A final home for beloved pets
Some of our first experiences with death and dying often come when we lose our childhood pet. For many of us, animals become part of the family -- faithful companions who are missed deeply when they're gone. How we remember our pets can say a lot about who we are as humans, too.
Bubbling Well Pet Memorial Park
In the foothills above California's Napa Valley is the Bubbling Well Pet Memorial Park. Founded more than 40 years ago, these five tranquil acres contain the remains and memories of some 12,000 pets -- dogs, cats, rabbits, ferrets and more -- who asked little in return for their loyalty.
Memorial
Cal Harberts started Bubbling Well back when the idea of a pet cemetery raised more than a few eyebrows.
"My father called me up and said, 'Son, you know, I've got an idea for a business,'" Dan Harberts told CBS News' Lee Cowan. "And I said, 'Really, Dad? What's that?' And he said, 'I'm going to start a pet cemetery.' And I said, 'Ah, Dad, I don't know that's the best idea.'"
Why? "Well, in those days, it was a joke, and it was taken as such," said Harberts.
"Gates of Heaven"
The story of Bubbling Well's creation was told in Errol Morris' classic 1978 documentary, "Gates of Heaven" (left).
Dan Harberts & Duke
Dan Harberts (with Drake), who now owns the park, is reminded each day of the unshakable bond between animals and the people they leave behind.
He agreed that while people bury people because they have to, they bury pets because they want to. "It's so true," said Harberts. "You're doing it from pure love, and that's the highest form that we can pay tribute to, as far as our pets go."
Headstone
Left: A statue of St. Francis of Assisi, patron saint of animals.
Headstone
There are now more than 750 pet cemeteries nationwide, and in many (like here), the graves are attended to with care that's sometimes not afforded human cemeteries.
Victor
A view at Bubbling Well Pet Memorial Park.
Cassius, Whiskey and C.C.
A view at Bubbling Well Pet Memorial Park.
Mementos
A view at Bubbling Well Pet Memorial Park.
K-9 Veteran
A view at Bubbling Well Pet Memorial Park.
Birds Of A Feather
A view at Bubbling Well Pet Memorial Park.
Stella
A view at Bubbling Well Pet Memorial Park.
Resting Place
Harberts thinks of the countless people he's met over the years, grieving a loss, and asking the same question many pet owners do: Where do they go when they're gone?
"I think whatever presence that we have in the afterlife is shared by everything, by all living creatures in some capacity," he told Cowan. "It would be important for me to have that as part of my afterlife."
Memorials
A view at Bubbling Well Pet Memorial Park.
Sumrah Najjar
A view at Bubbling Well Pet Memorial Park.
Dog Tag
A view at Bubbling Well Pet Memorial Park.
Kotaro and Ichiro
A view at Bubbling Well Pet Memorial Park.
Memorial
A view at Bubbling Well Pet Memorial Park.
Nimbus
A view at Bubbling Well Pet Memorial Park.
Bubbling Well
Helen Chulik, who regularly visits the grave of her dog, Fancy, believes, "we'll get together," she told Cowan.
"If there's a heaven, our pets will be with us, there's no doubt."
Dog
For more info:
Bubbling Well Pet Memorial Park, Napa., Calif.
International Association of Pet Cemeteries and Crematories
"Gates of Heaven" by Errol Morris (errolmorris.com)
By CBSNews.com senior producer David Morgan