4 Legs & A Tail LK Winter 2021

Page 32

What I Told My Kids Donna LeClair - Grand Isle, VT

30 4 Legs & a Tail

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itting at the supper table that night, I looked at my teenaged daughter and son and thought, “Oh! I’ve got to tell them this. Right now!” It was one more of the myriad bits of information and wisdom parents feel duty-bound to impart to their children. My daughter was a high school senior, and my son was a freshman. They were both old enough to receive, understand, and heed, the information I felt an immediate need to provide. In fact, I wondered how it could have escaped me that they had not been told this information before. The trigger that prompted my talk was that our dog had died, and we were without one. I was grieving the loss. Suddenly I thought my children might want to ease my heartache with another. “Don’t ever buy me a dog. And don’t buy anyone else a dog, or a cat, either. Even if someone’s dog or cat has died, people have preferences. I’m partial to poodles or poodle mixes because of my allergies, but I would always want to choose my own dog and, as a family, we decide together. People often want to feel a ‘connection’ when they choose a pet. Some people like big dogs; others, little ones; some want a short-haired dog; others want one with long hair.” “You might think someone is so devastated when their dog or cat dies that

they will surely want another one. But maybe not. They are grieving because that one was so special to them. They might need time to adjust to that loss. Maybe they want to consider whether they will have one at all. Sometimes their love is so great for the one they lost that they never do get another one. Those should be their choices, over time.” “Okay, that’s for me and my feelings. This is for yourselves. Never get a dog, cat, or any pet, without thinking through how you will take care of it. You need to think about how long it might live so you can plan to take care of it for all of its life. Where might you live? If you live in an apartment, the first question is: Are pets allowed? How long might you live there? Will you have a job that requires traveling, or might you want to take extended trips? What about your pet? Who will take care of it if you’re away? Doggie Day Care can get expensive over a long period of time, and would that be fair to your dog?” “Suppose you do live in an apartment, and your landlord says it’s okay to have a dog. What is the apartment like? Is it four floors up? Because if you have a dog, there could be a serious number of flights to go up and down to take your 4-legged buddy outdoors. All these things should be considered so you can properly take care of the pet you will love.” “Then there is the cost to have a pet. You need to license your dog with the town you live in. There will be shots needed to keep it healthy, and if it gets sick or is hurt in some way, you need to know you can afford the care it needs, and that can sometimes be very expensive.” This conversation and the questions were asked many years ago. My children are now adults with their own children. They took my advice, and both waited to have their dogs when they had homes of their own. When Hurricane Katrina was forecast to hit New Orleans, people were being evacuated and told to leave their pets behind. My son told me he watched on TV as one man was the last to board a bus to be taken to a safe place, and when the bus doors closed, his dog wildly, insistently, jumped up and down against the doors of the bus as it pulled away. My son is like a dog whisperer. He loves dogs. He said to his wife, “I would never leave my dog.” His wife replied, “You would have to.” “Read my lips—I would NEVER leave my dog!” That is the depth of love my family feels for our dogs. Winter 2021


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Articles inside

Abraham Lincoln’s Dog, Fido Kate Kelly

14min
pages 50-56

Meet Joe Biden’s Dogs Champ and Major, Set to Become the First White House Pets in 4 Years Corinne Heller

3min
pages 48-49

The Light of the Memory Tree Tanya Sousa

3min
pages 46-47

I Am Afraid of Anesthesia for My Pet Part II Sandra Waugh, VMD, MS

4min
pages 44-45

Take Time to Check Your Home for Poisons! M. Kathleen Shaw DVM

4min
pages 38-39

Alternatively Speaking: The ABC’s of Vitamin D Dr. Anne Carroll DVM, CVA

7min
pages 40-43

Mass(achusetts) Migration Scott Borthwick

2min
page 31

Not So Cold, After All Dorothy Crosby

6min
pages 25-27

When Should You Call the Vet? Catherine MacLean

4min
pages 36-37

What I Told My Kids Donna LeClair

3min
page 32

A Pet Lovers Guide to Burns and Freezes Ingrid Braulini

6min
pages 28-29

How cats’ nutritional needs are different from those of dogs?

2min
page 33

Help Monarch Butterflies By Building A Migration Waystation Catherine Greenleaf

4min
page 30

Plant-Based Dogs Meg Hurley

4min
pages 34-35

Caring for your Senior Horse During The Cold Weather Jennifer Roberts-Keating

6min
pages 22-24

Special Needs Susan Tarczewski

6min
pages 6-9

A Day on the Green for K9s Karen Sturtevant

4min
pages 14-15

Find Joy in Your Pets This Holiday Season Marina Kinney

2min
page 5

Helping Pets in Need Carol Laughner

5min
pages 10-11

A Grooming Trend Gone Wild Aimee Doiron

5min
pages 16-17

The Four-Legged Friends Behind the Co-op’s Products: Abby Rose of Cheshire Garden Jen Risley

3min
pages 12-13

Helmet Awareness Sue Miller

8min
pages 18-21
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