Inbred Fred to Jack Me Off Again When I Was Sleeping


Behavior

VIN Audio VIN Movie

Euthanizing Ambitious Dogs: Sometimes It's the Best Pick

Some dogs aren't wired correctly, and no corporeality of grooming or medication tin can fix that

Baronial 12, 2013 (published) | July 18, 2016 (revised)

Dodger airing smallest DeGioia

Photo past Phyllis DeGioia

When my dog lunged at my face, I savage down the stairs. I saw him lookout me come up up the stairs at 12:30 a.1000. He seemed fine, but a moment later he went for my face. I pulled back and fell downwards half a flying of steep stairs. My head ended upwards in the bottom level of an open-sided end tabular array. Had I striking my head on the meridian I could accept broken my cervix and become a quadriplegic like my mother had been.

Or died.

The vet who euthanized him said I looked like I'd been in a bar fight. I cried on her shoulder.

"If he were salubrious, you wouldn't be here this morning," she said, and I knew she was correct. I accept no doubt that ending his life was the right thing to practise. This choice - and it didn't experience like a choice, simply something I had to practise - is non one everyone would make, I know. However, we would all be safer if more people euthanized dogs whose behavior cannot be improved after professional help.

I had been working with Dodger for months on his aggression. Three months earlier that fateful nighttime, my 42-pound, 9-year-sometime English setter had bitten me three times in two seconds; he left six wounds on my forearm under a sweatshirt after I petted him on his back. I was stunned, but I knew what to practise.

He had a thorough medical work upward, and went on the anti-anxiety medication clomipramine after no physical cause for his behavior change was found. I chosen in a certified trainer, a woman highly experienced in dog assailment. When she arrived, she said, "I cannot guarantee he won't bite over again."

Dodger seemed to exist getting better and although he'd snapped at me a few times he hadn't broken skin. I thought his bite inhibition was back, and that as long as I didn't startle him, information technology would be okay.

I was utterly wrong.

Beingness attacked by someone you lot dear is a visceral slam to your gut. For a brusk while, rational thought is gone. It happens and so speedily. Your body shakes, and your heart pounds as the instinctive fight-or-flight response is gear up off. I cried that dark as I iced my face, wishing I could ice half of my body. Beingness bitten past my own dog was a traumatizing upshot, a betrayal of trust by a dearest canine who'd always slept on my bed.

Dodger had been anxious enough when he arrived five years agone to wear downwardly a path in the back yard within three days. He'd always been snappy when startled. Exercise was never lacking, as we frequently went to fenced, off-leash canis familiaris parks. Even so, last wintertime I noticed he was much more anxious than he used to be.

When I started talking to people about him, I realized that many friends have euthanized aggressive dogs, including i who owns a canis familiaris training schoolhouse – and so did one of the preparation school'due south co-owners. Veterinarians too: Years agone, Dr. Teri Oursler brought abode a 3-year-old rescued beagle. Every time he had gotten in his former possessor's mode, she kicked him, and so she kicked him when she shoved him into the kennel. Dr. Oursler consulted with veterinary behaviorists who told her she could non cure Sherman, and that all she could practice was meliorate his behavior and try non to put him in any situation where he could cause impairment. 3 months later, Sherman attacked her viii-year-old son'southward human foot, leaving viii puncture wounds. It was his fourth seize with teeth and by far the most aggressive and unprovoked. Sherman was euthanized.

Eight years later, Dr. Oursler still struggles with the guilt of putting Sherman'south needs above the safety of her children.

"I will never forget the sounds of his attack and my child screaming," she said. "He taught me that some animals are wired incorrect and cannot be fixed, only like some people. Think of Ted Bundy. Sherman taught me that euthanasia of a severely anxious animal is relief of suffering as much as euthanasia for a physical problem is relief of suffering. He taught me that euthanasia for a beliefs problem relieves man suffering equally much every bit animal suffering."

Some aggressive dogs can be helped by a good trainer or veterinary behaviorist, and that is where people should offset to work with the canis familiaris; getting professional assist can make the needed divergence. Just I now believe strongly that some dogs - like Dodger - aren't wired correctly, and no amount of training or medication can ready broken wiring.

From where I'm sitting, too many people make excuses for repeat offenders, no matter if the cause is medical or otherwise, rather than actually addressing the problem even if it'south escalating. They wait until a disaster transpires. Sometimes they don't even realize that's what they're doing.

What I realized later, through my grief, was that I'd been walking on egg shells effectually him and that relief was a large part of my emotional response. More often than not it was sadness. In the first few days anger was a large part of information technology: That he suffered from anxiety, because I could have broken my neck, because I will never again run into his stunningly graceful run.

I struggle with his unhappiness despite all my efforts, and I wonder when or if that will ever terminate. A rip in my soul feels like it might never heal.

In my sadness I turned to Dr. Michele Gaspar, both a veterinarian and man therapist.

"At that place are some dogs who are mentally ill, either due to genetics, trauma or their evolution," she said. "I capeesh the effort that people put into agreement them, just some of these dogs just never are normal. I don't call back meds would accept helped Dodger. Escalating behavior is not skilful in any species. Dogs should be mentally potent enough not to startle in a domicile environment."

Dr. Gaspar said she is increasingly intolerant of dogs and cats with behavioral issues, but it seems to her that equally a society we effort to overcome these issues in pets more than we do with people.

At least I have the condolement that he will never get worse. He won't ever bite anyone else, simply because he can't. Children tin can be allowed in my house again, and I won't ever be sued because Dodger hurt someone. Nor volition he get turned away past my veterinary clinic considering he bites the staff. These are the things I tell myself when I'm trying to feel better. They are not pocket-sized comforts.

The frightening statistics for canis familiaris bites account for a lot of fright and hateful feelings about dogs. Bitten children, the about common victims, often grow up to be afraid of dogs. Bites bear on people who work with dogs: boarding kennel operators and pet-sitters, trainers, rescue group volunteers, and veterinary staff. Veterinarians and veterinary technicians receive many of those bites, affecting how they experience about their profession and future clients.

Dr. Beth Carmine discussed her reaction to an aggressive patient on a message board of the Veterinarian Information Network:

"In all the years I have worked in a veterinary clinic I accept never been bitten in the confront (before today). It created a fear I don't call up I have ever dealt with. The consummate lack of warning from the domestic dog has left me very insecure. I have been bitten and scratched a lot in the terminal 25 years, merely never have I felt so minor and vulnerable every bit I did today. Seeing those teeth coming at your face and having absolutely no control creates an emotional experience that y'all can't imagine or describe."

Y'all can't imagine or describe it, but if you'd lived it, her words ring true.

