A young mum claims her beloved pet dog Ava died after being turned away from a local vet because they were too busy .
Eloise and Evan Meyer, from the south coast of New South Wales, said their 11-year-old German Shepherd cross Rottweiler was her normal happy self before her health suddenly took a turn for the worse on April 21. Ava was running around playing with my other dog, but by the afternoon my 7-year-old son found her laying down having trouble breathing, and with a white tongue, Ms Meyer told Daily Mail Australia.
Mr Meyer and his young son rushed Ava to a vet on the NSW South Coast.
Things to do in L A : Moon bathing at the Arboretum
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Now is the perfect time to moon bathe in L A This is the right way to do it
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Butterfly fans, take a breath. I
know it’s officially spring and we’re all pounding on nursery doors, anxious to plant some California native milkweed to help the endangered Western monarch butterfly stay afloat since,
yes, milkweed is the only thing its caterpillars will eat and nonnative varieties appear to be hastening its demise.
But here’s the thing: native milkweeds are still slowly coming back to life.
Native milkweeds especially narrow-leaf milkweed, the most prominent variety in California are just now emerging from dormancy, a normal, natural thing that won’t be hurried no matter how we plead, said Patty Roess, manager of the retail portion of the Tree of Life Nursery in San Juan Capistrano, one of Southern California’s premier growers of native plants. “We’ve tried growing native milkweed in different conditions and it’s the same. You can’t change what the plant wants to be: a summer bloomer that goes dormant in midwinter.”