Pets death...what did you bury them with?
Pets death...what did you bury them with?
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Penny-lope

Original Poster:

13,645 posts

217 months

Sunday 31st October 2010
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Over the years I have had to bury/dispose a few pets (13 year old cat, a rather cute but very expensive bunny, and two gerbils...one of which just died yesterday) and I've always place some 'stuff' in the grave/box with them.

By 'stuff' I mean
- Food (munchies, choc drops, carrot)
- Bedding (sawdust, blankets, straw)
- A photo or a drawing from my son

I just wondered if I am the only one to do this?


Some Gump

13,016 posts

210 months

Sunday 31st October 2010
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Starting with basic, and getting more manly:
trowel
spade
spit
auger
digger
jcb
plan b from the chillean mine.

HTH

Morningside

24,147 posts

253 months

Sunday 31st October 2010
quotequote all
All ours (there are four in the garden) are wrapped in a blanket or and old wollie.

My bassethound (Columbo) was a nightmare to bury. As he weighed 6.5 stone I could not lift him out of the car so I dragged him up there on an a tarpaulin and then 'dropped' him into the hole.
Luckily he just managed to fit as it took me 2 HOURS to dig as its all clay here and being very cold it goes like concrete.

Robb F

4,614 posts

195 months

Sunday 31st October 2010
quotequote all
Morningside said:
All ours (there are four in the garden) are wrapped in a blanket or and old wollie.

My bassethound (Columbo) was a nightmare to bury. As he weighed 6.5 stone I could not lift him out of the car so I dragged him up there on an a tarpaulin and then 'dropped' him into the hole.
Luckily he just managed to fit as it took me 2 HOURS to dig as its all clay here and being very cold it goes like concrete.
The contrast between the OP and this is fantastic.

driverrob

4,837 posts

227 months

Sunday 31st October 2010
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Rabbits in bin bags under the concrete of my new compost bin.
Cat cremated. Ashes in a small wooden box. Dug hole with spade. Wooden marker with name plaque supplied by cremation company. More expensive but, then, he'd been a lot better company than the rabbits.

chris1roll

1,899 posts

268 months

Sunday 31st October 2010
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The lurcher father and I spent a good hour or so digging our heavy clay soil in sub-zero temperatures. He only just fit too, as although rigor mortis was passing he froze stiff instead.

Hamsters, rats and gerbils etc just went on the muck-heap or in the rayburn.

The horse we had the hunt take away - we'd have had to hire a mini digger otherwise, no way were we digging the hole for that!

bexVN

14,690 posts

235 months

Monday 1st November 2010
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I haven't buried a deceased pet for a very long time as I get then cremated. Did have a gerbil that I buried with his bedding and food when I was a child.

If I were to bury a favourite treat and toy would go with them I think.

I always advise wrap in natural fibres not plastic for obvious reasons.

Silent1

19,762 posts

259 months

Monday 1st November 2010
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All outs get cremated and we keep a them in wooden casket/urns in a cabinet

Superficial

753 posts

198 months

Monday 1st November 2010
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Small furries were always put in a nice little box, padded out with something and sometimes with a little note. The two dogs we lost fairly recently were both cremated, one was put in the garden with a note from us and can't quite bring ourselves to scatter the other one yet so he's kept by Dad's bedside where he spent his later months.

Rollcage

11,345 posts

216 months

Monday 1st November 2010
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I buried my male GSD, wrapped in a blanket! Kept his collar and lead, and wrapped the dog's walkies bag with all their toys round the little headpost I made.

The blanket was the only way I could move him - I'm hardly small, but 8 stone of dead dog is impossible to pick up on your own, so moved him onto the blanket and then used that to get him down the stairs and out into the car, all at four in the morning.

Took three of us most of the day to dig a five foot deep hole for him and then we lowered him in, wrapped in the blanket. I dont think I could have shovelled the earth onto him without that covering him - too undignified. Not the easiest of days.

Peter101

1,594 posts

229 months

Monday 1st November 2010
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When my wifes 19 year old cat died i made a wooden coffin. The coffin was lined with toweling. We put a couple of boxes of the cats favourate treats and a photo of us in with it. We planted a pear tree above her grave.

mrmaggit

10,146 posts

272 months

Monday 1st November 2010
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All our rabbits that have died have been buried in the garden in a towel with some of their favourie food. They have all been buried in places that I think are unlikely to be disturbed.

Scraggles

7,619 posts

248 months

Monday 1st November 2010
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went to see a friend over the weekend, had what was called roadkill curry, but looking at the birds hung up in the barn, suspect some had been for the pot

about 10 years ago same friend had a run of banquets, his kid had a gerbil or hamster that ended up as a mystery meat, bit surreal to find out that the pet had a heart attack or something, another option to consider

for those that want to buy the pet, if it is cat or dog sized, get a fruit tree on top of it, the body will give nutrients to the tree and might make it easier for the kids to come to terms with their loss ?

skeggysteve

5,724 posts

241 months

Monday 1st November 2010
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Rollcage said:
.............I I dont think I could have shovelled the earth onto him without that covering him - too undignified. Not the easiest of days.
Yes, there was no way I could have shovelled the earth with out the blacket in either.

I've buried two of our dogs in our garden, both in the same area, both wrapped in thier blankets, both with thier leads, collars and toys.
I/we could not ever use leads/collars/toys from an dead dog for a new one.

When we had oil heating installed our landlords (National Trust) were very good about not digging where the dogs were buried.

The only small pets I/we have lost were both birds and both small enough to bury in small graves in the garden. Again both were wrapped up and with thier toys. Thier cages are still in a shed, unused.


Tiggsy

10,261 posts

276 months

Tuesday 2nd November 2010
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Vets always dealt with ours. Don't like digging.

DPX

1,027 posts

224 months

Tuesday 2nd November 2010
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Bunny underground in carrier bag in the orchard

JQ

6,606 posts

203 months

Tuesday 2nd November 2010
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Our cat got run over on the day my first son was born, whilst me and Mrs JQ were at the hospital - very sad. I burried him in my favorite T-shirt, a Langdale & Ambleside Mountain Rescue T-shirt. Great sentimental value as the guys there saved my mums life many years ago.

kiteless

12,412 posts

228 months

Tuesday 2nd November 2010
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Deano is in a rather ornamental urn on the dresser to my left as I'm typing.

We've not decided when or where to scatter the ashes as yet, but it'll be somewhere particular to Deano. I'm keen on somewhere on the Long Mynd where he once spent an afternoon chasing sheep (despite said sheep being on the opposite side of the valley........he got bored, eventually, chasing small fluffy white spots one mile distant, and came back to find us).

Or maybe the Stiperstones, where me & mrs k once bore the brunt of a particularly intense hail storm whilst sheltering the boy.

He was a good lad, was Deano.

frown

ali_kat

32,143 posts

245 months

Wednesday 3rd November 2010
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Chilli was buried in a cardboard box in a flowerbed by the front door, with my t-shirt that I left him at the Vets with (so he had something of me to smell & comfort him whilst he was recovering from his car related injuries frown). He'd managed to claw it under his head & died on it frown

He also had his favourite toys smile

I still miss him frown

RDMcG

20,581 posts

231 months

Wednesday 3rd November 2010
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Always cremated at the vet's.