That twenty-four hour period nearly three years agone changed the fashion Dr. Cherry-red practices. She has go more cautious during exams. She keeps her head and face at a safer distance, only approaches a domestic dog from the side where she has plenty of opportunity to back off chop-chop, and uses muzzles more oftentimes.

"I am definitely jumpier than I used to exist, which can be embarrassing," she said.

What I have never understood, even before Dodger came into my life, was how people could keep dogs who bit people or other animals repeatedly and simply live with information technology. That's an unacceptable risk. While owners may accept it for themselves, it is immoral for them to take it for anyone else. I also believe it is wrong to turn the dog over to a shelter or rescue, and even worse not to disembalm the truth about aggressive behavior. There's enough bad stuff in the world that people cannot control; sending forth a domestic dog who will hurt someone is a moral failing.

Imagine what you lot would feel after your aggressive domestic dog mauled a toddler's face. Imagine what you would feel if a stranger'due south dog attacked you or your child. Wouldn't you wonder, forever, why the dog's owner didn't do something virtually the dog's escalating behavior when they could have?

I don't take to wonder about that any more. As I proceed to sort through and address my feelings almost Dodger, what I could have done and what I finally did, I am secure in knowing that ending his life was the correct affair to do.

"Expiry is the ultimate loss but non the ultimate harm," said Dr. Gaspar. I agree.

UPDATE

It's been exactly 1 year since I euthanized Dodger, which was one of the worst episodes of my life. I'1000 thankful to anybody who has written. The comments from readers have been enormously helpful and are full of solace. (We didn't publish the handful that essentially said, "How dare y'all murder that domestic dog, yous piece of &%#!," equally they violated our language policy, although they never bothered me.) I've had lengthy dorsum aqueduct conversations with several commenters. All likewise often, though, I don't answer individual comments because they piece into my sorrow and keep information technology fresh; I can't respond for the sake of my own mental wellness. My pain has eased greatly, but it is still nearby, as though all that's needed to unleash information technology is to open a cabinet.

This subject area is filled with angst and guilt, not to mention shame at a perceived inability to "train" the aggression out of a beloved dog. Some of our solutions involved catastrophe the life of someone nosotros love with all our heart in order to protect others and ourselves. I cringe every time I read nigh another mauling by a canis familiaris, and I wonder if the owners of those maulers experience the massive guilt and regret that I would. I could not live with myself if my domestic dog hurt someone that way.

Thankfully, I never felt guilty about euthanzing my boy, and did not regret my pick; this is non the case for everyone. Then and now, I didn't experience every bit though it was a selection; it felt like something I had to practise. Considering of his protectiveness of that stairwell landing, he would have lunged at me again, and the kind of luck I had walking away from that fall is not going to happen twice. I still don't sympathize how I walked away the start time, landing crumpled up and passed out inside an cease table with a painful and swollen body.

The physical scars are fading, and some of the emotional ones are too, but it takes longer than we recall it volition. Whenever I come across someone with an English setter, I stop and enquire if I can pet information technology. Sometimes I weep. Information technology's embarrassing, but then what? We must keep our hearts and souls intact.

I yet weep remembering Dodger's head resting on my genu and looking deeply into my eyes: connecting, bonding, trusting. It's the behavior of his I miss the well-nigh, although I deeply loved his giddy sense of humor. Needless to say, I never miss being afraid of him, and I recall well why I chose to euthanize him. But that doesn't hateful I can't take pleasure in remembering the aspects that fabricated me happy: the way he'd greet visitors with a toy; the gentle way he took treats; the games he loved to initiate; his incredibly graceful and swift running; his look of joy and anticipation on his way to the canis familiaris park. Enough grains accept shifted in my sand clock that these memories are the ones surfacing more oft, rather than the other ones. Time is a good healer, and I am thankful across measure out for that.

Second UPDATE

Two years after I euthanized Dodger, his behavior nonetheless affects my household. The cat he chased continues to live a life of stress-induced veterinarian care. The stress didn't cause his physical bug, just it exacerbates them. His temperament is permanently altered, and non for the meliorate.

Dickens was hither first, and he gave "mellow and friendly" new meaning. The twenty-four hour period they were immune out loose together, Dodger bolted to him while barking in a frenzy. Dickens was screaming, I was screaming. Thankfully my long-haired cat walked out unharmed admitting wet all over from Dodger'due south saliva. The rescue person offered to accept Dodger back, just I said no - a decision I have regretted more once.

It's surprising to other people, but I still don't have a successor dog. I'm the blazon who ordinarily finds a new companion inside a month or and then of losing 1; I typically have a strong power to move on. My friends and family expected me to have a new domestic dog in no fourth dimension. No i asks anymore if or when I'grand going to get another 1. If they did, the answer would be that I don't know: mayhap tomorrow, maybe never once again. Zita is happy. Dickens'southward whole world would disintegrate from stress.

About importantly, I don't trust my ability to make a proficient selection because I made such a error last time. In the middle of the night, when fear rises like tendrils of smoke, I'm afraid I will choose another aggressive dog.

Equally for how I feel about Dodger, time makes information technology easier. When I run into a photo of him, my middle nonetheless clenches - not as tightly equally it did concluding yr and far less than the yr before. The unresolved grief is familar. My mother died the week I turned 15, and decades afterwards I oftentimes miss noticing her birthday or the appointment of her death, even though it'due south and so closely linked to my birthday. While I withal miss her, I recall of practiced times with her, and anytime I will only retrieve of Dodger'south sense of humor.

I dear my boy. I hope he rests in peace.

THIRD AND Terminal UPDATE

It's been a long time since I felt the stabbing, aching grief that accompanied my choice to euthanize my aggressive canis familiaris. Fourth dimension heals nearly wounds, and in this case information technology has. My heart swells with more than joy than I thought would exist possible when I run across a photograph of him. I am now able to think about him without falling autonomously, without tears, without regrets, although I never forget that I have experienced this misery; it was one of the worst episodes of my life. I don't cry whatsoever more when I see other English setters, although I ask if I tin can pet them.

I nevertheless dream of his graceful running through acres of lush, green land, equally though he was in depression gear but contemplating a switch to high gear: his loping merely hinted at the speed he could pull out at any moment. He was bred to run races, and he loved running more than than anything in the world, even me. I recollect of the day he took a dip in a silt pond and came out looking like a happy Creature of the Black Lagoon, or his good times with mud.

Those are the memories I enjoy at present. When I recollect about the moment he fleck my forearm three times in three seconds, and the half dozen pocket-size puncture wounds he left, my breadbasket doesn't clench. I don't fifty-fifty have much of an emotional reaction to the thought of existence lunged at prior to falling downwards one-half of a steep stairwell, which could accept killed me. It'due south more along the lines of "Aye, that was so horrible, one of the worst days of my life. Is at that place any more than java?"

