Dogs can sense many health problems in humans. They can naturally tell when a child has autism, and they can also be trained to predict epileptic seizures.
Dogs rely more on smell than taste to identify their food. In fact, dogs have less than one-fifth of the taste buds that humans have.
A dog’s nose works one million times better than a human’s nose.
Dogs have the ability to sense changes in static electricity and barometric pressure. Because of this, dogs can often predict changes in the weather.
The greyhound is documented as early as 6000 years ago in Egypt. The greyhound is the fastest dog, reaching speeds over 40 miles per hour.
Female dog bites are twice as numerous as male bites. The Beatles song Martha My Dear was written by Paul McCartney about his sheepdog Martha. Ancient Egyptians revered their dogs. When a pet dog would die, the owners shaved off their eyebrows, smeared mud in their hair, and mourned aloud for days. The most dogs ever owned by one person were 5,000 Mastiffs owned by Kubla Khan. During the Middle Ages, mixed breeds of peasants’ dogs were required to wear blocks around their necks to keep them from breeding with noble hunting dogs. Purebred dogs were very expensive and hunting became the province of the rich. The ancient Mbaya Indians of the Gran Chaco in South America believed that humans originally lived underground until dogs dug them up Plato once said that “a dog has the soul of a philosopher The term “dog days of summer” was coined by the ancient Greeks and Romans to describe the hottest days of summer that coincided with the rising of the Dog Star, Sirius The earliest European images of dogs are found in cave paintings dating back 12,000 years ago in Spain The Basenji is the world’s only barkless dog President Franklin Roosevelt created a minor international incident when he claimed he sent a destroyer to the Aleutian Islands just to pick up his Scottish Terrier, Fala, who had been left behind. It costs approximately $10,000 to train a federally certified search and rescue dog At the end of WWI, the German government trained the first guide dogs for war-blinded soldiers |
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