You guys are awesome. Stop sending money for LB’s grave marker, we’re almost at 200% since the last time I looked.
With your consent, I’ll pledge any surplus to another fund raiser currently taking pledges – gas expenses for the guy who might (if that decision is made, which is still a week or two away) be driving Mama Liberty’s dog, Laddie the Highly Intolerant, from the Great White North to the Gulch. As of the last time I looked, that pledge will put that fund raiser close to the top.

















































WooHoo!
You might spend the excess on a ramp, so that short-legged SOB can get in and out of the house without being carried.
I second the whoohoos, though I didn’t manage to donate to this fundraiser. Through all the sorrow of dogs dying (many of them too young), it’s a delight to see those hilarious gravestones.
I had the privilege of knowing many of those critters buried on Boot Hill and I know how perfectly true their epitaphs are. I couldn’t begin to come up with such apt descriptions.
You have my permission, gladly.
I agree with Bear about the ramp. Truly important to avoid back issues for the short legged.
Far better to continue the donations and get him a stair lift:
https://www.bruno.com/stair-lifts
}:-]
Laddie the Highly Intolerant. Sounds like my kind of dog.
😀 Just got an email from the guy he’s living with…
It’s not going up stairs that is much of an issue. It’s the jumping down from heights that is the problem. Short legged dogs with long spines are prone to back injury from jumping down off beds, steps, or couches etc. I don’t mean to harp. It is that I have been heartbroken seeing this happen.
Sometimes I get behind. Reading posts. But hey. Worse could happen. And Laddie (LHI). Good shot at good home, worth a little oops…
Short legged dogs with long spines are prone to back injury from jumping down off beds, steps, or couches etc.
A narrow ramp down the side of the stairwell should be enough to avoid that problem, assuming LHI can be trained to use it.