These days it's a tale of long ago, an anecdote of my past.

No successor has followed him, and another dog isn't even in the picture. My dog Zita remains happy every bit a sus scrofa in mud. My cat Dickens notwithstanding suffers from stress-induced bouts of colitis (translation: diarrhea everywhere), the latest merely two weeks ago when I had the brazenness to come home reeking of a litter of kittens; Mr. Sensitive acted out, and virtually 24 hours later he had a raging fit of colitis. He probable has irritable bowel syndrome, caused by stress rather than inflammation, and I even so call back it's all related to how agape Dickens was of Dodger, a beast 4 times his size with a penchant for bowling over cats. At that place will be no new pets for me while Dickens is alive. Plus, he runs up some interesting vet bills.

If it were not for Mr. Sensitive, I would exist emotionally set for another dog. Information technology'southward just not meant to be at this time.

I'm good with that.

The best part is that I no longer feel like I tin can't trust myself to select another dog. When Dickens is no longer here, I volition get another dog. Perhaps it volition be my usual rescue, maybe it will be a puppy for the first time.

That's the personal side. How I feel most the public side - this article - is dissimilar. I don't really know how to explain it. Even though writing about an feel is inevitably how I deal with life, the explosion of comments that still get in weekly three years later is breathtaking and however formidable. For a while the level of fresh grief information technology brought was difficult, a bit like table salt on an open wound. But that'south non the case now.

Today, it'south the sameness of what commenters say that disconcerts me, and sometimes numbs me: "I didn't recall he was actually aggressive until he ...;" "I was sure nosotros could go on him confined when other people came over;" "I beloved this domestic dog and then much;" "I idea it was ever a reaction to something I'd done;" and the worst: "He'south bitten nine people, and twice someone had to get to the hospital, but I don't call up he'due south that bad. He's really proficient most of the fourth dimension." In a fashion, for those of usa who dearest dogs that become aggressive, it seems to eddy downward to a deep honey of a dog who behaves wonderfully the vast majority of the time, only sometimes has this trouble and it seems to exist getting worse.

The hardest part is when people couch the question if I recall they should euthanize their dog. Here's my blanket response: each family is solely responsible for that decision. Heed to the advice of someone who has really seen the dog: your veterinarian or your veterinary behaviorist (while at that place are no veterinary behaviorists in some geographic areas, in this scenario they are preferable).

As with a lot of things in veterinarian medicine, what tin can exist washed, what should be washed, and what is reasonable to do are moving targets and dependent on such factors as local resources, owner finances, family size/dynamic, size of canis familiaris, and frequency/caste of aggression.

For case, compare the following:

  1. Young-developed, mid-size dog with sudden onset of one or 2 mild to moderately aggressive moves (growls, snaps, bit when food bowl was moved). Affluent, salubrious, dog-experienced owners. No kids. Not much traffic in and out of the firm.
  2. Adult giant brood dog (Akita, Cane Corso, etc.) with chronic, escalating assailment. Children and grandmother in the firm. Owners have limited finances.

steep stairwell DeGioia

The 1948 staircase is steep: the steps are 7-inches loftier and 7.5-inches deep. I went up the stairs where he watched me from the landing. I was about half mode up when he lunged at the left side of my face up so I reflexively turned to the correct and cruel backwards, then twisted and hit the right side of my face on the opposite wall. I woke up about 15 minutes afterward with my head on the lesser shelf of the end table. Photo past Phyllis DeGioia

In scenario A, an all-encompassing medical workup, medication trial, behavioral consults would all be reasonable and probably should happen. In scenario B, fifty-fifty if the owners scraped together the money, someone could get mauled or killed before any of those steps could kick in. All of us here are taking the road less traveled by existence and then open; in some cases, the only ones we're not honest with are ourselves. Traditionally, euthanizing aggressive dogs has been a topic avoided in public, as though you are and so ashamed of your "inability to turn that dog around." As if. And yet if you talk to employees of a veterinary dispensary, the folks who take to deal with aggressive dogs every twenty-four hour period and have the scars that go with the danger of their job, they volition often tell you lot that there are enough of nice dogs out there who need a habitation, and why would you go through all that effort to keep an aggressive dog and walk on eggshells all the fourth dimension?

When the veterinary technician said that to me, I caught my breath and thought what a terrible affair that was to say. Eventually I saw that she was right.

What's correct for me may not exist right for anyone else. The reasons to euthanize or not are a moving target, and little about this topic is articulate cutting. It'due south a topic constituting a hundred shades of grey and not much black and white. I believe that if your dog has inflicted enough concrete impairment to send someone to the ER, or has mauled or killed some other domestic dog, information technology's time to human activity definitively. Simply that'due south me. I'm more than lucky I didn't intermission my cervix on that fall downward the stairs after he lunged at my face, and it is sheer grace that I got upwardly and walked away with only bruises and a limp to show for information technology.

My wish for every 1 of us is the love of a non-aggressive dog without any demand for us to walk on eggshells. May that beloved be with u.s.a. all, and if not with this dog, and then some other one.

(Editor'due south Notation: Seven years afterward euthanizing Dodger, the author brought home another dog for the first time since and then. Meet The Dog After the Grief.)

1152 Comments

Phyllis DeGioia
May 4, 2022


Melissa Perez
May 3, 2022


Julie
May ii, 2022


J
April 13, 2022


Suelyn
Apr 12, 2022


Milly
March 17, 2022


Rick
March 15, 2022

I'd like to thank the author and many commenters for providing much needed peace of mind. I came beyond the article at around 1:00 am concluding dark, after having problem sleeping subsequent to having euthanised our much loved family unit pet only eight hours earlier. Wracked with both grief and guilt, I googled for stories of others who had similar experiences and found this commodity. After an escalating series of bitter incidents, 3 of which had resulted in trips to the doctor for family members, we finally made the determination that euthanasia was the only option after over a year of trying to manage the problem without success. I was confident when we fabricated the determination that it was the right one, simply laying awake in the heart of the dark thinking about our cute dog who was loving and appreciating 99% of the time, my trust in the decision was starting waver. Reading this article, and all the follow up comments has provided great reassurance that the right determination was made. I however accept regret that we were not able to manage the progression , allowing united states to avoid getting to where we are now, but giving the severity of the latest incident and the hazard of further escalation, I now remain convinced nosotros had no other feasible options. The thought expressed in this article (and the  many wonderful comments), that - despite appearing healthy on the outside - dogs in this situation are actually quite ill from a mental bespeak of view resonate strongly with me. Our lovely dog was non a bad canis familiaris, he but had an illness that we were non able to resolve, and this eventually led to the tragic, but necessary consequence of having him put to sleep. Less than 24 hours since we said goodbye to him, my memories are already dominated by all the good times we had together. Grief is nonetheless the overwhelming emotion, only I'm sure I'll eventually get to the signal where these fond memories can fill my heart with joy rather than the stabbing pain of grief they are raising now. My heartfelt all-time wishes become out to all those who are treading (or have tread) this path. Reading this page has definitely made me feel less alone in my grief, and that has helped lift my brunt.


