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#1
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Due to the recent loss of a deeply beloved furry member of our family and
the concomitant training requirements of a new puppy, Gail and Jim will not be going to Oshkosh this year. First time in twelve years for Gail; first time in thirty-three years for Jim. We have a room in the newly air-conditioned Taylor Hall reserved for most of the Show. I don't want to make a penny on it. If anybody wants this room and is willing to pay me what I have on deposit ($50 or so) and take over the "payments", then give me an email First "regular" in these newsgroups gets it. I'll filter down to the unknowns later. Paypal is the preferred method of payment. Jim (sniffle, bawl, poor damned puppydog didn't deserve her ultimate end ...) |
#2
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Due to the recent loss of a deeply beloved furry member of our family and
the concomitant training requirements of a new puppy, Gail and Jim will not be going to Oshkosh this year. First time in twelve years for Gail; first time in thirty-three years for Jim. ???? You're missing OSH '06 to train a puppy? No way. This *has* to be an imposter, scamming Jim's email address...right? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#3
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RST Engineering wrote:
Due to the recent loss of a deeply beloved furry member of our family and the concomitant training requirements of a new puppy, Gail and Jim will not be going to Oshkosh this year. First time in twelve years for Gail; first time in thirty-three years for Jim. What sort of training takes 6 months and doesn't allow a week's vacation? Something doesn't smell right here, and it's not the dog. George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. |
#4
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OK, so we care as much for our furry family as we do for each other.
Airplanes and dogs have equal weight in our eyes. And airplanes don't sleep on your feet on cold nights and lick your face awake in the morning. Sorry, Jay, there is more to life than cold aluminum airframes and hard steel engines. No, this is not an imposter scamming my addy, and if you had half a heart you'd understand how bad I'm hurting from my loss. Jim You're missing OSH '06 to train a puppy? No way. This *has* to be an imposter, scamming Jim's email address...right? |
#5
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Jay Honeck wrote:
Due to the recent loss of a deeply beloved furry member of our family and the concomitant training requirements of a new puppy, Gail and Jim will not be going to Oshkosh this year. First time in twelve years for Gail; first time in thirty-three years for Jim. ???? You're missing OSH '06 to train a puppy? No way. This *has* to be an imposter, scamming Jim's email address...right? Well, Jay, not everyone thinks airplanes are ALL there is in life. Some of us have other loves and interests, such as motorcycles and guns (in my case) and puppies apparently in Jim's case. I'm as surprised that you can't understand that as you are that Jim is skipping OSH. It is only an airshow for crying out loud. And it will be there next year... Matt |
#6
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In rec.aviation.owning RST Engineering wrote:
OK, so we care as much for our furry family as we do for each other. Airplanes and dogs have equal weight in our eyes. And airplanes don't sleep on your feet on cold nights and lick your face awake in the morning. Sorry, Jay, there is more to life than cold aluminum airframes and hard steel engines. No, this is not an imposter scamming my addy, and if you had half a heart you'd understand how bad I'm hurting from my loss. Jim, I feel your loss. It took me years to get over the last critter that I lost. If one of my critters needed expensive medical attention, and the only way I could pay for it was to sell the plane. The plane would be gone. I'm feeling for you, buddy. --- Jay Masino -- __!__ Jay and Teresa Masino ___(_)___ http://www.JayMasino.com ! ! ! http://www.OceanCityAirport.com http://www.oc-Adolfos.com |
#7
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![]() "RST Engineering" wrote in message .. . And airplanes don't sleep on your feet on cold nights and lick your face awake in the morning. Maybe not at your house.. |
#8
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George Patterson wrote:
Montblack wrote: I got roped into taking care of four cats last year. Won't do that again! We have 6 cats. They'll take care of themselves for periods up to a week. If we stay away that long, though, some of them give us an "do I know you?" look when we get back. We just have to make sure they have clean litter boxes and adequate food and water before we go. George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. Yeah Let the mice out ;-) |
#9
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Sorry, Jay, there is more to life than cold aluminum airframes and hard
steel engines. No, this is not an imposter scamming my addy, and if you had half a heart you'd understand how bad I'm hurting from my loss. Well, Jim, I've cried a thousand tears for my dogs over the years. When we had to put Princess down last year, we pulled the kids out of school so they could spend time with her at the vet's before, well, you know... We're STILL hurting about it. But, for crying out loud, OSH is six months away! I think it's safe to say that you can potty train any puppy by then? I'm not insensitive to your loss, but I think you're premature in cancelling your reservations. There are many people -- myself included -- that regard your forums as the ONLY "don't miss" forums at OSH, and it simply won't be the same without you and Gail... -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#10
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My condolences on your loss Jim.
