SOFT NEWS Pet owners are FREEZE-DRYING dead cats, dogs, guinea pigs and snakes so they can stay with them forever

Cardinal

Chickministrator
_______________
Go to the link for the rest of the unbelievable pics.

Fur-ever friends! Pet owners are FREEZE-DRYING dead cats, dogs, guinea pigs and snakes so they can stay with them forever - and the results are astonishingly life-like​


Soaring numbers of grieving pet owners are freeze-drying their furry friends when they die so they don't have to say goodbye.

Unlike traditional taxidermy where an animal's hide may be removed and their shape distorted, freeze-drying is more natural and can better preserve their appearance.

One freeze-dry taxidermist, Chuck Rupert, who owns a company called Second Life Freeze Dry, told DailyMail.com that he typically preserves up to 90 animals a year, including dogs, cats, hamsters, hedgehogs, guinea pigs, ferrets, squirrels, minks and even rattlesnakes.

But this service does not come cheap, and depending on the animal's size the cost can range from $1,200 to $4,000, and up.

Among those who've used it are Anni Pereya, who was distraught when her dog Nate passed away in March 2023, almost 11 years after she rescued the Yorkie-Maltese mix from an Arkansas puppy mill.

'I found Second Life Freeze Dry through an internet search. I liked the aesthetic of the photos and wholesome poses,' she said. 'It was not something I even knew about it but as soon I learned about it - it just made complete sense to me.'

'It really helped me so much with my grieving process.'

Chuck Rupert, who owns a company called Second Life Freeze Dry, told DailyMail.com that he typically preserves up to 90 animals a year, including dogs, cats, hamsters, hedgehogs, guinea pigs, ferrets, squirrels, minks, turtles and even rattlesnakes

+8
View gallery
Chuck Rupert, who owns a company called Second Life Freeze Dry, told DailyMail.com that he typically preserves up to 90 animals a year, including dogs, cats, hamsters, hedgehogs, guinea pigs, ferrets, squirrels, minks, turtles and even rattlesnakes
In fact she was so impressed and equally fascinated by the service, she is now considering purchasing Rupert's company when he goes into semi-retirement later this year.

Second Life Freeze Dry is located in rural Pennsylvania, but Rupert said requests come from all over the US and abroad - including a cat mailed from Singapore and a dog from Hong Kong.

Explaining how he handles foreign orders, Rupert said: 'It can be done but it is costly. I have to send them to a broker who can clear customs,' he explained.

The process of freeze drying is a labor of love but also a laborious one.

Typically, smaller animals take four to five months to preserve and larger animals up to a year.

He explained that the process involves removing the animals organs, filling the body cavity with a natural wood filler before the animal is sewn back up.

Then, he places the animal in a pose that the pet owner requested - often sleeping with their eyes closed, sitting with their eyes open or wearing a happy expression.

More than half of his clients, he said, request a sleeping peaceful pose, but there are others who want a more animated lively expression. He has done some preservations where the dog is in his sweater or on his doggie bed.

'I have a client who told me how his cat would place each paw in his tennis shoes when he came home from work every night, so I am preserving the cat in the exact pose he requested with tennis shoes and all.'

Rupert explained that once the pose is finalized, they are placed in a freeze dried machine that has a vacuum which extracts moisture from the tissue and preserves it so the animal will not decompose.

'It isn't magic,' he explained. 'It is cold temperatures and a vacuum that is what preserves the animal.'

Once the drying portion is completed, he uses oil based paints to give the animal more color and make them look like they did when they were alive.

He averages about 70 to 90 animals per year.

Rupert said: 'People think its the greatest thing that ever happened, or it's absolutely crazy.'

He added: 'I never had anyone regret the decision.'
In his ten years in the business, he revealed some of the strangest requests he's had - such as the time someone called him about freeze drying a man's 'testicles.'

He laughed and told DailyMail.com 'that was a request I denied. I guess, I found out that I do have a line.'

'And, the truth is that that organ itself would not be a good candidate for the dryer.'

He did once accept a human body part - a woman's foot.

'It was a guy from California whose mother was having her foot amputated and for religious reasons they needed her foot so she could be buried complete,' he explained.

Strangely enough, he said the hospital would not release the foot to the family, but after checking out his credentials shipped it directly to him.

He said the foot took a lot longer to preserve than expected and ended up needing up to nine months in the dryer.

'That request came in about four to five years ago and I don't believe she has perished yet,' he said. 'That was one of the wildest requests.'

He laughed. 'There's nothing anybody could call and ask me about that would surprise me or set me back. It's all just fairly crazy.'

He admitted that while he is in the freeze -dry taxidermy business, he doesn't think he would choose this option for his own pets when they pass.

