I have never heard of such a thing.. That's crazy......I've had a cat who killed a dog once (adopted NYC alley cat vs a feral Doberman) but have never actually encountered a cat who had been really hurt by a dog.....
Off to the vet oncologist now. Hoping Mac has a fighting chance. He lost another 3 pounds or so this week.
I feel like a monster. Despite the strong chance he may be put down, the vet insisted I take away his food and water last night. He's desperately thirsty and miserable now.
Encouraging to hear about a dog living longer with an extreme illness than expected. My parents - not dog people due to my mom's allergies - don't understand why I'd be willing to go into debt to have him just another few months. But fuck them.
Best wishes man. My dogs are my children. Glad he's not suffering (too much).Mac has inoperable sarcoma. It has already crushed part of his rib cage and is the cause of his breathing and weight loss problems.
The only piece of good news is, given his breed (OEBD), he actually feels relatively little pain, not enough to warrant extreme measures at this time. So I have him home, where I can hopefully keep him as comfortable as possible, until he either dies naturally or the pain becomes too intense. The vet oncologist is giving him a month or so, though he admits it could be far more or far less time.
It's funny, but until I moved from NY, I never met anybody who thought it was odd. Those '70s NYC alley cats were bad-ass and big. My doberman-killer, a ginger tom named Jimmy, was huge. Like nearly ocelot-sized. And to give him his due, the feral doberman had threatened me and my sister a couple of times. Jimmy was very protective of us. So one day he tore the dog's neck out. From on its back. Like a tiger taking an elephant from a tree. The cops then had Jimmy out down for being 'dangerous'. A cat.I'm very sorry to read about your dog @arf777.. It sucks to have to put a pet down.. I had a rough time the last time.. ATM I don't have any animals, but I would love a cat and dog.
I have never heard of such a thing.. That's crazy.
Positive vibes sent your way. I think the uptick in cancer has some to do with our environment and food supply as well. It's a very unfortunate situation. Stay strong and my thoughts are with you.It's funny, but until I moved from NY, I never met anybody who thought it was odd. Those '70s NYC alley cats were bad-ass and big. My doberman-killer, a ginger tom named Jimmy, was huge. Like nearly ocelot-sized. And to give him his due, the feral doberman had threatened me and my sister a couple of times. Jimmy was very protective of us. So one day he tore the dog's neck out. From on its back. Like a tiger taking an elephant from a tree. The cops then had Jimmy out down for being 'dangerous'. A cat.
Meanwhile, a day later, Mac is getting slowly worse. I can almost feel his tumor growing. A friend pointed out I wasn't taking my handicap into account - if Mac dies at home, I will likely not be able to lift him. Even after his weight loss, he's over 80 pounds. And I live more than an hour from any friends or family. Between the two, it looks like i will have to let him go by the end of the week, unless he makes a miraculous recovery.
As a Buddhist, pain and death are no shock to me. But I am getting fucking sick of the cancer insanity in the Baltimore-DC area. Before we moved here from New York, no one in either of my parents' families had ever had any kind of cancer at all, despite being chain-smoking Russians. Now both my sisters are sterile from uterine cancer, one by the age of 24; my mother has had ovarian cancer; and my father has had two separate cancers, prostate and melanoma. Because Baltimore is a great medical town and they all got diagnosed early (my parents work in public health) all of them lived. But I lost a dozen friends to various cancers before any of us was 30. I knew an entire family - husband, wife, daughter and pets - all dead from the same cancer (the husband, last alive, killed himself when diagnosed).
And when I worked at an EPA lab for a while in the '90s I found out why. The Baltimore - DC area has the plumes of more untreated Superfund sites over it than any other urbanized part of the country. Every site and their contaminants have been known for getting on 20 years. All of 1 of them has had clean up. Of course in this are, all the sites were government or government-related, so no surprise the EPA isn't forcing cleanup. Meanwhile people and animals in the Balto-DC area keep dying, of the same cancers - reproductive, lymphoma, leukemia, systemic melanoma, sarcomas - all known to have connections to water-borne contaminants. Lots of depleted uranium got into the water table here during cold-war weapons testing, as well as other things like TCA and TCE.
It's funny, but until I moved from NY, I never met anybody who thought it was odd. Those '70s NYC alley cats were bad-ass and big. My doberman-killer, a ginger tom named Jimmy, was huge. Like nearly ocelot-sized. And to give him his due, the feral doberman had threatened me and my sister a couple of times. Jimmy was very protective of us. So one day he tore the dog's neck out. From on its back. Like a tiger taking an elephant from a tree. The cops then had Jimmy out down for being 'dangerous'. A cat.
Meanwhile, a day later, Mac is getting slowly worse. I can almost feel his tumor growing. A friend pointed out I wasn't taking my handicap into account - if Mac dies at home, I will likely not be able to lift him. Even after his weight loss, he's over 80 pounds. And I live more than an hour from any friends or family. Between the two, it looks like i will have to let him go by the end of the week, unless he makes a miraculous recovery.
As a Buddhist, pain and death are no shock to me. But I am getting fucking sick of the cancer insanity in the Baltimore-DC area. Before we moved here from New York, no one in either of my parents' families had ever had any kind of cancer at all, despite being chain-smoking Russians. Now both my sisters are sterile from uterine cancer, one by the age of 24; my mother has had ovarian cancer; and my father has had two separate cancers, prostate and melanoma. Because Baltimore is a great medical town and they all got diagnosed early (my parents work in public health) all of them lived. But I lost a dozen friends to various cancers before any of us was 30. I knew an entire family - husband, wife, daughter and pets - all dead from the same cancer (the husband, last alive, killed himself when diagnosed).
And when I worked at an EPA lab for a while in the '90s I found out why. The Baltimore - DC area has the plumes of more untreated Superfund sites over it than any other urbanized part of the country. Every site and their contaminants have been known for getting on 20 years. All of 1 of them has had clean up. Of course in this are, all the sites were government or government-related, so no surprise the EPA isn't forcing cleanup. Meanwhile people and animals in the Balto-DC area keep dying, of the same cancers - reproductive, lymphoma, leukemia, systemic melanoma, sarcomas - all known to have connections to water-borne contaminants. Lots of depleted uranium got into the water table here during cold-war weapons testing, as well as other things like TCA and TCE.