Karinac
Posted : 6/4/2009 8:58:54 AM
Thanks to JackieG, DeniseM and Chevy for your kindness and supportive comments re Yeti's death. I'm still struggling with coming to terms with it. The story is coming out bit by bit but there's things I'm still uncomfortable with. I know they tried to do their best for Yeti and apparently did ring a vet and got their advice, but a number of things still bother me:-
1. I did some detective work and managed to track down the vet that they'd consulted (and they don't know that I've done this). I was told by that vet that he offered to see her, yet he said they didn't bring her to him. Why did they not do this? Why did they take it upon themselves to not take her there? Where they worried about the bill? I would have paid anything for her health, for her life. Why did they not ring me and ask me what I wanted to do.
2. They said that she drowned in the late afternoon on Sunday. The vet I spoke to said that he spoke to them at midday. Why did they say this?
3. They didn't tell me she had died until 7 or 7.30pm at night. Why not? Yes, they said they wanted to tell me in person, but you know, she was my dog, not their dog. Why didn't they tell me earlier?
I can't tell you my devastation and getting a rigamortised dog back. She was stiff as an old boot. I was expecting my lovely soft little girl back.
I know the mum and the girls tried their best for the dog. I've since found out the mum has a health problem and was drugged up to the gills over the weekend. I also know that they had a party up there, I assume on the Saturday night. I didn't know about either of these things. I didn't know that there was a swimming pool there. I didn't even consider asking questions like this. Yes, it was my fault.
I guess what I want to know is how would each of you feel if this had happened to your dog. Would you feel you could ask these questions? I'd like to be able to contact the grandparents at whose house she was at.
Yeti was up for sale. I'd had someone come and look at her the weekend before and we had agreed on a price for her, $900. They didn't end up buying her, probably as the woman had a leg in a plaster cast and I suggested it might not be the best time for her to buy a dog as it's easy to trip on them. Yet I am a disability pensioner. Yeti was my most valuable dog. So I spent 6.5 months raising a dog, my asset if I can put it that coldly (but you all know I adored her), to have them destroy my asset. This doesn't sit well with me. They don't even know that someone almost bought her the week before, or how much she was worth.
So what would you do? I would love to contact the grandparents and the other woman who lives in their house (who I suspect might be the one that let her out of the house leading to her drowning). In contacting them the friendship with her mum would probably end. The mum isn't coping with her own health problems, which are quite serious. It may be that the friendship won't survive this anyway.
Any input would be appreciated. I need something, I just don't know what. Maybe nothing will ever fill that sense of needing something else. I just don't know.
Karina.