Thx

Thank you letter for the week of Jan. 9, 2022

Thank you, merci, danke, gracias, gunalchéesh.

Thank you for making 2021 pet food drive a success

The Grateful Dogs of Juneau 12th Annual Holiday Pet Food Drive was a success.

513 pounds of dog and cat food were collected during the drive.

Thanks to the community of Juneau and the many local businesses that supported the pet food drive. We appreciate the generosity of the Juneau public. The community’s continuous giving made our pet food drive successful.

Grateful Dogs wants to especially thank the Southeast Alaska Animal Medical Center and Petco for assisting with this year’s pet food drive.

All donations received during the pet food drive benefit the Southeast Alaska Food Bank, Helping Hands Food Bank, local food pantries, and their clients.

George Utermohle,

Board Member of Grateful Dogs of Juneau

More in Neighbors

Weekly events guide: Juneau community calendar for Feb. 9 – 15
Juneau Community Calendar

Weekly events guide: Feb. 9 – 15

Jeff Lund/contributed
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Sustainable Southeast Partnership reflects on a values-aligned approach to financial wellness.

Actors in These Birds, a play inspired by death, flowers and Farkle, hold ‘flowers’ during a performance at the UAS Egan Library on Saturday, Jan. 31. (photo courtesy Claire Richardson)
Living and Growing: Why stories of living and dying in Juneau matter

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Weekly events guide: Juneau community calendar for Feb. 2 – Feb. 8

Visit Juneau Arts and Humanities Council at JAHC.org for more details on this week’s happenings.

calendar
Weekly events guide: Juneau community calendar for Jan. 26 – Feb. 1

Visit Juneau Arts and Humanities Council at JAHC.org for more details on this week’s happenings.

Courtesy photo
Adam Bauer of the Local Spiritual Assembly of Bahá’ís of Juneau.
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Weekly events guide: Juneau community calendar for Jan. 19-25

Visit Juneau Arts and Humanities Council at JAHC.org for more details on this week’s happenings.

(web only)
Weekly events guide: Juneau community calendar for Jan. 12-18

Visit Juneau Arts and Humanities Council at JAHC.org for more details on this week’s happenings.

Four members of the Riley Creek wolf pack, including the matriarch, “Riley,” dig a moose carcass frozen from creek ice in May 2016. National Park Service trail camera photo
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Born in May, 2009, Riley first saw sunlight after crawling from a hole dug in the roots of an old spruce above the Teklanika River.

Sun shines through the canopy in the Tongass National Forest. (Photo by Brian Logan/U.S. Forest Service)
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