Our nearly  13-year old Labrador, Tess, crossed the Rainbow Bridge yesterday after a long  and full life.  
            Tess came to  us as a recue dog from Golden Gate Lab  Rescue in 2003. She had a serious break in her elbow when still in the  litter, and her family did not want to pay the cost of having it set. Golden  Gate Lab Rescue arranged for the surgery and for a foster family. When her  break had healed, and she was ready to walk, Tess came to us as a 5-month old  puppy in December 2003, joining another Lab Rescue dog, Lodi, who came to us in  1998. They weren’t sure if she would walk without a limp, but she did fine. 
            Tess’ most  memorable challenge came in the summer of 2004, when she contracted and almost  died from Salmon  Poisoning, a disease so rare in the Bay Area that it was undiagnosed until  our other dog at the time, Lodi, had succumbed. 
              
              Tess in her  last days was still looking pretty good 
            Tess harassed  Lodi in her own puppyhood and in turn was harassed by first Chispa and then Rosie,  our now nearly 3-year old. Tess loved the water and was a great swimmer. She  was also an escape artist, always probing for a new way to get under the fence  and frequently leading her dog sisters on rambles over the hill to the beach to  swim. Sometimes, they got their directions mixed up and ended up in strange  places like the Chevron Refinery (Richmond  mayor-elect's dogs retrieved after midnight stroll on Chevron property,  December 23, 2014).  
            It was after  we acquired Rosie that we finally invested in a collar-mounted GPS, Whistle,  so we would be notified and could track our escaped dogs. 
            It was in  2012, when L’il G, a pygmy goat we acquired, swam with Tess and Chispa in  the Bay. She had been hanging with our dogs and wanted to do everything  they did.  
            Tess didn’t  really start slowing down until last summer, and gradually she gave up long  walks, swimming and chasing squirrels. This was also the time of her last  escape over the hill to the Bay. Even in the last two weeks, she was able to  work herself into a short run when the leashes came out and we took a short  walk around Nicholl Knob. 
              
              Tess  and Rosie, buddies to the end 
            But her time  had run out, and she went gently on, joining the other six dogs we have buried  on Nicholl Knob since coming to Richmond 43 years ago. They were Sadie, Molly,  Chloe, Jake, Lodi,  and Chispa, all  wonderful friends and all together now swimming and running on the other side  of that Rainbow Bridge. 
              
              Rosie  will miss her friend Tess. Louie and Seamus beyond belong to Andrew’s and  Daniel’s families. 
               
                
            Dog  burials, with grandkids and dogs, a tradition in the Butt family.
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