A PurrFurred Pet Care Service

A PurrFurred Pet Care Service CUDDLY CARE IN YOUR HOME! Pet Sitting - Daily Visits, Overnight Stays
Dog Walking
Pet

Call A Purrfurred Pet Care Service when:

* You are going out of town (for any length of time), and would prefer that your dog, cat, or goldfish stay at home – safe, sound, and well-cared for… instead of at a kennel or boarding facility where they’ll be in unfamiliar surroundings and could possibly catch an infection or disease.
* You are visiting the Las Vegas or Clark County area and nee

d a pet sitter to feed, play with, or walk your cat or dog while you are out on the town.
* You can’t make it back home in the middle of your day to let your dog out to go potty.
* You’re so busy, you don’t have time to exercise and walk your dog.
* You have a dinner engagement and need someone to give your pet insulin or medication at the scheduled time.
* You have so much going on that you don’t have time to take your pet to the veterinarian or groomer and could use an affordable and convenient pet taxi.
* Your pet is having some “issues” that healing animal reiki or beneficial essential oils could possibly help.
* You would rather have someone who is licensed, bonded, insured *and* is Pet First Aid & CPR Certified, instead of your friend, relative, or neighbor who have their own stuff to do.

Happy New Year Everyone! The 2025 Best of Las Vegas' results were announced and we are excited to say we placed second, ...
01/04/2026

Happy New Year Everyone! The 2025 Best of Las Vegas' results were announced and we are excited to say we placed second, and won the SILVER AWARD for BEST PET SITTER!!! Thank you, thank you, thank you to everyone who supported and voted for us - we appreciate you all so very, very much!!!

12/05/2025

❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
COPIED & PASTED

The bill was $14,000. The dog was a nine-year-old rescue mutt. The owner was a 24-year-old girl in a coffee shop apron who was visibly shaking.

She looked at the estimate, then at me, her eyes hollow with fear. “I have $500,” she whispered. “My car payment is late. Can… can I make payments?”

That’s what my job has become. I’m not just a veterinarian. I’m a financial counselor with a stethoscope, deciding who gets care based on a credit score.

It wasn’t always this way.

I once stitched up a cattle dog’s throat with fishing line on the tailgate of a rusted Ford pickup. The owner, a farmer who smelled of diesel and desperation, held a flashlight in his mouth and cried like a child. That was 1983. No sterile field, no proper equipment, no credit check.

The dog lived. That man still sends me a Christmas card, even though the dog passed twenty years ago and the farm was lost a decade back.

I’ve been a vet for forty years. Four decades of fur on my clothes, long nights, and moments that stay with me forever. It used to be that you helped however you could with whatever you had—not based on what someone could afford.

I started in ’85. Fresh out of Cornell, still had hair, still had hope. My first clinic was a converted barn on a gravel road in upstate New York. The roof leaked, the phone was rotary, and the heater only worked if you kicked it.

But people came. Farmers, teachers, truckers, factory workers. They didn’t have much, but they paid in whatever way they could. Mrs. Gable paid for her cat’s spay with six jars of strawberry jam. Old Man Hemlock paid for his hound’s arthritis meds with a cord of firewood. We didn’t need financing plans. We had trust.

We gave vaccines. We set broken bones. And when it was time to say goodbye, people understood. There were no debates, no online advice threads, just a quiet understanding between a person and their animal that the suffering had become too much. And they trusted me to help.

We didn’t just do it. We stayed with them. We knelt on the cold floor beside the owner and bore witness.

Now, I hand them a laminated list of cremation options. “Private” or “Communal.” A “Clay Paw Print” for $75. A “Fur Clipping” in a little vial for $120. It feels like monetizing grief. People sign a form, hand over a credit card, and ask if they can pick up the ashes next week.

I’ll never forget a German Shepherd named King. He’d been hit by a tractor. His owner, Mr. Henderson, a Korean War veteran, was tough as leather. But when I told him there was nothing I could do, his knees buckled right there on my linoleum floor.

He didn’t say a word. He knelt, kissed King’s snout, and whispered, “You were a good soldier, boy. You’re relieved of duty.”

Then he looked at me and said, “Do it fast, Doc. Don’t let him hurt.”

I did.

That night, I sat on my porch and drank, realizing this job wasn’t just about animals. It was about people—about the love they give something that will never outlive them.

Now it’s 2025. My hair is white. My hands ache. The clinic is glass and steel, smelling of disinfectant instead of hay. We have a 25-year-old “Social Media Manager” who told me I should film “reaction videos.” I told him I’d rather spay myself with a rusty spoon.

We used to fight diseases. Now we fight misinformation and algorithms.

A woman came in last week with a bulldog in obvious respiratory distress. I said we needed to act immediately.

She held up her phone. “Hold on. My Facebook group says it might be reverse sneezing. They said to try honey.”

I looked at her. Then at the dog struggling to breathe.

“Ma’am, your dog is dying. Right now. The Facebook group is not here.”

I nearly quit during the pandemic. Passing animals through cracked car windows. Shouting diagnoses over traffic. Performing euthanasia in the parking lot because owners weren’t allowed inside.

Saying goodbye over a cellphone. Not being able to hug a grieving senior who had just lost her only companion. It broke something in all of us.

But then…

A little girl comes in with a shoebox, crying over a half-dead sparrow she found. Her face lights up when I say, “Let’s see what we can do.”

A tough-looking trucker breaks down and hugs me because I saved his one-eyed, elderly chihuahua.

An elderly woman on a fixed income brings me a jar of apple butter because I stayed with her after her cat passed and just listened.

That’s why I stay.

Because for all the influencers, credit checks, online reviews, and arguments in the waiting room… one thing remains unchanged.

People love their animals with a force that doesn’t make sense.