Patrick Boudreau
March 11, 2022


A
February 19, 2022


Liz
February 15, 2022


Phyllis DeGioia
February 14, 2022


Shari
Feb 14, 2022


Lily
February 8, 2022


Lauri Fauss
February seven, 2022


atlas
January 13, 2022


Christie
Jan 12, 2022


Mary E
Jan 9, 2022


Ting
January seven, 2022


Sharon
Jan 7, 2022


Kate
January two, 2022


Jodie
December 11, 2021


Phyllis DeGioia
December x, 2021

Donetta, I'm so pitiful to hear of your feel. First, please don't let what other people say become to you lot, although I know that is easier said than washed. They did not live with the domestic dog, they did non see the attack, they exercise not understand the situation the way you do, and they never volition. Your negative feelings will likely lessen if you lot take a "consider the source" kind of approach. I'm grateful that your friend is so supportive of yous despite what happened to him, and more than grateful still that yous are now condom from an attack too. Actually, I'm surprised that brute command would allow him to be adopted. I loved my aggressive dog also, with all my heart, but think of him as my Jekyll and Hyde. For what information technology's worth, I recommend getting another dog, i that has been thoroughly temperament tested (even though that is non a 100% guarantee). Falling in love with another dog, one that is like shooting fish in a barrel to exist with and who does not cause concern, will help you lot get over the past.  My middle is with y'all.


