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Oak Rest Pet Gardens: Career mortician lends his skills to pets

By Christy Smith
Staff Correspondent

WHAT THEY DO: Funeral and mortuary services for pets and large animals
LOCATIONS: 2691 Harbins Road in Bethlehem. Offices also are in Chamblee and Douglasville.
EMPLOYEES: 20
OWNERS: Doyle and Maudann Shugart and their sons, Keith and Kyle WEB SITE:
www.oakrest.com
PHONE: 770-995-8862
FOUNDED: 1972
Police officers from Gwinnett County, local municipalities and from surrounding counties gathered on a green hillside in March to say goodbye to one of their comrades.
Deceased Pet Care,Inc.
As police officers bowed their heads in prayer, K-9 patrol dogs stretched their bodies until their stomachs respectfully touched the ground. The service was for Officer Beck, a K-9 German Shepherd who faithfully had served and protected the people of Gwinnett County.
 
Officer Beck was laid to rest in the Garden of Honor, an alcove surrounded by cedar trees reserved only for police dogs in Oak Rest Pet Gardens. And it didn't cost a dime.

"We completely donate all the services to every county for K-9 officers if they died in the line of duty or if they're still active and died of natural causes," said Kyle Shugart, co-owner of Oak Rest Pet Gardens.
 
Some of the most famous contemporary names in the animal kingdom were cared for by the Shugarts: Beauregard, Lewis Grizzard's basset hound; several K-9 officers; and Willie B. of Zoo Atlanta.

Men and women who enter the mortuary business usually are born with a love of the craft. As a little boy, Doyle Shugart held funerals for neighborhood pets. When he grew up, Shugart studied mortuary science, became a licensed funeral director and built a satisfying 38-year-long career with H.M. Patterson and Sons Funeral Home in Atlanta. During his time laying people to rest, Shugart started getting requests for someone to bury household pets.

Responding to a need, Shugart began arranging funerals for pets, and the company Deceased Pet Care was born. For 10 years, Shugart ran Deceased Pet Care from a home office, while continuing to work full time for H.M. Patterson and Sons.

"One of Dad's first burials was a 6-foot boa constrictor in a solid oak casket," Kyle Shugart said.

In 1982, as Atlanta's outskirts became less rural, Shugart mortgaged his house to purchase a crematory and some land on Peachtree Road in Chamblee for a pet cemetery. Why would a pet owner opt for cremation?

"Apartment living," Kyle said. "And a lot of people have horses, but they don't have large acreage, so they board their horse at a stables. What do you do with a horse when it dies? You'd need a machine just to dig a grave large enough to hold it."
Both sons followed their dad through mortuary college, and Doyle is on the board of directors of the International Association of Pet Cemeteries.

Oak Rest Pet Gardens in Bethlehem was originally a cantaloupe farm. When the owners' house burned down, they left the cantaloupe business and sold the land to the Shugarts in 1986. Keith had completed landscape school, and the family labored to sew grass, plant gardens and construct by hand the gazebo, fountain, pond, office and rock pathways he designed.

Pet owners may choose a simple cremation or design a funeral for their beloved pet. The pet is embalmed, reposed in a casket, and a respectful service is conducted by one of two on-staff ministers in a chapel or the outdoor gazebo. The owner may take home the remains or bury the animal under a carved headstone in the gardens.

RISKS: "Today, our risk is cremation liability," Kyle said. "In this business, you can't make mistakes."

REWARDS: "Dad had this vision that, with as much love as pets give and how attached you get to them, a service needed to be established," Kyle said.
"There was nothing else like it around. He really was ahead of his time, and he is seeing his vision grow."

Please visit http://gwinnettdailypost.com :: gwinnettdailypost.com.

 

Gwinnett Daily Post
February 15, 2008

'Great dog' laid to rest
Police remember K-9 as crimefighting machine

By Melissa Wilson
Staff Writer

DACULA - Officers smiled as they remembered his uncanny ability to track a bad guy, his agility and his friendly personality.  

A veteran of the Gwinnett County Police Department for more than five years, many memories of K-9 Beny's exciting life as a police dog were recounted by all who attended as he was laid to rest at the Oak Rest Pet Gardens in Dacula On Thursday afternoon.

Officers and friends from around the county gathered as Beny's casket was carried into the Garden of Honor by a six-man honor guard and placed alongside 34 other faithful K-9s.

Having lived at home with handler John Surowiec and his family for most of his career days, the 13 year old German Shepherd was well into retirement when he suffered a debilitating stroke and was put to sleep Monday.

"They're just a such a part of the family," Surowiec said.  "He was a great dog...alot of fond memories."

With fellow K-9s' barks echoing in the background.  Beny's trainer and first handler Lawrenceville officer Emory Griffith spoke to a intimate crowd, recalling Beny's small stature but fearless heart when it came to police work.

K9picture208.gif
Lawrenceville Police Dept. Honor Guard leads a procession with K-9 Beny at Oak Rest Pet Gardens

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Officer John Surowiec comforts his son Luke, after the flag covering K-9 Beny's casket was presented

Affectionately known to many as "Mr. B, "Griffith said the dog was often brought to training sessions even after his retirement to show K-9s new on the force how the job was done.

"He caught people wanted for murder, burglaries, home invasions - he was a machine," Griffith said.

Surowiec recalled nights running after a suspect with Beny at his side, helping him execute a successful takedown and arrest.

"He was great with the family but could then change gears into a crimefighting machine," Surowiec said.

Though the handler lost a partner, he and his wife Patti and children Luke, 7, and Alex, 3, said they also lost a friend and member of the family.

Luke said, "No thank you," when asked if he wanted to say something about his faithful dog, but smiled when his dad showed a picture and letter Luke had drawn for Beny and placed inside his casket.

"You were a great dog," the crayon written letter read.

Many who attended the funeral called him one of Gwinnett County's finest on the force.

"He had a heart of a lion", Surowiec said.


click here to download file

The Atlanta Journal and Constitution
       February 1, 2007
A solemn day as K-9 hero is laid to rest

click here to download video

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The Atlanta Journal and Constitution
June 15, 2005
K-9 Officer Cisco goes to reward
after fine service

click here to download file

The Atlanta Journal and Constitution
December 16, 2004
Pet services can mirror
human funeral rituals

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Dekalb Neighbor
June 30, 2004
Resting place: 
a closer
look at an
animal
funeral home

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Atlanta Magazine March 2004  
Pet Cemetery
For three Decades, the Shugart's have
helped Atlantans cope with the loss of
their loved ones.

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Calhoun Times 
June 2002
Shugart is president
of pet cemetery association

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Calhoun Times
January 2, 2002
Doyle helps grieving
pet owners

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The Atlanta Journal and Constitution
December 25, 2001
Pet cemetery an idyll to
unconditional love

click here to download file

Pets Monthly
Publication of The Atlanta Journal
and Constitution
Dealing with loss of a beloved pet

click here to download file

Gwinnett Loaf of Creative Loafing
August 29, 1998
Animal Love
Gwinnett business' cater
to pets from cradle to grave

click here to download file

 
 

 

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