T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1200.1 | part of a process | GVAADG::DONALDSON | the green frog leaps... | Mon Jan 15 1990 06:15 | 23 |
| Re: .0
Well, assuming this is a serious note -
> packages in the meat freezer to avoid making chow of our chow.
- here's my opinion:
Freezing the dog in this way willl have caused irreparable
damage to its brain. The freezing will have been too slow
to prevent the creation of tiny ice crystals. There are
other problems but lets leave them.
Rather I would recommend some kind of 'saying farewell'
followed by a period of mourning, followed by finding a
new dog to share your lives.
Have a funeral pyre, remember good times and bad times shared
with your dog, realise that the dog has merged into the
substrate of the universe from which arise 'the ten thousand things'
(and not a few dogs besides).
John D.
|
1200.2 | dog chow... | CSCMA::PERRY | | Mon Jan 15 1990 10:02 | 7 |
| John is right...and assuming you are serious...
frezzing the dog like that is much different than the way walt
got his...bidding farewell is tough, we get so attached to our
animals...but we all have to do it sooner or later....
|
1200.3 | Wrong temerature range | DELNI::BEECHER | | Wed Jan 17 1990 12:59 | 7 |
| Sorry to break it to you like this, but Walt Disney was cremated not
frozen. That story started about 4 months or so after his death.
To date no human who has been cryogenicaly stored has been revived, and
the freezing process used has caused considerable damage to the body
tissues. Cryogenic storage for future revival is a great idea, but
still needs a lot of work.
|
1200.4 | | LAIDBK::FRIEDMAN_MI | Don't be happy; worry. | Wed Jan 24 1990 00:22 | 5 |
| What I read is that the blood is removed and replaced with
ethylene glycol. This chemical will prevent ice crystals
from forming when the body enters the deep freeze; however,
a new problem is created in that ethylene glycol is a deadly
poison.
|
1200.5 | Forget "freeze-drying", too. | ROULET::RUDMAN | Always the Black Knight. | Mon Feb 19 1990 13:26 | 13 |
| re -.1: Why is that a problem? Can't kill'em but once. A
little radiator flush prior to replacing the blood
and set the controls to "thaw".
But seriously, folks, and given that .0's pet has been zip-locked,
we, too, will be facing the death of a pet (read member of the
family) in the next 5-10 years and it's gonna be tough. I figure
the best way to handle it is similar to the prev. mentioned
farewell disposal--to replace the pet ASAP to fill the gap. As
with other pets, he won't be forgotten just because he's been
"replaced".
Don
|