About Me

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Hi! I'm Eunice and I live in Bolton, Lancashire, with my two dogs Sophie and Sugar and an assortment of cats - well it used to be Sophie and Sugar, now it's Sophie and Poppie. I first began camping back in 1997 when my then partner took me to Anglesey for my birthday weekend. We slept in the back of the car - a hatchback - using the cushions off the settee at home as a mattress, and cooked and brewed up on a single burner camping stove. The site was good, the views were great, the weather fantastic and I was completely hooked. Following that weekend we got a two-man tent and some proper accessories and returned to Anglesey two weeks later, then over time we progressed to a three-man tent followed by an old trailer tent, then a new trailer tent, a campervan and finally a caravan. When my partner decided that the grass was greener on the other side of the street - literally - in April 2009 and I suddenly found myself alone after fifteen years, I decided there was no way I was going to give up camping and caravanning if I could cope on my own. This blog is the story of my travels, trials and tribulations since becoming a solo camper - I hope you like it

In Memory Of Kip


                           
The sun was shining brightly as you ran along the sand
Your mum was close behind you with your lead held in her hand,
But you were having too much fun playing your own game
And you went too far to hear your mum when she called out your name.

No-one knows what happened but you ran right out of sight,
Your mum was really worried and she called with all her might.
Hours and days she searched for you and every night would pray
That tomorrow she would find you and it would be a happy day.

Lots of others joined the search and kept their fingers crossed
That everything would be okay for this blind dog who was lost.
And then one day the news came that the search need be no more
For your poor bedraggled body had been found upon the shore.

It seems like you had lost your way and gone for a long swim
Then God reached down and took you up to Heaven to live with him.
Many tears were shed that day and many hearts were broken
For this blind dog who was loved so much, and words could not be spoken.

The sun was shining brightly as we walked along the shore,
Forty, fifty people there, and maybe even more.
The lifeboat sailed along with us - its captain and the crew
And all the people on the beach had all turned out for you.

As your mum sprinkled your ashes in a line along the sand
A rainbow came across the sea, sent by God's own hand,
And as she looked up to the sky your mum did softly say
"Sleep tight sweet Kip, you're safe now, I know you'll be okay"





Although the poem is my own my thanks must go to Rebecca Ashworth of http://www.sitstaycapture.co.uk/ for allowing me to use this lovely photo which she took on the day of Kip's celebration.

Saturday June 30th 2012 - Kip's Celebration

It was the day of Kip's celebration and the sun was shining as I arrived at the village hall in Low Hauxley, Northumberland, just before 5pm; several Doglost helpers were already there and more were arriving by the minute, most of them with at least one dog and some with two or three. When everyone was assembled we set off down the path with Sylvia and her other dog Belle leading the way, and after walking for a distance through the dunes we went down onto the beach, where many of the dogs, including Sophie and Sugar, were let off their leads to run and play on the sand. I don't know how far we walked, it must have been at least a mile if not a bit more; we were heading for the spot where Sylvia used to let Kip off the lead and where his ashes would be scattered. We even had a seagoing 'escort' in the form of the Blyth lifeboat and its crew, which sailed slowly along parallel to the shore; it seemed that one of the Doglost helpers had something to do with that, and though 'officially' it was a training exercise they had turned out in memory of Kip.

Now although we'd set off in glorious sunshine we had only got about halfway when the sky clouded over and the rain came in a short but heavy shower - added to that was the gale blowing along the beach so we all got pretty wet, especially those like me who had no jackets; the rain didn't last long though and the sun did try to put in another appearance through the clouds but the wind didn't let up at all. When we got to the right spot on the beach Sylvia walked out close to the water's edge with Belle then slowly sprinkled Kip's ashes from their container in a line along the sand - and unexpectedly, but very appropriately, a rainbow appeared over the sea. It was as if Kip was looking down on his mum and telling her that he was okay; I think at that point there were more than a few misty eyes around. Sylvia gave a yellow rose each to those who wanted one and we threw them into the sea; the lifeboat flashed its light and we waved to the crew in return, then after trying unsuccessfully to send up a heart-shaped Chinese lantern with Kip's picture on it - it was too windy to light it - we all set off back along the beach to the village hall.


Of course we couldn't get back there without the rain coming down for a second time, and while it was our fronts which got wet the first time it was now our backs which got the soaking. Having no jacket and being just in t-shirt sleeves I looked and felt like a very cold drowned rat by the time the rain stopped again; the dogs didn't look very happy either, so I quickened my pace to warm up a bit and walked on ahead of everyone else so I could get back to the van, where I had a dry t-shirt and my lightweight jacket. Feeling a bit drier (on the top half at least), and leaving the dogs in the van to keep warm, I went back to the hall; as I don't 'do' barbecued food I'd taken some of my own, which I ate inside, then after spending some time chatting to Sylvia I went outside to talk to some of the Doglost helpers in the garden. Food-wise the dog population hadn't been forgotten either; there were lots of dog treats of various shapes and sizes and someone had even made a special doggy cake with Kip's name on the top in bone-shaped treats. Fortunately the weather had stayed dry after the second rain shower and the sun had come out again, so it turned into quite a pleasant, although cool, evening.

It was 9.30pm by the time I was ready to leave, and after another brief chat to Sylvia and a hug I returned to the van and set off back to the camp site. I had spoken to several different people and their dogs that evening, and although I'd never met any of them before then it was as if I'd known them all for some time as we all had two things in common - our love of dogs in general and our love for Kip in particular. Every single person was there because of him, many of them had joined Doglost because of him, and because of him many more lost dogs will have a better chance of being found. He may be gone but he'll never be forgotten.