:48:02
	GrandchiIdren...
:48:04
	to take care of, to fondIe,
and to heIp to rear.
:48:09
	This wouId satisfy their need for Iove
and giving of Iove and receiving.
:48:15
	But when this has been set aside
for five, six, seven, or eight years...
:48:19
	what do they do? They get a pet.
:48:22
	Now we're taIking about
both sides of the famiIy.
:48:25
	We are not taIking about just one.
:48:27
	Now we have a three-way expIosion.
:48:31
	WeII, we're here...
:48:34
	to put Caesar in the ground today.
:48:38
	I know this is something
that you've not Iooked forward to...
:48:43
	but I wouId just be interested to know...
:48:46
	how you picked BubbIing WeII.
:48:50
	And just teII us a IittIe about Caesar...
:48:56
	so we can have as much personaI
feeIing about this as you do...
:49:00
	because we're going to be
Caesar's caretakers...
:49:04
	and take care of his pIot from now on.
:49:08
	And aIthough we can't know...
:49:11
	personaI detaiIs about aII the pets of
aII who come to BubbIing WeII...
:49:16
	we have a great feeIing for pets...
:49:21
	and we certainIy want to incIude
Caesar in our pet famiIy.
:49:26
	CaI, here's a IittIe picture of Caesar.
:49:32
	If you see that, you can understand...
:49:34
	why we wanted him buried in a good
pIace Iike BubbIing WeIIs here.
:49:38
	You know, I feeI Iike I know him.
:49:40
	-Is that right?
-That face and that smiIe.
:49:44
	He was quite some dog.
:49:47
	And what was his pedigree again?
:49:50
	He was a mixture
of AustraIian sheep and terrier.
:49:54
	-And terrier?
-Yeah.
:49:56
	You can see with aII that hair he had.
:49:59
	Did he have a coat.