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A 900-degree farewell

Carolin Teufelberger
21.11.2022
Translation: Veronica Bielawski
Pictures: Christian Walker

What do you do when your beloved pet dies? One option is cremation at the animal crematorium in Seon. I went there for a visit.

I’m in the industrial zone in Aargau. Between the Mammut outlet and tyre assembly place is a flat-roofed building with a silver chimney towering into the sky. There’s no smoke to be seen. And yet, the furnaces inside have long been running at full speed. Pets from all over Switzerland are cremated here at temperatures of nearly 900 degrees.

Cremation over public disposal

«There’s no way I’m throwing my pet in the trash!» According to Esther Sager, the head of customer service at Seon Pet Crematorium, this is the most common reason for people making their way over. When a pet dies, it usually ends up in a public disposal facility. There, the bodies are broken down into proteins and fats. The former can then be used as fuel in cement production, while the latter can be processed into biodiesel.

If that doesn’t sound right to you, you have three other options. You can bury your pet on your own property (for pets weighing up to ten kilos), in a pet cemetery or have it cremated. «We get as many as 16 people bringing in their pets daily. But we do still pick up the majority from the vet,» Sager says. They’re packed in special, white cremation bags to prevent contamination by faeces or blood during transport.

Everything is well thought out

In the end, only bones and prostheses remain

«Every tear shed is a declaration of love»

And that right in the middle of Aargau’s sobering industrial zone, there’s plenty of room for emotion in these little rooms.

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My life in a nutshell? On a quest to broaden my horizon. I love discovering and learning new skills and I see a chance to experience something new in everything – be it travelling, reading, cooking, movies or DIY.


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