'From a personal standpoint, I would never want to have a pet of mine preserved and sitting around,' he said. 'It would literally be like getting kicked in the teeth everyday when I come home. It's hard enough when you lose them.'

He said that many of his clients choose this path because it gives them a sense of 'comfort.'

'It gives them a feeling that their pet is home again,' he said. 'People are amazed that their pet looks exactly as it did the last time they saw them.'

Pereya said when she picked up Nate after he was preserved it was an emotional moment. He looked so lifelike - just like he did when he was alive, she said.

He now sits on his dog bed in her bedroom, so she can delight in seeing him everyday.
 

bev

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Yeah, I don’t know if I could do that to Oreo.

There’s no mention of the cost, unless I missed it.
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
Go to the link for the rest of the unbelievable pics.

Fur-ever friends! Pet owners are FREEZE-DRYING dead cats, dogs, guinea pigs and snakes so they can stay with them forever - and the results are astonishingly life-like​


Soaring numbers of grieving pet owners are freeze-drying their furry friends when they die so they don't have to say goodbye.

Unlike traditional taxidermy where an animal's hide may be removed and their shape distorted, freeze-drying is more natural and can better preserve their appearance.

One freeze-dry taxidermist, Chuck Rupert, who owns a company called Second Life Freeze Dry, told DailyMail.com that he typically preserves up to 90 animals a year, including dogs, cats, hamsters, hedgehogs, guinea pigs, ferrets, squirrels, minks and even rattlesnakes.

But this service does not come cheap, and depending on the animal's size the cost can range from $1,200 to $4,000, and up.

Among those who've used it are Anni Pereya, who was distraught when her dog Nate passed away in March 2023, almost 11 years after she rescued the Yorkie-Maltese mix from an Arkansas puppy mill.

'I found Second Life Freeze Dry through an internet search. I liked the aesthetic of the photos and wholesome poses,' she said. 'It was not something I even knew about it but as soon I learned about it - it just made complete sense to me.'

'It really helped me so much with my grieving process.'

Chuck Rupert, who owns a company called Second Life Freeze Dry, told DailyMail.com that he typically preserves up to 90 animals a year, including dogs, cats, hamsters, hedgehogs, guinea pigs, ferrets, squirrels, minks, turtles and even rattlesnakes

+8
View gallery
Chuck Rupert, who owns a company called Second Life Freeze Dry, told DailyMail.com that he typically preserves up to 90 animals a year, including dogs, cats, hamsters, hedgehogs, guinea pigs, ferrets, squirrels, minks, turtles and even rattlesnakes
In fact she was so impressed and equally fascinated by the service, she is now considering purchasing Rupert's company when he goes into semi-retirement later this year.

Second Life Freeze Dry is located in rural Pennsylvania, but Rupert said requests come from all over the US and abroad - including a cat mailed from Singapore and a dog from Hong Kong.

Explaining how he handles foreign orders, Rupert said: 'It can be done but it is costly. I have to send them to a broker who can clear customs,' he explained.

The process of freeze drying is a labor of love but also a laborious one.

Typically, smaller animals take four to five months to preserve and larger animals up to a year.

He explained that the process involves removing the animals organs, filling the body cavity with a natural wood filler before the animal is sewn back up.

Then, he places the animal in a pose that the pet owner requested - often sleeping with their eyes closed, sitting with their eyes open or wearing a happy expression.

More than half of his clients, he said, request a sleeping peaceful pose, but there are others who want a more animated lively expression. He has done some preservations where the dog is in his sweater or on his doggie bed.

'I have a client who told me how his cat would place each paw in his tennis shoes when he came home from work every night, so I am preserving the cat in the exact pose he requested with tennis shoes and all.'

Rupert explained that once the pose is finalized, they are placed in a freeze dried machine that has a vacuum which extracts moisture from the tissue and preserves it so the animal will not decompose.

'It isn't magic,' he explained. 'It is cold temperatures and a vacuum that is what preserves the animal.'

Once the drying portion is completed, he uses oil based paints to give the animal more color and make them look like they did when they were alive.

He averages about 70 to 90 animals per year.

Rupert said: 'People think its the greatest thing that ever happened, or it's absolutely crazy.'

He added: 'I never had anyone regret the decision.'
In his ten years in the business, he revealed some of the strangest requests he's had - such as the time someone called him about freeze drying a man's 'testicles.'

He laughed and told DailyMail.com 'that was a request I denied. I guess, I found out that I do have a line.'

'And, the truth is that that organ itself would not be a good candidate for the dryer.'

He did once accept a human body part - a woman's foot.

