"Człowiek, który ma marzenia nigdy nie straci nadziei"...
... właśnie... a jakie Wy macie marzenia, takie dla siebie...
pomijając temat zdrowia, pieniędzy itp. ??
Fajnie przecież marzyć... a jeszcze fajniej dążyć do tego by te marzenia spełniać
Moje marzenia:
- wyjazd do Peru... piękna przygoda bez ramowego planu podróży
- zrobienie w końcu prawo jazdy na motocykl i szusowanie jakimś chooperkiem w górskie okolice
Przejechać Tour de France dla amatorów, zbudować wyciąg na Krecie, nauczyć się jazdy na nartach co najmniej tak jak jeździł syn, kupić zegarek Patka, emaliować jak Ricky Frank, spotkać sie na stoku z Janem Kovalem, duzo tego
A ten facet ma konkrety do zaoferowania - nasz piesy sa u nas, dzieki Niemu
Greg Mahle drives a tractor trailer 4,200 miles across the country twice a month. He’s not carrying supplies for a major retailer or delivering packages for a shipping company.
He has precious cargo on every trip—dozens of dogs in need of a good home.
Mahle runs Rescue Road Trips, which takes abandoned dogs from the South and matches them up with new owners in the North. Mahle saw a supply and demand need in the dog rescue world. There’s just way more abandoned dogs in the South than in the North. So after being in the restaurant business in Ohio for 30 years he began picking up dogs and delivering them to their new owners.
Related: Our Canine Reporter Investigates One Pet Friendly Hotel
One of those new owners was journalist and author Peter Zheutlin, who used Mahle’s service to adopt his family dog Albie. He learned about Mahle’s cross-country operation and was amazed.
Mahle leaves his home in Ohio on a Monday morning and starts heading south through Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas. That’s where he begins picking up dogs from local veterinarians and rescue groups. He has a fellow driver with him named Tommy. They take turns sleeping and driving, barely stopping to rest. Then they head back across the Gulf states hitting Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi. They can cart as many as 85 dogs in the back of his trailer. Then they make the trek up north towards New England. By Friday, they’re in Pennsylvania and the last stop is Massachusetts. On Sunday, he heads back home to Ohio, where he stays home for a week, cleaning the trailer and fielding calls for more adoptions, before doing it all again.