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saying goodbye to the Old Geezer

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  • #21
    Quin,
    Our thoughts are with you, and we feel your pain.

    on behalf of Geezer, please let us all say thank you for giving him these past wonderful 6 years, and most of all, THANK YOU for loving him enough to know it is time and letting him go.

    Gracie and Cheveyo, Hagrid and Diego -- CWER's greeting crew on the other side of the rainbow bridge -- will gladly help him find his way when he arrives.

    Thinking of you,
    AMC
    AnnMarie Cross, Pres, Crosswinds Equine Rescue, cwer.org
    Sidell IL (near Champ./UofI/Danville IL/IN state border)

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    • #22
      You will both be in my thoughts tomorrow. Bless you for giving a great old man a good retirement and a happy ending. I have a retired schoolie old man TB myself and he makes me smile every single day. I hope it is a beautiful day tomorrow and that your grand old man goes peacefully. Hugs.

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      • #23
        " It is easy to know the right thing to do, the hard part is doing it." I have tears in my eyes for you as I say " Good luck".
        Come to the dark side, we have cookies

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        • #24
          Hugs. I'm so sorry. Thanks for giving him a great retirement.
          http://www.leakycreek.com/
          http://leakycreek.wordpress.com/ Rainbows & Mourning Doves Blog
          John P. Smith II 1973-2009 Love Always
          Father, Husband, Friend, Firefighter- Cancer Sucks- Cure Melanoma

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          • #25
            Bless you for giving Geezer a well deserved retirement and easy passing with dignity. ((Hugs))

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            • #26
              Originally posted by BasqueMom View Post
              More hugs and as another horse said, "this it be right." Hope I got that
              correctly!
              It was my Willem, and this it absolutely be right.

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              • #27
                (((((((HHHUUUGGGSSS))))))) to you, the Geezer, and the Geezer's old friends equine and human.
                HAS provides hospital care to 340,000 people in Haiti's Artibonite Valley 24/7/365/earthquake/cholera/whatever.
                www.hashaiti.org blog:http://hashaiti.org/blog

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                • #28
                  Hugs and blessings to you as you part with your grand old gentleman. You've given him the gift of both a dignified retirement and passing.
                  Lowly Farm Hand with Delusions of Barn Biddieom.
                  Witherun Farm
                  http://witherun-farm.blogspot.com/

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                  • #29
                    what a lucky horse to be so loved and what a wonderful horseman you are to end his days in peace. you and yours will be in my prayers.

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                    • #30
                      Thank you for giving a dignified ending to a grand old man. *hugs*

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                      • #31
                        To adopt a horse at age 32 and willingly taking on that responsibility is a testament to your character. You go ahead and cry. Be sure to smile through the tears though, it sounds as if he made you smile while you cared for him in his retirement years.
                        "Concern for animals is a matter of taking the side of the weak against the strong, something the best people have always done." Harriet Beecher Stowe 1811-1896

                        Ponies are cool!

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                        • #32
                          Originally posted by equinelaundry View Post
                          To adopt a horse at age 32 and willingly taking on that responsibility is a testament to your character. You go ahead and cry. Be sure to smile through the tears though, it sounds as if he made you smile while you cared for him in his retirement years.
                          so absolutely this.
                          www.specialhorses.org
                          a 501(c)3 organization helping 501(c)3 equine rescues

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                          • #33
                            my old man went in September.

                            It still hurts. My darling husband decided that "Tuff's Place" though elegantly fenced with two newly planted elm trees, wasn't quite befitting of the old guy. He had the landscapers come and make a beautiful garden with red roses, lots of dark blue flowers and yellow lillies. Like a tri color ribbon. He surprised me with it last week. Still cry when I turn on the sprinklers.

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                            • #34
                              Godspeed old Geezer and my condolences to you.

                              It never gets any easier to say goodbye to them. You gave him a great retirement. All equines should have it so good.
                              Save lives! Adopt a pet from your local shelter.

                              Comment


                              • #35
                                I'm so sorry for your loss. It sounds like the Old Geezer was quite a gentleman. You are an amazing person for giving him the retirement he deserved. May he go in peace...

                                Comment

                                • Original Poster

                                  #36
                                  RIP Pistol aka our Old Geezer.

                                  ?1972 - 6/7/10 9:15 am.

                                  With lots of medication and a little cooperation from the weather he had a comfortable final weekend.

                                  DD age 18 went out at dawn to say goodbye, then stayed in the house until after the body was removed. DH & I were with him the whole time. The vet was wonderful.

                                  And I am at the office pretending to get some work done and failing miserably. Over the years we've had a few dogs but all have died peacefully at home. The Geezer was the first of our horses to go, and this was the first time I've ever been present when any horse was put down. I'm still a little shell-shocked.

                                  Thanks to all for your kind words, both for me and for him. I read about a lot of amazing horses on these boards - great performance horses, stellar show careers, lifelong companions, 'once-in-a-lifetime horses'. The Geezer was none of those. He was just an average guy who worked for a living as long as he possibly could. I am glad we were able to give him a peaceful end with a stomach full of apples (I went through 2 bags this weekend....) and a mouth full of his favorite purple clover. DH mowed this weekend but saved a huge patch outside the fence just for this morning.

                                  And as sad as I am, the one thing I am sure of is that within a very short period we will bring home another old age pensioner and do it all over again.
                                  Incredible Invisible

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                                  • #37
                                    RIP Pistol, Your Old Geezer

                                    I am very sorry for your loss- it is a difficult decision and a tough time to go through but in time you will come to be happy that you gave this Old Geezer the best ending a horse could possibly have: a stomach full of yummy treats and lots of warmth and love coming from its humans!

                                    I had to put my two old geezers down a year apart, they were, like yours, just two hard working horses who had just grown old. I only had them for a bit over three years in their retirement, they were about 30 when I had to let them go. As much as one thinks it was time! it doesn't make letting go easier.
                                    These old geesers have a way to make themselves so precious!

                                    It is nice to know that there is another Old Geezer who is about to become a very very lucky Old Geezer to be taking on Pistol's position as a companion to your other horses!!

                                    Comment


                                    • #38
                                      Well now I am crying. I am so sorry you had to go through this. I'll call tonight.

                                      Pistol gave you a gift. So sadly, each one of our beautiful friends has an expiration date. Pistol helped you, as gently as he could, walk this frightening, sad path through the unknown. Now you know -- the hardest horse lesson of all.

                                      The known is still just as sad, but somehow not quite as frightening as the unknown.

                                      Godspeed Pistol!

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                                      • #39
                                        Godspeed, Pistol (Geezer!).....

                                        Many hugs to you on the loss of your old Geezer. Thank you for your kindness and compassion.......for doing it all over again for another oldster who needs a soft place to land. You are a hero!

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                                        • #40
                                          These are my favorite kind of horse. The aged and the noble. How blessed he was to have you and even more, you to have had him. My heart aches for you. You have every right to be heartbroken.
                                          Our horses are not seen as the old and disabled they may have become, but rather as the mighty steeds they once believed themselves to be.

                                          Sunkissed Acres Rescue and Retirement

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