Wow that's a lot of people Mark. Where do they all go when then evacuate
that many? 

 I hope you have an emergency plan in effect, and that all your dogs have
collars and ID's and are micro-chipped. That was the biggest problem that CA
had with dogs and cats a couple of years ago with there fires, they either
escaped or got left behind, or rescued, they didn't know who hundreds of
them belonged to for lack of IDs. Hence those not claimed within the first
week were put in shelters and put up for adoption. 

One story was so sad, an elderly man landed in the hospital for two weeks
and couldn't claim his dog. Then a couple of months later, when they were
showing a newscast of the dogs saved, he saw his and it was adopted out. The
new owners refused to give the dog back and legally there was nothing that
he could do about it.

Anyway, I sure hope the temperatures go down and you get some real good rain
and they can start containing those nasty fires.
Hey, try the rain dance, LOL!

Stay safe and be well.
Peggy & The Girls

 
 
 
-------Original Message-------
 
From: Mark Strassler
Date: 6/27/2012 12:58:03 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Chihuahuas] Fla Minister displays humor for Debby
 
  
Hello:


We can use the rain in Colorado. 12+ wild fires, over 180 structures loss,
tonight in the waldo canyon area, 32,000 people in the USAF, Colorado
Springs, Manatue Springs evacuated. The fires in the Colorado Springs area
are just amazing to watch on TV, it is just a huge red glow like you see in
the TV movies. Two of my Chi's did come from Rescue Units in the Colorado
Springs area. Colorado currently has over 1/2 of all of the United States
forest fire fighting equipment/people fighting fires. I live near the
regional airport which stages most of the air tankers. They been flying
morning to dusk over the past few weeks.  We have had five days of 100+
temperatures. My chi's are safe in the house but there are days the smoke
from the Hyde Park fire Fort Collins which is 60 miles north of me is bad
outside. It did close the regional airport for a day last week. When I came
home from work tonight I saw a C-130 military tankers just after takeoff and
flying to a fire up in the Boulder/NCAR area. They can dump about 3000
gallons of water/slury in one drop. So, if you have extra rain with no
lighting, we can use it now.


Mark





From: Peggy & The Girls <[email protected]>
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Tuesday, June 26, 2012 9:02 PM
Subject: [Chihuahuas] Fla Minister displays humor for Debby



  

 
>From Kelly Jordan/The Times-Union
A message on a sign at the San Jose Baptist Church on San Jose Boulevard
sums up the feelings of many as rain totals continue to rise as North
Florida residents deal with the ongoing rains from Tropical Storm Debby 







 

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