I understand your pain. I lost a dog recently as well. I too loved her very much. My heartfelt advice is to leave your pet where he is, make that his final resting place. If you are worried about the new home owner disturbing your pets resting place...don't. Your pet has been in the ground for 6 months and will be in a decomposed state, depending on the weather conditions in your area and how you buried your pet...you will not even recognize what you have buried when you recover the body. Additionally, this is not the way you want to remember your friend and loved one. Let your pet rest in peace and keep his memory with you, not his body.
Make a memorial garden for him at your new home. He knows where you live. Many Blessings.
2007-11-14 01:03:42
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answer #1
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answered by CresentMoon 4
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there is no longer something incorrect with taking the various dirt from her grave and conserving it in an urn close to you. possibly you may want to communicate to the hot vendors of the abode previously exhuming her body? factor out to them that her very last resting position is behind the storage, and ask in the experience that they'd honor her by ability of never digging her up? you at the prompt are not the first human being to flow and go away behind a puppy's resting position -- that is why I choose cremation. for sure, it really is achieveable that the hot vendors will "balk" on the considered a cadaver buried on their land. for this reason, you would favor to exhume her body and both have it buried in a puppy cemetary or have your vet deliver her to a crematorium. I choose you peace.
2016-10-24 05:24:31
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I'm sorry to hear of your loss. I suggest you leave him where he is, that home is where is home was, the home he knew and loved. Let him rest in peace there. His memories will follow you where ever you go. Let your last memory of him stay in your head - trust me, you don't want to have to dig him up and see his body in its current state, it will only haunt you. Good luck in your decision, I know how difficult it is.
2007-11-14 01:30:58
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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I know how you feel , trust me on that . It's tough but I think I would leave your pet rest in peace , he will always be in your heart and with you where ever you go.
2007-11-14 00:46:04
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answer #4
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answered by gizmodiamond 2
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I would leave him where he is. That was his home; this new property is not his home. He will always be with you in your heart; in your memory, no matter where he's buried.
2007-11-14 00:47:13
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answer #5
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answered by missingora 7
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In Most states in the US you cannot burry a dog on your own property legally, removing it would be even more illegal becasue of the disease it may have becasue its decomposing, becarefull what you do becasue it could lead to legal issues. The dog should have been burried in plastic to begin with as well.
Good Luck
2007-11-14 03:00:53
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answer #6
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answered by El Jefe 5
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You have to leave him where he is.I know how it feels i have lost my pet chick and i buried her.It was the best chick i ever had i trained to come to me when i clap and it always used to wipe its beak properly when it ate something :(
2007-11-14 01:04:29
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Leave him where he rests. This is where he lived and where he should stay.
2007-11-14 00:42:38
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Leave him be.
If you do have him dug up, the smell will be horrendous.
2007-11-14 00:52:34
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answer #9
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answered by chronick 2
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i believe to leave the pet where he is... is sad.. i know
2007-11-14 00:49:51
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answer #10
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answered by Purple 2
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