michael.magorian
Banned
Registered: Mar 2008
Location: Menominee, Nebraska
Posts: 875 |
Ron, in the shape I described, I would pick it up, put it in my vehicle, drive a few miles down the road and put it out of its misery. Then after work, find out whose dog it is and tell them what happened. It really isn't that tough to do the right thing.
Five or six years ago, I was on my way to a job site in one or our work trucks, and I hit a yellow lab with the trailer I was pulling. I pulled over, picked up the dead dog, and drove to the closest place (this is pretty much out in the middle of no where), and told the gal what happened. She told me it wasn't her dog, and she didn't know whose dog it was. So I left, drove back a half mile to the next closest place, and it wasn't there dog either. There wasn't another house for miles in every direction so I laid it on the highway where someone could see it if they were missing a dog. Being no where near home, I felt that I did everything I could have done. My boss asked me what took so long, and I told him the story, and he said, "Well that was pretty white of you." I felt a little better after that.
Do what you want, but you won't catch me saying crap like, "to this day I don't know if I killed that dog in front of those kids."
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