
It was with great sadness and pain that I said goodbye to my beloved agility dog Zippity this morning. During my times of crying and reflecting during the day, I reminisced about all the special times we had together.
I remembered bringing her home from Texas on an airplane with her sister, Grace. I remembered that at 12 weeks old, I had to run up and down the street with her on a flexi lead at 1:00 in the morning so she would settle down and sleep.
As the day progressed, my thoughts turned to the vacations we spent together. We packed the truck so full with our camping gear, that there was only about 2 feet between the gear and the top of the camper shell. Zippity and Grace squeeze in and we were off!! I recalled the beauty of watching her swim under Rainbow Falls at Mammoth Mountain in California. The trip where we took a raft and floated on Horseshoe Lake, I couldn’t keep Zip in the raft. I’d pull her out and she’d just turn around and jump right back in. She swam for hours, biting at the oars or just swimming around the raft as we rowed around the lake.
Later, I thought about our agility training. I smiled when I thought about the day I “saw the light”. I could not figure out why some times she would bark at me when we practiced agility and sometimes she would not. I finally made the connection. She must have thought I was a real genius! She would bark at me when my commands were late, when she didn’t know where to go. She taught me more about handling and timing than any trainer could. I was always so excited when we got through a sequence without a single “woof”.
I remember how she smiled and her eyes sparkled at the end of a run where the crowd would ooh and aaah at our distance handling skills. She ate it up!
In between hysterical fits of crying, a little memory would pop into my mind, like the time we were at Knott’s Berry Farm and she sniffed the hind end of a bronze statue dog - She was so embarrassed! These tiny moments would fill me with joy, remembering the pleasure I had in sharing these experiences with her.
What will keep her alive in my heart for years to come are memories of the journey of her life. It was the wonderful moments we shared the joy she brought into my life and the thousands of times she made me smile. I am going to miss her terribly and the loss I feel right now is tremendous, but I know that the pain will lessen in time. I would not have given up the time we spent together for anything.
Kristy Netzer



Zippity was a very special dog. She touched many hearts with her loving personality, strong work ethic, excellent Dog Agility skills and her devotion to Kristy.
May Zippity live in
everlasting
peace and joy in Heaven.
She will forever be in our hearts...