'It was a guy from California whose mother was having her foot amputated and for religious reasons they needed her foot so she could be buried complete,' he explained.

Strangely enough, he said the hospital would not release the foot to the family, but after checking out his credentials shipped it directly to him.

He said the foot took a lot longer to preserve than expected and ended up needing up to nine months in the dryer.

'That request came in about four to five years ago and I don't believe she has perished yet,' he said. 'That was one of the wildest requests.'

He laughed. 'There's nothing anybody could call and ask me about that would surprise me or set me back. It's all just fairly crazy.'

He admitted that while he is in the freeze -dry taxidermy business, he doesn't think he would choose this option for his own pets when they pass.

'From a personal standpoint, I would never want to have a pet of mine preserved and sitting around,' he said. 'It would literally be like getting kicked in the teeth everyday when I come home. It's hard enough when you lose them.'

He said that many of his clients choose this path because it gives them a sense of 'comfort.'

'It gives them a feeling that their pet is home again,' he said. 'People are amazed that their pet looks exactly as it did the last time they saw them.'

Pereya said when she picked up Nate after he was preserved it was an emotional moment. He looked so lifelike - just like he did when he was alive, she said.

He now sits on his dog bed in her bedroom, so she can delight in seeing him everyday.
Ummm no!
 

Johnny Twoguns

Senior Member
Go to the link for the rest of the unbelievable pics.

Fur-ever friends! Pet owners are FREEZE-DRYING dead cats, dogs, guinea pigs and snakes so they can stay with them forever - and the results are astonishingly life-like​


Soaring numbers of grieving pet owners are freeze-drying their furry friends when they die so they don't have to say goodbye.

Unlike traditional taxidermy where an animal's hide may be removed and their shape distorted, freeze-drying is more natural and can better preserve their appearance.

One freeze-dry taxidermist, Chuck Rupert, who owns a company called Second Life Freeze Dry, told DailyMail.com that he typically preserves up to 90 animals a year, including dogs, cats, hamsters, hedgehogs, guinea pigs, ferrets, squirrels, minks and even rattlesnakes.

But this service does not come cheap, and depending on the animal's size the cost can range from $1,200 to $4,000, and up.

Among those who've used it are Anni Pereya, who was distraught when her dog Nate passed away in March 2023, almost 11 years after she rescued the Yorkie-Maltese mix from an Arkansas puppy mill.

'I found Second Life Freeze Dry through an internet search. I liked the aesthetic of the photos and wholesome poses,' she said. 'It was not something I even knew about it but as soon I learned about it - it just made complete sense to me.'

'It really helped me so much with my grieving process.'

Chuck Rupert, who owns a company called Second Life Freeze Dry, told DailyMail.com that he typically preserves up to 90 animals a year, including dogs, cats, hamsters, hedgehogs, guinea pigs, ferrets, squirrels, minks, turtles and even rattlesnakes

+8
View gallery
Chuck Rupert, who owns a company called Second Life Freeze Dry, told DailyMail.com that he typically preserves up to 90 animals a year, including dogs, cats, hamsters, hedgehogs, guinea pigs, ferrets, squirrels, minks, turtles and even rattlesnakes
In fact she was so impressed and equally fascinated by the service, she is now considering purchasing Rupert's company when he goes into semi-retirement later this year.

Second Life Freeze Dry is located in rural Pennsylvania, but Rupert said requests come from all over the US and abroad - including a cat mailed from Singapore and a dog from Hong Kong.

Explaining how he handles foreign orders, Rupert said: 'It can be done but it is costly. I have to send them to a broker who can clear customs,' he explained.

The process of freeze drying is a labor of love but also a laborious one.

Typically, smaller animals take four to five months to preserve and larger animals up to a year.

He explained that the process involves removing the animals organs, filling the body cavity with a natural wood filler before the animal is sewn back up.

Then, he places the animal in a pose that the pet owner requested - often sleeping with their eyes closed, sitting with their eyes open or wearing a happy expression.

More than half of his clients, he said, request a sleeping peaceful pose, but there are others who want a more animated lively expression. He has done some preservations where the dog is in his sweater or on his doggie bed.

'I have a client who told me how his cat would place each paw in his tennis shoes when he came home from work every night, so I am preserving the cat in the exact pose he requested with tennis shoes and all.'

Rupert explained that once the pose is finalized, they are placed in a freeze dried machine that has a vacuum which extracts moisture from the tissue and preserves it so the animal will not decompose.

'It isn't magic,' he explained. 'It is cold temperatures and a vacuum that is what preserves the animal.'

Once the drying portion is completed, he uses oil based paints to give the animal more color and make them look like they did when they were alive.

He averages about 70 to 90 animals per year.

