<div dir="ltr">Dear Droolers,<div><br></div><div>I'm writing tonight not for myself and the Adm. (thank God)--yet I am, in a sense. I am writing in honor of my good friends JoAnn Beebee and her husband Scott, both activists in Golden Gate Basset Rescue.They had to send their old boy Linus to the Bridge tonight. </div>
<div><br></div><div>It was time. It was right. It sucks.</div><div><br></div><div>Linus was a fine old fella, at 14; but the last year or so was hard. A bit over a year ago, he lost his life-mate, Sadie; She went to the bridge. Ever after, he would go out to the backyard and lie in the spot Sadie laid in for years. And they say dogs don't know this stuff. Right.</div>
<div><br></div><div>Linus was never right after Sadie died. None of us are, after we lose our life-mates. Why we expect dogs to get over it, I don't know. After Sadie walked over the Bridge to that sunlit field of frolic and eternal banqueting and counter-crawling, Linus survived bloat. I remember well the story JoAnn told about how she and Scott went careening down the mountain in their RV to get Linus to the vet in that critical 30 minutes. And how they decided, that Christmas, that their gift to one another was the $10k they had shelled out in basset care that year. They were not unhappy. We are all glad to do what we can for our hounds.</div>
<div><br></div><div>I am reminded, tonight, by how many hounds and Houndservants on this list are struggling--with problems big and small. With undiagnosed lumps and bumps, blood in the urine, pseudomonas (sp?) in regular (and irregular) places. It is not easy, this thing called living.</div>
<div><br></div><div>And yet, these Hounds Majestic are one of the things--if not the main thing,for many of us--that make life worth the living. Oh, sure, our hounds may ocassionally snap out of pain and confusion--but never out of malice. And even at the very end, our hounds give us that one thing that all of us cannot, will not, live without, and that is the experience of unconditional love. Of companionship that does not falter. And that is why we rack up credit cards or pay the mortgage late or do whatever is necessary so they get the care they need--regular or irregular, a trip to diagnose a gunky ear or a terrifying race down the mountain to save an aging hound.</div>
<div><br></div><div>For me, bassets have been the way back to life after devastating loss. My life partner, De-Anna, went to the human version of the Bridge last January--coming up on 2 years ago. (Extremely hard to believe it has been almost 2 years.) </div>
<div><br></div><div>Three months after her death, to the day, Golden Gate Basset Rescue entrusted me with my first basset, Percy. He died just shy of 2 months later, from bloat--while I was working. I did not find him until the next day. It was one of the worst days of my life, thinking somehow that wiley hound has escaped. GGBR members immediately called up and were organizing a house-to-house search. It proved heart-breakingly unnecessary. But is says everything about GGBR--and the people on this list--that a small battalion of people would drop EVERYTHING to help me locate my hound.</div>
<div><br></div><div>That day, about 18 hours after he went missing, when I found Percy halfway under an outbuilding, stiff, it was almost more than I could bear. Because in those two months I learned full well the healing power of drool, the magnificent heart of these pygmy beasties--and those who care for them. Grace entered my life with Percy, behind a goofy face and a extra-long hound body that loved slamming into me at full speed just to say, "yup, yup, I love ya, yup I DO!" Silky ears down the to ground, big old cold snuffle nose, and (I swear) a smile never ending. He was so damned glad to be alive, he made me happy to get up in the morning. No small achievement for 55 pounds of hound.</div>
<div><br></div><div>Golden Gate Basset Rescue did not shame me or blame me for his death, although I very much blamed myself; in fact, I was told over and over again that "Percy will send his replacement." And so he did. August of last year, the Admiral came aboard, christened the HMS Certifiable with his sacred drool, and here we are today.</div>
<div><br></div><div>And a most excellent bonus happened: I was taken in by other basset lovers. JoAnn and Scott invited me to Thanksgiving and Christmas dinner with their sprawling family. Somehow, becoming guardian to a basset made me part of a huge, sprawling, drooling new pack--many whom I have never met. And it gave me a focus. Doing everything I can possibly do for Golden Gate Basset Rescue--from adopting to transporting to fostering to events to fundraising--has given my life meaning and purpose and focus during a time when I was cast adrift in every meaningful way.</div>
<div><br></div><div>So this is all to say that, as I weep with JoAnn and Scott over the death of Linus, I also rejoice because these bassets, these crazy, funny, demanding, loving, giving, magnificent, wiley, can't-take-'em-serious, can't-live-without-em bassets, have given me the ability to know that death truly has no dominion. </div>
<div><br></div><div>Adm. says, "One more angel walks the Rainbow Bridge tonight. We shall look for Linus' bright, shining spirit when our Tour of Duty is Over."</div><div><br></div><div>Adm. watches from the bow of the ship; "Ahrooo! Ahrooo! Ahrooo!" sings out over the waves in honor of Linus and his beloved Sadie.<br>
<br></div><div>Thank you for listening tonight. Drool to all,</div><div><br></div><div>Lea Pierce</div><div>Houndslave to Adm. JED</div><div>Activist, Golden Gate Basset Rescue</div><div><br></div></div>