If You Could Live In Another Decade,...
ChatterBank0 min ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If you have your pet put down at the vets or take your dead animal to the vets it is not"cremated" as we think of cremation.
It is simply put in a plastic sack and dumped in a room with other bodies until it is collected to be incinarated by some worker who treats it like any other rubbish.
Sorry to be blunt but that's how it is done.
Most vets in my area (East Anglia) use a pet crematorium and they are collected and cremated all together but they also do individual cremations when you can get your own dogs ashes back. They are also quite a few 'private' pet crematoriums now that are run by 'dog' people, and their services, although not cheap, tend to be a bit more sympathetic. Personally I leave them at the vets and let them go to be cremated - I have no belief in any 'afterlife' or feelings for ashes being scatterered - I prefer to remember them as they were.
You can also buy pet coffins to bury them in or have them cremated in or caskets for their ashes. Your local vet will have details of pet crematoriums or try Yellow Pages.
shaneystar you and I have a lot in common! Actually I am not having a funeral at all - I am leaving my body (!) to a medical school at a hospital (when they have 'finished' with it they cremate it). If I had to have a funeral I would have one of those special coffins painted yellow and shaped like a skip!
Back to the pets, there is a 'woodland burial site' for 'organic' (not sure if that is the right word for it) burials near Norwich and I believe they also do pet burials.
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