Diner Life
Vacaville, California
Digital Sides
Nikon D750


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Diner Life
Vacaville, California
Digital Sides
Nikon D750
Dale and Tupperware from Pitter Patter Rescue in Vacaville, California
Click here for more information about adoption and other ways to help!
Click here for a link to Pitter Patter Rescue's main website.
Dale- (1 year) Young body, old soul. Dale is wonderfully laidback and ready to curl up and watch some movies. He was found on a wildlife refuge with his littermates but has become the perfect gentleman his fosters home. He has gotten along great with dogs and his siblings. No behaviors, loves attention, loves treats, never is pushy. If you have a spare good cardboard box this orange boy would love to get a chance to charm you.
Tupperware - (1 year) This gentleman is the perfect combo. Playful and still loves to snuggle and be held. This sweet boy was found on a wildlife refuge and has thrived in his fosters home. He has been on his best behavior with his littermates and even dogs! If you have the room for these four perfect white paws he will make sure to charm you. His other brother, Dale, is also available and they get along wonderfully.
My photography @sherrylephotography
Such a nice surprise.
From dry rolling hills
To the shade of Hume redwood grove
Bad Film - classic framing
October 2023
Location: Vacaville, California
Reminder that I’m at Vacacon in Vacaville, CA!
Wetlands
Vacaville, Ca.
April 2024
Harvey goes limp. "No Mr. Harrison, don't give me that!" "I'm sorry, Harv, but you don't give us much choice." . . . Burns prepares a Thorazine injection . . . [a]nd one morning soon they will take Harvey downstairs to an examining room, and strap him to the table. The doctors will drain Anectine from a vial while technicians wheel an oxygen tank closer. They will tell Harvey if he had behaved himself they wouldn't have to do this. The cotton ball will be cold on the tied vein, the needle inserted before he has time for a full breath or thought. Paralysis will sweep through him, pounding heart stilled, lungs unable to draw or burst, attempts at movements aborted. He will know he is dead as the doctor bends to softly warn, "Now, Harvey, you won't act up anymore, will you? It just doesn't pay. You know better than that …. ." And before unconsciousness, before a blurred hand reaches for the tank, he'll revive, tingling with frightened life, no wiser from knowing the next dose will be larger.
The accuracy of this account is substantiated by the statements of Dr. Arthur Nugent, chief psychiatrist at Vacaville, when he observed that the Anectine treatment gave the "patient" the feelings of suffocation and drowning, of terror and horror, and made him feel "as though he were on the brink of death. '
hidden mailbox - Vacaville, CA