A place for pets to rest in peace Dave Stephens says his business is more about human emotion than dead animals. There are four hectares of trees, shrubs, tracks and pathways. As development increases, and farmland and gardens shrink to nothing, the issue of what to do with a beloved pet when it dies is not always straightforward these days. Burying Fido or Felix in the garden is not an option for many people, and no one wants to think of their furry family member as rubbish to be disposed of. Dave Stevens has created an alternative solution, however, in the form of four hectares of landscaped gardens just off Dairy Flat Highway, north of Albany, where deceased pets can be buried among the plants and permanently remembered.