Donetta
December 10, 2021


Phyllis DeGioia
November 29, 2021


VE
November 25, 2021


Tammy
November 16, 2021


Sam
October 28, 2021


Phyllis DeGioia
October 11, 2021


Phyllis DeGioia
October xi, 2021


Jenny
October 10, 2021


Monica Celizic
September 29, 2021


Sally
September 2, 2021


M
September 2, 2021


Tammy Moses
August xxx, 2021


Phyllis DeGioia
Baronial 27, 2021


Tammy Moses
August 26, 2021


Joyce Kocsis
August 26, 2021


Kim
August 23, 2021


Bonnie Harris
August xx, 2021


Phyllis DeGioia
August sixteen, 2021


Shari
August 15, 2021


Heather
August 5, 2021


Kyle
August i, 2021


Melissa
July 29, 2021


Shari
July 12, 2021


Lisa Dush
July vii, 2021


SadinFlorida
July 2, 2021


Mike
June 21, 2021


Ria
June xix, 2021


Roxana Cipriani
June xv, 2021


Suzanne
June 16, 2021


Phyllis DeGioia
June 14, 2021


Monika
June 13, 2021


Robin
June 11, 2021


Leslie Lynch
June 8, 2021


Phyllis DeGioia
June iv, 2021


Erik
June iii, 2021


Jody
June 1, 2021


Joyce
May 28, 2021


Amber McKinley
May 26, 2021


Paula
May eleven, 2021


Nancy
May 11, 2021


Claire
April eight, 2021


Kate
April 7, 2021


Donna
April 5, 2021


Catrece
Apr 1, 2021


Emily
March xx, 2021


Lyn Carney
March xx, 2021


Christine
March 16, 2021


Denise Pollari
March 15, 2021


O Antonik
March fourteen, 2021


Denise Miller
March 12, 2021


Grace S
March 11, 2021


John C
March ten, 2021


Susan D
March eight, 2021


mbryan
March iii, 2021


Christine
February 22, 2021


Jodi Montoya
February 21, 2021


Antony
February fifteen, 2021


Casey
January 28, 2021


Roseanna Aparicio
Jan 27, 2021


Rick
January 19, 2021


Phyllis DeGioia
January eighteen, 2021


M rivera
January 15, 2021


Christine
January 4, 2021


Mags
December 28, 2020


Lexi
December 22, 2020


Rita
December xi, 2020


Nikki
December one, 2020


Kyla
Nov 23, 2020


Wendy Stieg
November 23, 2020


Luisa
November 17, 2020


Ericka Marie Howell
November vii, 2020


Wendy Smith Wilson, DVM
October 31, 2020


Christy Wilkinson
October 20, 2020


Frederika
October 3, 2020


Lina
September 23, 2020


H
September 22, 2020


DLS
September 18, 2020


Antony
September 15, 2020


Josie
August 25, 2020


Mary
August 25, 2020


Panama Canal
August 25, 2020


Melissa
August 12, 2020


NayNay
August 11, 2020


Grieving
Baronial 9, 2020


Pam
July 29, 2020


Rebecca
July 28, 2020


Melanie
July 16, 2020


Colleen
July fifteen, 2020


Laura D
July 15, 2020


Rex's Mom
July seven, 2020


Chelsea
July 7, 2020


Christy
June 30, 2020


Stacia
June 20, 2020


Pearl Osmond
June nineteen, 2020


Sarah
June 17, 2020


Renee East
June 16, 2020


Elena
June 1, 2020


Jen
May 28, 2020


Ana
May 20, 2020


Cassidy
May 12, 2020


RD
May xi, 2020


Christy
May 9, 2020


Rosie
May 5, 2020


Clyde Disney
May 5, 2020


Becky
May iii, 2020


Elizabeth Northward
April thirty, 2020


Tiffany
April 28, 2020


Phyllis DeGioia
March 13, 2020


Jessica
March 11, 2020


Phyllis DeGioia
March five, 2020


Peter
March 4, 2020


Phyllis DeGioia
Feb 24, 2020


Emotional Wreck
Feb 23, 2020


Heart Dog
Feb xvi, 2020


RC
February 13, 2020


Toni Brown
January 18, 2020


Michael
January 17, 2020


Jess
January 14, 2020


Joyce
Jan 12, 2020


Melissa
January 12, 2020


Mekah
January two, 2020


Teri Ann Oursler, DVM
December 31, 2019


Shreya
December 31, 2019


Michelle Cory
Dec sixteen, 2019


Scott
December 15, 2019


Kris
November 22, 2019


Mary I
November 19, 2019


Erica
Nov 17, 2019


Beryl
November thirteen, 2019


Caron Sanson
November 12, 2019


Diana
November 9, 2019


Phyllis DeGioia
November, 2019


Daryl
November 2, 2019


Misty McColgan
Nov ii, 2019


Phyllis DeGioia
Oct 24, 2019


Mary L
Oct 22, 2019

Daryl
Gretta
October eighteen, 2019


Phyllis DeGioia
Oct 14, 2019


Michael SC
October 13, 2019


Carol
October 3, 2019


Tom
September 24, 2019


Anthony
September 18, 2019


Jill
September 11, 2019


Beth
September eleven, 2019


Amy
September half-dozen, 2019


Luke
August xxx, 2019


JR
August 29, 2019


Jeri
August 27, 2019


Mark
August 25, 2019


Karine
August 24, 2019


Phyllis DeGioia
August xx, 2019


Air conditioning
August 21, 2019


Lainey
August 18, 2019


Michelle
August 6, 2019


Jayle
July 18, 2019


Megan Rigas
July 16, 2019


Kristen
July 10, 2019


Denise Jones
June 8, 2019


Elle
June ii, 2019


Phyllis DeGioia
May 31, 2019


Kathy
May 30, 2019


Lisa
May 24, 2019


Eugene C Shults
May 23, 2019


Teri Ann Oursler, DVM
May 9, 2019


Natalie
May 9, 2019


Gab
April 19, 2019


Laura
Apr 19, 2019


Joy
April xviii, 2019


Bettina
April 10, 2019


Bernadette
April half dozen, 2019


David
April ane, 2019


Rowena Wildin
March 25, 2019


Doglover Forever
March 25, 2019


Kareen
March xx, 2019


Jerri
March 17, 2019


Madison
March 15, 2019


Phyllis DeGioia
March 11, 2019


Georgia Ponton
March 11, 2019


Camille Teigan
March 8, 2019


Kristy Hani
March 6, 2019


Phyllis DeGioia
March iv, 2019


Paul Jordan
March 4, 2019


The i that had a beagle
March iii, 2019


Becky
March ane, 2019


Polly'southward Mom
February 12, 2019


Steve Schula
February 8, 2019


Phyllis DeGioia
February 7, 2019


Rebecca Self
February 7, 2019


JustMe
February 3, 2019


Teri Ann Oursler, DVM
February 2, 2019


Amanda
February 2, 2019


Sara
January 29, 2019


Betimes
Jan 28, 2019


Phyllis DeGioia
January 23, 2019


Janet
January 23, 2019


Phyllis DeGioia
Jan 22, 2019


Jule
January 19, 2019


Melissa
January xiv, 2019


Katie
January 9, 2019


Alicia Peetz
January half dozen, 2019


Laura
January 1, 2019


Tammy
December 28, 2018


Marnie Prange
December 25, 2018


Amoura
December 17, 2018


Jenny C
December fifteen, 2018


Phyllis DeGioia
Dec 11, 2018


Robin Gregg
December 11, 2018


Lynne
December xi, 2018


Phyllis DeGioia
December ten, 2018


Laurie
December 9, 2018


Denice
December 3, 2018


Paige J
Nov 30, 2018


Catherine
Nov fourteen, 2018