People's relationships with their pets are as varied as their relationships with people, and I respect that. I've had dogs all my life, been around cattle and horses ever since I can remember, raised 100 chickens from hatching eggs in the second grade. (The chickens got butchered when the roosters became mean and would attack my mom.) My first dog was a St. Bernard. He died on Mothers Day, 1974. I was 8. The next was a Heinz 57 Spitz type, who grew old and totally insane, nipping and biting anyone but me. I held him while my Dad euthanized him. My next dog was the first dog that was totally "mine". I'd saved every penny I had earned over summer vacation. He was a Sheltie, but an oversized dog, about 1/3 the size of a Collie. He went everywhere with me until he was about 5 years old and came down with an unknown disease and was suffering terribly. I euthanized him myself with 30cc's of Acepromazine mixed with Ketamine, 3cc's of Ace will put down a 2000 lb bull, he never felt a thing. I buried him myself, alone. I was 15. That was the same year that I bought my first show heifer, spent countless hours, blood, sweat, and tears halter breaking her, training her, and taking her to fairs and shows, actually slept in the stalls next to her while away from home. She died that fall, hardware puncture to her rumen. I helped the vet do the necropsy. At one time our cow/calf operation consisted of over 2000 head of beef cows. We had a half dozen horses and I worked cattle with horses every summer from the time I was 12 until I was 20. The relationships that I developed with the horses was a working relationship. The cows were a job. They could just be down right mean. When they'd calve each spring, death was everywhere. Helpless calves unable to nurse, still bornes, cows laying on their calves, cows abandoning them, septic or milk fever cows dieing. You'd feel sorry for them until the next cow kicked you, or the next calf crapped all over you. Don't get me wrong, each of us developed many many relationships with these horses and cattle. Some were good, some we cared for deeply, some we simply hated and I'm positive that some of them hated us just as much. My kids were born during the years that my wife and I raised and showed dogs. When the bitches whelped, I slept (if you can even call it sleeping) right next to them. I protected the puppies from their own mother stepping, laying, and eating them. I showed my kids exactly what happens when a mother licks a puppies navel so much that it creates a hernia and the puppy bleeds to death. I showed them the still bones. They've learned the responsibility of animal ownership, care, life, and death. They've cried when the puppy's were sold and the new owners took them away. They've also re-greeted some of the same dogs years later when their owners would visit, or we'd see one at a show. The point that I've tried to pass on to my kids is that death is part of animal ownership. The minute that an animal is born, responsibility begins and will not end until one day you have to say goodbye. The time in between and the relationship that you develop is what you make of it, but never forget that someday it will be over. I can't remember the day that I got every dog I've ever owned, but I can remember the day that every one of them died. If Jay only has half a heart, maybe I have none. I don't know. But what I do know, is that animals are only a part of my life and they only enter my life to serve a purpose, even if that purpose is companionship. I'll never care as much for any of our animals as I do for my family members or my friends. When I loose an animal I never feel that I didn't spend enough time with them. Animals remember short term events, they learn through conditioning, they do not remember yesterday, last week, last month, last year per say. When I loose a friend or family member I do and will always feel that I hadn't spent enough time with them. People, just like animals, are thankfully different. Again, I'm sorry for your loss and we'll miss both you and Gail at OSH. Jim "RST Engineering" wrote in message .. . OK, so we care as much for our furry family as we do for each other. Airplanes and dogs have equal weight in our eyes. And airplanes don't sleep on your feet on cold nights and lick your face awake in the morning. Sorry, Jay, there is more to life than cold aluminum airframes and hard steel engines. No, this is not an imposter scamming my addy, and if you had half a heart you'd understand how bad I'm hurting from my loss. Jim You're missing OSH '06 to train a puppy? No way. This *has* to be an imposter, scamming Jim's email address...right? |
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