Rupert said: 'People think its the greatest thing that ever happened, or it's absolutely crazy.'

He added: 'I never had anyone regret the decision.'
In his ten years in the business, he revealed some of the strangest requests he's had - such as the time someone called him about freeze drying a man's 'testicles.'

He laughed and told DailyMail.com 'that was a request I denied. I guess, I found out that I do have a line.'

'And, the truth is that that organ itself would not be a good candidate for the dryer.'

He did once accept a human body part - a woman's foot.

'It was a guy from California whose mother was having her foot amputated and for religious reasons they needed her foot so she could be buried complete,' he explained.

Strangely enough, he said the hospital would not release the foot to the family, but after checking out his credentials shipped it directly to him.

He said the foot took a lot longer to preserve than expected and ended up needing up to nine months in the dryer.

'That request came in about four to five years ago and I don't believe she has perished yet,' he said. 'That was one of the wildest requests.'

He laughed. 'There's nothing anybody could call and ask me about that would surprise me or set me back. It's all just fairly crazy.'

He admitted that while he is in the freeze -dry taxidermy business, he doesn't think he would choose this option for his own pets when they pass.

'From a personal standpoint, I would never want to have a pet of mine preserved and sitting around,' he said. 'It would literally be like getting kicked in the teeth everyday when I come home. It's hard enough when you lose them.'

He said that many of his clients choose this path because it gives them a sense of 'comfort.'

'It gives them a feeling that their pet is home again,' he said. 'People are amazed that their pet looks exactly as it did the last time they saw them.'

Pereya said when she picked up Nate after he was preserved it was an emotional moment. He looked so lifelike - just like he did when he was alive, she said.

He now sits on his dog bed in her bedroom, so she can delight in seeing him everyday.
I think I saw an Alfred Hitchcock movie like that when I was a kid. Creepy then, creepy now. I thought it was creepy when I found out Roy stuffed Trigger. Sometimes I wonder if they will find Dale one of these days..............

Now, one could make an argument for Comanche. Maybe even Rin Tin Tin, but even that one is pushing it.
 

Terrwyn

Veteran Member
I think I saw an Alfred Hitchcock movie like that when I was a kid. Creepy then, creepy now. I thought it was creepy when I found out Roy stuffed Trigger. Sometimes I wonder if they will find Dale one of these days..............

Now, one could make an argument for Comanche. Maybe even Rin Tin Tin, but even that one is pushing it.
He used to be near me in their museum. I thought it was sad they did that.
 

wobble

Veteran Member
I was visiting in Tennessee back in the early 90's with some friends and their friends who all lived in a compound in a holler.
One of our visiting gang went to get some beers in one of the lady's houses.
I watched as she went to the lady's cabin and she went in and then came back out and made a B-line straight to me with this weird look on her face and grabbed me and took me in the house and then the kitchen where she opened the freezer and did a Carol Merrell pose presenting the interior of the freezer.

There was about a dozen dead cats in the freezer.
 

Meemur

Voice on the Prairie / FJB!
I can’t imagine doing this to my pet!

The next-to-the-strangest request I’ve had in my Etsy shop was a guy who sleeps with his cat’s ashes in an urn. I made a cover for it for him.

At least if the power goes out, there won't be any issues.
I don't have a problem with people keeping the ashes of loved ones and pets around, especially if they have the intention of being cremated themselves and then all of the ashes scattered somewhere together.

But freeze drying? Ugh.
 

Kathy in FL

Administrator
_______________
I don't even do taxidermy and find a lot of it in museums beyond creepy. I can't imagine freeze drying. Neither do I do ashes.

I'm sorry, I just can't separate some of the stuff people do to comfort themselves from their grief from some of the stuff the Ancient Egyptians did to worship their dead.
 

Seeker22

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I do not want my DEAD pet staring at me DEAD from across the room. I think the idea of freeze-drying your pets is sick and twisted, MOO. Quite gross actually.

This is one of those horrendous ideas that fits under: Just because you can do something, doesn't mean you should.

I respect my Pack way more than that. Each of mine have been Cremated and will join me out in the High Meadow. Our ashes can all grow something good. If I want my fur babies staring at me, I have plenty of photos of our time together.
 

ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
WeIl, these aren't the people who are stuggling with
food, rent, car, costs & low wages and cant raise
$1,000 for an emergency.
It's the lefty elites.
 

West

Senior
Think I'll stick to freeze drying my food. And obviously these specimens still have the hair on them, that's just nasty!
 

Signwatcher

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Sick...just sick! And I had a stuffed alligator when I was a kid. It's horrifying when the foot falls off because you were manhandling it.

Just mourn the passing and grieve and move on and get another pet!
 
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