John Luce
October 23, 2018


Alicia
October 15, 2018


Kimmy Hiltunen
October ii, 2018


Brody's Heartbroken Mom
September 11, 2018


Shari Zindler
September seven, 2018


Darlene
September 5, 2018


Valerie Rizzo
September 5, 2018


Paul Minard
August 23, 2018


Victoria Reeve
August 20, 2018


Mao Fuimaono
June 27, 2018


LaVerne Manzanares
June 26, 2018


Tiffany
June 23, 2018


Tiffany Raeburn
June 20, 2018


Kelly
June 18, 2018


Annie
June nine, 2018


Jennifer
June 7, 2018


Anita Szabo
June vii, 2018


Selaine
May 29, 2018


Casey
May 27, 2018


Alyssa
May 22, 2018


Teresa L Harman
May 21, 2018


Becka
May xx, 2018


Alyssa
May 17, 2018


Phyllis DeGioia
May 15, 2018


Patti K
May thirteen, 2018


Phyllis DeGioia
May ten, 2018


Tracey
May vii, 2018


Tracey
May 7, 2018


Karen
May 6, 2018


grrlgall
April 28, 2018


Christine
April xix, 2018


Tee
April 6, 2018


Maureen
Apr 3, 2018


Vicki Biggs-Anderson
Apr 3, 2018


Vita
March 30, 2018


Teri Ann Oursler, DVM
March 21, 2018


Jordan
March 21, 2018


Teri Ann Oursler, DVM
March 20, 2018


Jordan
March 20, 2018


Hannah
March 18, 2018


MB
March 2, 2018


Barbara
March 1, 2018


Erik
February 23, 2018


Kathy
February 21, 2018


Barbara Due south.
February 21, 2018


Ellen
February sixteen, 2018


ballad pepe
February half dozen, 2018


Karen and Michael
Feb 4, 2018


Sofia
February two, 2018


Heather
Feb 1, 2018


Owner of a sweet puppy
January 30, 2018


Lea
January 30, 2018


Gary Davis
Jan 27, 2018


Lynne Coleman
January 25, 2018


Sinead
January 20, 2018


LoraR
January 18, 2018


Martin England
January 16, 2018


Grace
January 11, 2018


Travis
January 9, 2018


Phyllis DeGioia
January 8, 2018


Jean
January 6, 2018


Phyllis DeGioia
January five, 2018


Kelly
January v, 2018


Teri Ann Oursler, DVM
December 24, 2017


Jen
December 24, 2017


Teri Ann Oursler, DVM
December xix, 2017


Dorothy
December 19, 2017


Phyllis DeGioia
Dec eighteen, 2017


Casey
Dec 16, 2017


Dorothy
Dec 11, 2017


Amber
December 10, 2017


Dorothy
December 1, 2017


Phyllis DeGioia
November 29, 2017


Jamie
November 29, 2017


Phyllis DeGioia
November 28, 2017


Nancy
November 27, 2017


Pam
November 26, 2017


Dan
November xv, 2017


anna
November 13, 2017


Phyllis DeGioia
November 5, 2017


Michelle A Cory
November 5, 2017


Rebecca
September 25, 2017


Phyllis DeGioia
September 11, 2017


Phyllis DeGioia
September 7, 2017


Arlene
September vi, 2017


Phyllis DeGioia
August 24, 2017


Greg Smith
August 23, 2017


Susan Morrison
Baronial 23, 2017


Alondra R
August nineteen, 2017


Tracy
August 18, 2017


Heather
Baronial 8, 2017


Mary Lou Ilgenfritz
August viii, 2017


Beth A. Berger
July nineteen, 2017


Erika
July xv, 2017


Melaney
July 14, 2017


Efi
July xiii, 2017


Kristin
July 2, 2017


Linda
July i, 2017


Liz
June xxx, 2017


Michael Kistler
June 24, 2017


Bonnie
June 23, 2017


Pat
June twenty, 2017


Phyllis DeGioia
June xx, 2017


Shannon
June xx, 2017


January Kelly
June 20, 2017


Bonnie
June xiii, 2017


Scott
June 12, 2017


Tara
June 1, 2017


Alexandra
May xxx, 2017


Eileen
May 8, 2017


Annie
May 3, 2017


Allie
Apr 28, 2017


Cris Simons
April 22, 2017


Betty
April 21, 2017


Rick
March 29, 2017


Kimberly Conklin
March 27, 2017


Madelien D
March xx, 2017


Eva Pedersen
March x, 2017


Fred G.
March 6, 2017


Leah
February 27, 2017


Phyllis DeGioia
February 23, 2017


Clarissa
Feb 23, 2017


Nikki
Feb 9, 2017


Anna B Nirva
Feb 5, 2017


Christine
January 29, 2017


Heavenawaits
January 26, 2017


Quin
Jan 26, 2017


Mike
Jan 19, 2017


Phyllis DeGioia
January nineteen, 2017


Phyllis
January 19, 2017


Christy Corp-Minamiji, DVM
January 17, 2017


Hazel Kelly
January eighteen, 2017


Jennifer
Jan xi, 2017


Gillian
Jan 10, 2017


Nikki
January 8, 2017


Sarah
January vii, 2017


Phyllis DeGioia
Jan 5, 2017


Dorrie
Jan v, 2017


Julia
January 3, 2017


Kimberly
January 3, 2017


Joleen
January i, 2017


Lindsay Ann Comeau
Dec 27, 2016


Kate
December 26, 2016


Diane
December 23, 2016


Belle
December 10, 2016


Phyllis DeGioia
December 6, 2016


BV
Dec vi, 2016


Phyllis DeGioia
December five, 2016


Debbie
December 5, 2016


Nancy
Nov 24, 2016


Debby
November 22, 2016


Caroline
November 17, 2016


Phyllis DeGioia
November xvi, 2016


Charlie Pup
November 16, 2016


Phyllis DeGioia
November 14, 2016


Alexandra Fenton
Nov xiv, 2016


Siobhan
November 13, 2016


Lisa D
November xi, 2016


Phyllis DeGioia
November 7, 2016


Teri Ann Oursler, DVM
November 7, 2016


Tess
November seven, 2016


Pauline
November 1, 2016


Katherine
Oct 31, 2016


Pat Chiliad
Oct 16, 2016


Christy Corp-Minamiji, DVM
October 25, 2016


Amelie
October 25, 2016


Ava Henderson-ronchetti
October 19, 2016


Linda
October xviii, 2016


roadbyrd
Oct 17, 2016


Jennifer
October fifteen, 2016


Linda Corson
Oct fifteen, 2016


Jen
October 14, 2016


Sara
October 12, 2016


Brett J
September 30, 2016


Sally
September 28, 2016


Phyllis DeGioia
September 27, 2016


Robin
September 26, 2016


Gypsy
September 16, 2016


Carolyn
September 16, 2016


Teri
September 9, 2016


HJ
September i, 2016


Cathy Brooks
August 31, 2016


Emma
August 24, 2016


Phyllis DeGioia
August 16, 2016


Ct
August 16, 2016


Michelle P
August 16, 2016


Tammy
August 15, 2016


Wendie
August 13, 2016


Dan
August 13, 2016


Shannon
August 12, 2016

Phyllis DeGioia
August 12, 2016


Cat
Baronial 11, 2016


Cat
August 11, 2016

JD
August 4, 2016

Dawn
August two, 2016

Brittani
July 31, 2016

Heather
July 31, 2016

Mary
July 30, 2016

Dayna Williamson
July 22, 2016

Juli
July 22, 2016

Marilyn Killian
July 21, 2016

Pat
July 21, 2016

Pat Young
July twenty, 2016

Mary
July 20, 2016

Emma
July 20, 2016

2Maines
July nineteen, 2016

Shelley
July eighteen, 2016

Donna
July 15, 2016

Shannon
July 12, 2016


Amanda
July 12, 2016


Jane
July 12, 2016


