farmer giles;1213717 wrote: i was walking the two pups in the rain and i saw one of the dog owners a woman of 65 with her huge black lab ,the dog is really friendly and plays with the two pups and always comes up to me for a stoke and tickle .the lady was a bit quite and i asked whats up ??
she said with a voice breaking with emotion to tell the truth i'm really upset i have to have monty put to sleep on wednesday he has a massive growth in his throat and i just cant stand to know he is suffering ,monty is 14 years old i dont know how much longer he would live any way ,i have to be cruel to be kind i dont want him to suffer

:(
it gave me a massive lump in my throat ,imagine having a dog since he was a pup all those years then have to have him put down

:( that house is gona seem very empty
has any one ever had to have their dog put to sleep it must be hard
It is incredibly hard, have taken a much loved 17 year old springer in when he lost complete control of his body functions. With a young baby in the house just starting to crawl it was not possible to keep him alive any longer, we'd pushed him on through the previous year as it was.
The next springer, I begged and pleaded to be allowed to take him to the vets, or to even call a vet out when it became apparent that he was dying. I was overruled and the poor dog drowned from fluid in his lungs, slowly. I was disgusted with the selfish person who decided that having his pet at home to die with him was better than having him put to sleep. I will never fathom out why he thought that was the better option, pure cruelty in my mind.
So, yes putting a dog to sleep is incredibly hard, but in the long run it is actually the best thing to do for the animal, and believe me, it's so much more peaceful.