I bring you sad news from Summerville, South Carolina. We lost our
wonderful, precious Ivy tonight. She was ten years and ten months old. Ivy
was born on 29 November 1994 and came to us at IPPL when she was three
years old. She had received her Certificate of Longevity from GPCA earlier
this year. and we were so proud of her. She had slowed down in recent years
and had been treated for Lyme disease and was under care for arthritis. Her
August 2005 geriatric blood panel scores were all over the place. She
stayed in our animal care cottage till about 7.30 p.m. tonight with North
and Bullet and I went to collect the trio after the animal care staff had
left. The three came out, they usually take a few minutes and make bathroom
stops on the way between the buildings. I noticed that Ivy was walking
slowly. I went through the office (where I live) to open the atrium sliding
door which is the door Ivy usually used at nights, but not always. She
didn't show up at this door, so a few minutes later I went to see if she
was at the loading dock door. She was lying there, looking just like she
was napping, but in fact our gentle Ivy had passed on. She looked very
peaceful and there was no blood or injury and I had heard no distress
sounds. The staff reported that she ate and drank normally today and that
she dozed on the cottage cot, her favorite place. Of course she was slowing
down and was on medication (adequan shots and derramax). Her geriatric
panel in August had shown many problematic scores. I think she died of old
age, but am not sure. She left us so gently - she was a perfect dog and
deserved a peaceful ending to her life.
Although born into a show family, Ivy didn't like the show ring and her
owner (Nancy Sandoval) had her spayed and offered to send her to live with
us after our first Great Pyrenees, Sebastien, passed on. Nancy invited me
to Gwynn Oak in Maryland to meet Ivy. I deliberately took no crate as I
did not want to make a hasty decision! But Ivy jumped up (oddly, the only
time she ever did this, she was not a jumper, I guess she knew she had to
make a good impression). So I said yes, called the airline to reserve a
crate and we put Ivy and a lot of used sheets in the back of my rental
care. I stopped in a wayside park - but she produced nothing! By the time
we got to the National Airport in Washington, she had made a puddle on the
back seat of the car, so I went into the parking lot, took her to the
airline, bought the crate, and checked her in. Then I went to clear up the
mess and go to the rental care return. To my horror I had lost my parking
ticket, but the attendant let me through. When I got to the car rental
return area, nobody noticed a problem and we made our non-stop flight home
to Charleston to be met by a greeting party of all my staff.
Ivy was a truly amazing girl. Though she never had puppies, she became the
loving mother and companion to our blind dog Bullet who would follow her
all round the property. I know he'll miss his companion of so many years,
but fortunately he likes Northie and our new rescue Pyr girl Zoe (who we
had to keep far from Ivy due to a personality conflict).
So tonight is a very sad night here. I cut off a snippet of Ivy's hair and
put it in her "personal file" that we keep for all our dogs. Good bye,
dearest Ivy, you with the most lustrous brown eyes I ever saw, till we
meet again.
Shirley McGreal
Dr. Shirley McGreal, Chairwoman
International Primate Protection League
PO Box 766
Summerville, SC 29484, USA
Phone - 843-871-2280, Fax- 843-871-7988
E-mail - smcgreal@ippl.org, Web: www.ippl.org
Working to Protect All Primates Since 1973
Save the date for our next Members' Meeting: March 24-26, 2006!
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