Liz
July eleven, 2016


Kelly
July eleven, 2016


Amy
July nine, 2016


Christine Morton
July ix, 2016


Christy Corp-Minamiji, DVM
July 12, 2016


Tanya
July 8 2016


Christy Corp-Minamiji, DVM
July eight, 2016


Kim
July 6, 2016


Jennifer McMahon
July 6, 2016


Amanda
July 5, 2016


Amanda
July 4, 2016


Jennifer Allen
July iii, 2016


KIm
July 1, 2016


Brooke
July 30, 2016


Amy
June 30, 2016


Phyllis DeGioia
June 30, 2016


Bernie
June 30, 2016


Jennifer
June 30, 2016


Fran
June 29, 2016


Pat
June 29, 2016


Candice
June 28, 2016


Joann
June 25, 2016


Lola Rubio
June 22, 2016


Gareth
June 21, 2016


Hera
June 18, 2016


Melanie
June 17, 2016


Jonelle A
June 14, 2016


Mara
June 12, 2016


Janaye
June 11, 2016


Lisa
June six, 2016


Rebecca
June 5, 2016


Jim
June iv, 2016


Diana
May 31, 2016


Andrea Nida
May 31, 2016


Be
May 28, 2016


Diane May
May 28, 2016


Susan
May 28, 2016


Steven
May 27, 2016


Phyllis DeGioia
May 26, 2016


Laurie
May 26, 2016


Jaime
May 23, 2016


Susan
May 22, 2016


Tracy
May 20, 2016


Helen Weinbrecht
May 16, 2016


Phyllis DeGioia
May 16, 2016


Phyllis DeGioia
May xvi, 2016


Phyllis DeGioia
May 16, 2016


Dot Kewley
May 15, 2016


Jeremy
May 14, 2016


Rich
May 13, 2016


Catherine
May 12, 2016


Phyllis DeGioia
May eleven, 2016


Noelle Bergeron
May 11, 2016


Phyllis DeGioia
May 11, 2016


Kitty
May 11, 2016


Richard Woods
May 11, 2016


Jasmine
May nine, 2016


Phyllis DeGioia
April 21, 2016


Lori McKay
April 21, 2016


Scott
Apr 17, 2016


Dave
April 14, 2016


Pauline
Apr xiv, 2016


Joe
April 11, 2016


Denise
April 10, 2016


Sharon Quilter
April 9, 2016


Christie
April 7, 2016


Teri Ann Oursler, DVM
April vii, 2016


Phyllis DeGioia
April 7, 2016


Christie
April 6, 2016


Sue
April iii, 2016


Lisa D.
March 31, 2016


Teri Ann Oursler, DVM
March 29, 2016


Dr. Tony Johnson
March 29, 2016


Ms. Curtis
March 28, 2016


Laren
March 20, 2015


Butter'due south Mom
March 18, 2015


Phyllis DeGioia
March 15, 2015


Courtney
March 15, 2016


Feeling At Ease
March thirteen, 2016


Michelle
March 11, 2016


Belle City Daughter
February 26, 2016


Anik Iwanowsky
Feb 24, 2016


Phyllis DeGioia
February 22, 2016


Nancy
Feb 22, 2016


Tina Vandergriff
February 16, 2016


Judy
February 12, 2016


Lost
February 10, 2016


CML
Feb 8, 2016


Steph
February 6, 2016


Beth
February 5, 2016


Dani
February three, 2016


Gina D
January 27, 2016


Mary
January 27, 2016


Rick
Jan 26, 2016


Laura Crandall
January 25, 2016


Diana
January 17, 2016


Kelsie
January 17, 2016


Pam
Jan 16, 2016


Amerika H.
January 14, 2016


Phyllis DeGioia
January 11, 2016


Cheryl Godinez
January 11, 2016


Beau
January 9, 2016


Diana
Jan 7, 2016


Pamela Wright
January half-dozen, 2016


Michael Robbins
January 6, 2016


Phyllis DeGioia
Jan 3, 2016


Phyllis DeGioia
January 3, 2016


Anna
January 3, 2016


Barbara Daniels
January 2, 2016


Christy Corp-Minamiji, DVM
Dec 31, 2015


Jean
December 30, 2015


Christy Corp-Minamiji, DVM
December 30, 2015


Connie
December 29, 2015


KR
December 26, 2015


Phyllis DeGioia
December 21, 2015


Tracy
December 21, 2015


Jennifer
December 20, 2015


Elizabeth
December 18, 2015


Amy Robertson
December 18, 2015


MOBinDG
December 15, 2015


Diann
December fourteen, 2015


Janice Lampo
December 2, 2015


Winter29
December 1, 2015


Abigail
Nov 14, 2015


Angela
November 13, 2015


Cee
Nov 12, 2015


Emerge Tofteland
Nov 12, 2015


Kate
November 9, 2015


Rebecca
October 26, 2015


Phyllis DeGioia
Oct 26, 2015


Beth
October 25, 2015


Loco
October 23, 2015


Loco
October 23, 2014


Michelle
October 21, 2015


Emily
October 21, 2015


JB
Oct nineteen, 2015


Susan M
October 19, 2015


AJ
October 12, 2015


Debi Cheseboro
October 9, 2015


Jay
September 28, 2015


Polly
September 22, 2015


Sandy Glover
September 21, 2015


Pauline
September nineteen, 2015


Sue Casper
September 18, 2015


Lisa D.
September eighteen, 2015


Pauline
September 17, 2015


DGB
September 16, 2015


Teri Ann Oursler, DVM
September 11, 2015


Christy Corp-Minamiji, DVM
September 11, 2015


Janet
September 11, 2015


Odd one out
September 7, 2015


Miss Cellany
September 2, 2015


Phyllis DeGioia
August 31, 2015


Sue
Baronial 28, 2015


Janice
August 24, 2015


Cindy
August 24, 2015


YB
August 20, 2015


Phyllis DeGioia
August 19, 2015


Mandy
August xix, 2015


Phyllis DeGioia
Baronial 18, 2015


Making this same decision...trying
Baronial 18, 2015


Phyllis DeGioia
August 18, 2015


Fostering Dog
August xviii, 2015


Lisa D
August 17, 2015


Amanda
August 17, 2015


Phyllis DeGioia
August 17, 2015


Charlie Allen
Baronial 15, 2015


Evan Deutsch
August 12, 2015


Sarah B
Baronial 12, 2015


Lisa D
August 9, 2015


Trouble Sleeping
August 8, 2015


Angie
Baronial 4, 2015


Amy Moode
August 4, 2015


Wendy Smith Wilson, DVM
August iii, 2015


Phyllis DeGioia
August 3, 2015


Michelle
August 3, 2015


Donnaquixote
July 30, 2015


Ali S
July 28, 2015


Nicole
July 28, 2015


Christy Corp-Minamiji, DVM
July 26, 2015


Sarah B.
July 26, 2015


Jamie
July 27, 2015


Chris
July 24, 2015


Phyllis DeGioia
July 24, 2015


Kristi
July 24, 2015


Laura
July 23, 2015


Dr. Michele Gaspar
July 22, 2015


Phyllis DeGioia
July 21, 2015


Monica
July 21, 2015


Monica
July 21, 2015


Kathy Miller
July 20, 2015


Becky Lewis
July xx, 2015


Jenna Ruth
July xviii, 2015


Sarah
July 17, 2015


Kayleen
July 15, 2015


Janet
July 15, 2015


Stephanie
July xiii, 2015


Pam Fahler
July ix, 2015


Teri Ann Oursler, DVM
July viii, 2015


Phyllis DeGioia
July 8, 2015


StaceyD
July 8, 2015


Kathy
July viii, 2015


Anon
July 7, 2015


Phyllis DeGioia
July 6, 2015


Teri Blasser
July 6, 2015


Bearding
July 4, 2015


Kim
July 4, 2015


P.J. Lacette
July 3, 2015


Stormy
July 3, 2015


Rita MacCallon
July 3, 2015


Phyllis DeGioia
July 2, 2015