And when that love is real, it’s the quietest thing in the room. A trembling hand on a worn coat. A whispered “good boy” to a dog who can’t hear anymore. A wallet emptied without hesitation.

No matter the year, that doesn’t change.

A man shuffled in last month. He looked like he’d been sleeping in his car. He carried an old Crown Royal bag. Inside was a five-week-old kitten with a mangled leg, eyes sealed shut, ribs visible.

He placed it on the counter. He wouldn’t look at me. “I just got out,” he muttered. “I don’t have any money. My last five went to bus fare. But… can you help him?”

The kitten let out the faintest sound.

I nodded. “Leave him here. Come back Friday.”

We repaired the leg. Cleaned the eyes. Named him Scrappy.

The man returned wearing a clean shirt and holding a crumpled five-dollar bill. “No one’s ever trusted me with anything,” he said.

I pushed the bill back. “Animals don’t care about your past. They care about the kindness you show. You’ve shown it. We’ll handle the rest. He’s your cat.”

In my office, there’s a locked filing cabinet. The bottom drawer is filled with old collars, handwritten thank-you notes, blurry photos, a tennis ball from a dog who once saved a child, and a clay paw print from a cat who slept on a gas station counter.

I open it late at night when the clinic is quiet. When I feel myself slipping into seeing pets as invoices and owners as burdens.

I open it and remember.

I remember what it was like before software and online reviews. Before everything got so complicated. Back when we stitched with fishing line and hope. Back when we stayed with them—and with their people—until the very end.

If there’s one thing this life has taught me, it’s this:

You can’t save them all. You just can’t. Biology, money, time—something will stop you.

But you damn well better try.

And when the trying is over, and it’s time to say goodbye, you have one last duty.

You stay.

You don’t look away. You don’t rush. You kneel on that cold floor, put your hands on them, and stay until the very last breath.

That’s the final kindness. The part no one teaches you.

And it’s the part that costs you a piece of your soul every single time.

But it’s the part that keeps us human.

UPDATE: Voting is still open! You can vote DAILY through Thursday September 11th. Thank you to all of you have voted and...
09/03/2025

UPDATE: Voting is still open! You can vote DAILY through Thursday September 11th. Thank you to all of you have voted and continue to vote...MUCH APPRECIATED!!!

Hey Everyone! I just found out last night that we were nominated (again) for Best of Las Vegas 2025...THANK YOU SO MUCH to those of you who nominated us!!! ❤ Below are the instructions on how to place your vote, which you can do EVERYDAY through September 11th. Have your friends and family join in as well!
Click on https://www.votebolv.com/ , then scroll down to the Services Category, then scroll down to Pet Sitting, then click on A PurrFurred Pet Care Service , then click on the green "Review and Cast My Ballot" tab, then scroll down and hit the "Submit Ballot" tab, and then the Done tab. (There is another company with a "kind of similar" name so please be sure it's A PURRFURRED PET CARE SERVICE.)
Thank you for voting for us, and please remember to VOTE EVERYDAY through September 11th!!! 🐾🐾


02/16/2025

💔 It's with a heavy heart that we must announce another intake closure for Southern Nevada Animal Rescue. We've reached a critical point where we simply cannot take in any more animals. The heartbreaking reality is that we're struggling with a severe lack of foster and adoptive homes. We're seeing a devastating trend of animals, especially puppies adopted out, being returned as adults for reasons beyond their control. This revolving door puts immense strain on our resources and breaks our hearts.

Our vet bill has climbed back up to over $7,000, a staggering amount that we cannot manage without community support. We've poured our hearts and souls into saving these animals, but we can't do it alone.

Our focus has now shifted entirely to the 115 precious lives currently in our care. We MUST find loving, forever homes for these deserving animals. Once we've placed them, we'll reassess our situation and determine the best path forward. We hope that is to continue our mission.

How can you help?
ADOPT: Open your heart and home to one of our amazing animals! Check out our website www.snarllv.org see who's available.

FOSTER: Become a temporary hero! Providing a loving foster home gives animals a safe space and helps us free up resources. Contact us at [email protected] to learn more about fostering.

DONATE: Every dollar counts towards our mounting vet bills and helps us provide necessary care. www.snarllv.org

SHARE: Spread the word! Share this post and help us reach potential adopters and fosters.
We understand this news is disappointing, and we share your sadness. We are committed to these animals and will continue fighting for them. We desperately need your help to get through this.

Please consider adopting, fostering, donating, or sharing. Together, we can make a difference.

01/05/2025
❤️🐶🐱❤️ For those of you who feel led to donate, this is for the Animal Rescue folks in Asheville NC - they're building i...
10/07/2024

❤️🐶🐱❤️ For those of you who feel led to donate, this is for the Animal Rescue folks in Asheville NC - they're building is a complete loss from Hurricane Helene (they were able to evacuate all of the animals safely) and any donation amounts are welcome. Generous donors are matching gifts up to $850,000 right now, making anything you donate twice as impactful. TYIA!!!

Brother Wolf is located in Asheville, NC. Adopt, donate, or foster a pet today!

!!!An Important Public Announcement!!! If you're not already aware, Lilies are POISONOUS TO CATS!!! Do NOT have them in ...
03/27/2024

!!!An Important Public Announcement!!! If you're not already aware, Lilies are POISONOUS TO CATS!!! Do NOT have them in your house if you have cats. Please click on the link below to learn more.

Easter plants, Easter lilies and other lily varieties included, are poisonous to cats! Chocolate is another dangerous Easter time toxin for dogs and cats.

01/23/2024

Rigoletto definitely enjoys his lovin'...purr, purr, purr!

01/21/2024

Play time with Pierre! Spent almost the entire visit playing toss. ❤️

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Las Vegas, NV

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