What) Stephen Huneck loved dogs for as far as he could remember, but growing up in a family with seven children, he couldn’t afford to get one of his own. That all changed when he became an adult, and the special bond between him and his dogs was never stronger than when he came out of the hospital, following a two-month coma caused by a serious fall, 14 years ago. His four legged friends stood by his side as he learned to walk again. Stephen would go into the forests to walk on trails and the dogs walked two feet in front of him and always looked after him and waited for him to catch up. The dog’s behaviour during this time really moved him and he felt like he was in the hands of God’s helper. Stephen truly believed “dogs make us better people” and that “they can teach us more about love than most relationships we enter into”.
In 2000, after Stephen Huneck and his wife Gwen opened the Dog Chapel (a church that celebrates the special relationship between man and dog), people from all around the world started making their pilgrimage to the 150-acre property known as Dog Mountain. They walked their dogs on the green fields surrounding the chapel, and paid their respects to lost pets by posting thousands of tributes on the chapel’s walls. Dog Mountain and Dog Chapel were always non-profit ventures, and Stephen’s only income came from selling dog-inspired artworks, but when the recession came in 2008, business went sour and they couldn’t pay property taxes anymore. Then Stephen Huneck died two years ago and Gwen has been fighting to keep Dog Chapel alive ever since.
In July of
2011, the amount of unpaid property taxes amounted to $50,000
and the local authority threatened to sell Dog Mountain. Gwen
organized a marathon sale of her husband’s artworks that could
save Stephen’s legacy, and managed to raise $20,000 in
donations and sold artworks. Now she has to come up with
another $35,000 before the authorities’ deadline. ’I am still
in a state of grief but it is nice to know just how much
Stephen and Dog Mountain is loved. It has given me a purpose
in life to keep Dog Mountain open and I am now planning to
make the place into a charity so that people can enjoy it
after I’m gone. Stephen’s vision was to bring dogs and people
closer to nature in these beautiful surroundings. But he also
wanted to give people a place where they could come to grieve
the loss of a pet.’ (1)
Where) Spaulding Road Two miles east of St. Johnsbury on Route 2 Mon-Sat 9 - 5 Sun 1 - 5 1-800-449-2580
Why) I have mentioned previously that Pam likes dogs more than she likes people. My only worry about this place is that it might have shut down before we got there.