Jennifer Neumann
July 2, 2015


Laurie
July 2, 2015


MightBeWorthLookingInto
July one, 2015


Becki Bradford
July 1, 2015


Nichole Wilde
July 1, 2015


Repoleon
July ane, 2015


Karen
July 1, 2015


Deana
July 1, 2015


Karen Bordonaro
July 1, 2015


Misi Stine
June xxx, 2015


Lisa
June 30, 2015


Vanessa North. Weber
June 30, 2015


Freda Driscoll-Sbar
June thirty, 2015


Sarah
June 30, 2015


Bobbie
June 30, 2015


Lisa
June thirty, 2015


Mary Southward
June 30, 2015


Christy Corp-Minamiji, DVM
June 30, 2015


Chantelle
June xxx, 2015


Deb E
June xxx, 2015


Phyllis DeGioia
June 29, 2015


Nancy
June 28, 2015


Shannon Haddock
June 28, 2015


J. Masuk
June 28, 2015


Jaclyn
June 24, 2015


A. Barry
June 16, 2015


Susan
June 17, 2015


Michelle
June 15, 2015


Pauline
June 15, 2015


Bria
June 15, 2015


Julia
June 14, 2015


Phyllis DeGioia
June 10, 2015


Morgan
June 10, 2015


Cara Due south
June iii, 2015


Venessa
June one, 2015


Kristal
May 20, 2015


Sherry
May fifteen, 2015


Kim
May 15, 2015


Eileen
May 14, 2015


Cathy Prey
May 14, 2015


Lea M
May 14, 2015


Courtney Z
May 8, 2015


Marking
May 8, 2015


Kelley
May 6, 2015


Pauline
May three, 2015


A Hoffman
April 30, 2015


Marilyn
April 28, 2015


Erica
April 27, 2015


Susie
April 24, 2015


Mandy
April 22, 2015


Kathryn
April 22, 2015


Barbara
April 17, 2015


Susan
April 15, 2015


Banjokatt
April 11, 2015


Bria
April viii, 2015


Christy Corp-Minamiji, DVM
April 7, 2015


Phyllis DeGioia
April 6, 2015


Sookie
April iii, 2015


Nancy Toubl
Apr three, 2015


Monica Burnett
April 2, 2015


Susan Gargini
March 31, 2015


Jane Danforth
March 28, 2015


Jackie Creviston
March 27, 2015


Carrie
March 26, 2015


Kim
March 22, 2015


Michelle Cory
March 19, 2015


Emerge
March xviii, 2015


Susan Grand.
March 16, 2015


Sarah
March 12, 2015


Ashley
March x, 2015


Meg
March 10, 2015


Bobbie
March 3, 2015


Janet Wright
March iii, 2015


Minnesota Mary
March 3, 2015


Abby
March 2, 2015


Amy
February 28, 2015


Sad Owner
Feb 28, 2015


Kari
February 26, 2015


Janice
February 24, 2015


Phyllis DeGioia
February 24, 2015


Lynn
February 23, 2015


Michele Gaspar, DVM
February 23, 2015


Andrea
February 23, 2015


Christy Corp-Minamiji, DVM
February 23, 2015


Matt
Feb 22, 2015


Finnmar
February xix, 2015


Christy Corp-Minamiji, DVM
February 17, 2015


Laura
February xv, 2015


Jayda
February 14, 2015


Vicky de Lacy
Feb 12, 2015


Bria
February 11, 2015


Bria
February ix, 2015


Lydia Quartermane
Feb 9, 2015


Teri Ann Oursler, DVM
February 5, 2015


Katya Coles
February five, 2015


Bria
February 5, 2015


Melissa
Feb four, 2015


Bria
February four, 2015


Kathy
February 4, 2015


Janine
February iii, 2015


Bria
Feb 3, 2015


Janine
February 2, 2015


Bria
February 2, 2015


Nicole
January 31, 2015


Alana
January 30, 2015


Melissa
Jan 30, 2015


Bria
January 28, 2015


Melissa
January 27, 2015


Bria
Jan 27, 2015


Shirley Newland
Jan 26, 2015


Steve
January 25, 2015


Brian
Jan 24, 2015


Andy
January 23, 2015


Bradley Brown
January 23, 2015


Evelyn
January 22, 2015


Jennifer Knotts
Jan 21, 2015


Teri Ann Oursler, DVM
January xx 2015


Andy
Jan 19, 2015


Christy Corp-Minamiji, DVM
January 19, 2015


Tad
January 19, 2015


Elaine
Jan 19, 2015


Cecilia
January 18, 2015


Phyllis DeGioia
January 15, 2015


Tina
January 15, 2015


Sarah
January 13, 2015


Susan Oldham
January 13, 2015


Thao My
Jan 12, 2015


CW
January 12, 2015


Phyllis DeGioia
January 12, 2015


Christina
January 12, 2015


Diane
January 11, 2015


Chris
January 9, 2015


Linda Tinsley
January eight, 2015


Amy
January seven, 2015


Lisa
January 5, 2015


Jennifer Knotts
January ii, 2015


Phyllis DeGioia
December xxx, 2014


Nicole
Dec 30, 2014


Phyllis DeGioia
December 29, 2014


Anne Springer
December 28, 2014


Teri Ann Oursler, DVM
December 27, 2014


Cathy Hoard
December 27, 2014


Toni
December 25, 2014


Teri Ann Oursler, DVM
December 23, 2014


Lisa
December 22, 2014


Jessica
Dec 21, 2014


Phyllis  DeGioia
Dec nineteen, 2014


Pat
December 17, 2014


Janice
December sixteen, 2014


Phyllis DeGioia
December 16, 2014


Karl
December fifteen, 2014


Kristen
Dec 15, 2014


Natalie
December 11, 2014


Katjea
December xi, 2014


Phyllis DeGioia
December 11, 2014


Patrick
December 11, 2014


Elle
December 11, 2014


Janice
December xi, 2014


Hannah
December 10, 2014


Sara
December 9, 2014


Alli
Dec nine, 2014


Gabriella
Dec 7, 2014


Jeannie
December 6, 2014


Paul
December 6, 2014


Joanne Moore
Dec v, 2014


Lorelei
December 5, 2014


Janice
December 5, 2014


Annie
December five, 2014


Jeannie
Dec 5, 2014


Lorelei
December 4, 2014


Janice
Dec 4, 2014


Janice
December 3, 2014


Carrie
December 3, 2014


Janice
December three, 2014


Renee
December 3, 2014


Susannah Auwerda
Nov thirty, 2014


Alisha
Nov 29, 2014


Deborah
November 28, 2014


Peg
Nov 27, 2014


Jennifer
November 26, 2012


Janice
November 25, 2014


Teri Ann Oursler, DVM
November 25, 2014


Janice
November 25, 2014


Phyllis DeGioia
Nov 25, 2014


Phyllis DeGioia
November 25, 2014


Phyllis DeGioia
November 25, 2014


Jennifer
November 24, 2014


VIN News Service commentaries are opinion pieces presenting insights, personal experiences and/or perspectives on topical issues past members of the veterinary community. To submit a commentary for consideration, email news@vin.com.



Information and opinions expressed in letters to the editor are those of the author and are independent of the VIN News Service. Letters may be edited for manner. We practise not verify their content for accurateness.




pullenwhippyraton1972.blogspot.com

Source: https://www.vin.com/vetzinsight/default.aspx?pid=756&id=5912453

0 Response to "Inbred Fred to Jack Me Off Again When I Was Sleeping"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel