Posted on 12/27/2014 2:48:28 AM PST by blam
Story by Cy Brown
Photos by Kaylinn Gilstrap
Deember 27, 2014
He got Penny for Christmas. He didnt know he would get a trip into the deepest reaches of the 14,000-year history of dogs in North America.
Things we love in the South: Moon Pies, SEC football, Otis Redding, Flannery OConnor, Cheerwine and, probably more than anything else, our dogs.
What is it about Southerners and our dogs?
Maybe it's because in the South, we're a bit more country than our cousins to the north. Perhaps we are a generation or two fewer removed from the time when having a dog was essential to surviving and living off the land. Our four-legged brethren are a bridge between that wild past and a civilized present. We take them into the woods with us and let them sniff out our game and then retrieve it for us. We train them to protect our property. And they do this in exchange for a warm place to sleep, a full belly and the love of a human family.
We love dogs because they were shaped by us and their history runs concurrently with ours.
(snip)
But you may have never heard of the most Southern dog alive.
This dog's ancient bloodlines were never altered by humans. Its ancestors crossed the Bering Strait with the first humans ever to settle this land I'm talking about North America, not just the South.
(snip)
They're called Carolina Dogs some folks call them Dixie Dingoes and I have one.
(snip)
(Excerpt) Read more at bittersoutherner.com ...
Thanks to FReeper vigilantcitizen for this current article.
- Roll Tide -
It was just yesterday that I updated my FR page and included a picture of my current crop of dogs. (Click on my name to see) The top picture is my new crew and the bottom is the crew that I had when I joined FR...sadly, they have all passed on.
Doggie Ping!
Many vets are morons... they don’t know a purebred dog when they see one.
My German Shepherd always gets mistaken for a mix. She’s solid black.
Getting a purebred Carolina Dog from an animal shelter isn’t that unusual especially if uninformed employees lazily classify a rare breed dog as a “mix.”
Purebred dogs aren’t mutts or mongrels - period.
Second picture: “Skeptical dog is skeptical.”
That’s just the look it is giving, as if it just doesn’t quite believe the promises of treats by the photographer.
“I’ve been fooled a couple times like that. Either you have meds or it’s a trip to the vet!”
Most of the dogs kept by the semi-nomadic pastoral tribes in East Africa (Pokot, Turkana, Karamajong, Sanburu, Maasai) look just like very hungry, skinny versions of these Dixie Dingos.
Funny thing is, I never saw any that bore any resemblance to the African Wild Dog or jackals or the various African foxes.
Canaan Dogs, Dholes, Australian Dingoes, New Guinea Singing Dogs and American Dingoes are pariah dogs - very primitive dogs human intervention has done little to modify. Despite that they’re all dogs, not wolves.
My dog is a Border Collie/Cattle dog mix and she is a beauty.She’s mostly black with Merle on her front legs and a grey patch that runs from her tummy up to be neck.She also has a white tip on her tail.
We rescued her from Tennessee when she was a puppy.
This dog can go out and walk for miles and still want to play upon getting home.
Talk about the Energizer Bunny.She has him beat by a country mile.
Re....... Many vets are morons
Must say I take exception to this statement. Know many Vets, married to one. No morons in the bunch.
See the link below, and Shhh.. when the world finds out just how wonderful the BMC's are, they will all want one :-).
http://www.blackmouthcur.com/FAQs.htm#What%20does%20the%20Black
We have a one and a half year old female Carolina rescue (spade when we got her, unfortunately) and it was a trainer who had owned one herself that clued us into Sam's breed. We checked off every marker that distinguishes the breed and only wish there was a DNA test available to confirm it. Most intelligent dog I've ever owned with some behaviors that are just "different". Very glad we have her at such a young age and may enjoy being her pack for a few years to come.
beautiful, just beautiful pictures.
I’m with you, PM. Our daughter is studying to be a vet tech. BS in Bio. 20 years as close to horses as anybody could possibly be. Smart as can be.
We are friends with a power couple that are both Vets. Smarter than the average bear they are. They often tell us how much harder it is to get into Vet School than Med School :-).
These Carolina dogs are beautiful. We plan on trying to find one to add to our pack of pugs and a Swedish Vallhund.
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