad it is right now. I am sure you know that. *smiles*
Rest in Peace Sassafras (I had a pilgrim goose named that... god I loved her

You are not alone and we are here.
Nancy
PS I for one would like to learn what to do right away in case this ever happens.... Maggots used in medicine are sterile flies raised in a lab, a FAR cry for anything outside. They are so rarely used. I have seem them used once in 37 years. This was a last ditch effort to save someone with flesh eating bacteria. It was not an easy thing to watch...trust me. This patient was in a coma and at deaths door. There is absolutely NO place for them on any living pet.
New topic Threehorses? Tell us?