Lundehund and other interesting breeds
Ok, this Lundehund has a great range of motion in its joints, allowing it to fit into narrow passages. The head can be bent backwards along the dog's own spine, and the forelegs can turn to the side at a 90-degree angle to its body, much like human arms. Its pricked, upright ears can be sealed nearly shut by folding them forward or backward.The Norwegian Lundehund is polydactyl & instead of the normal four toes a foot, the Lundehund has six toes. Its double dew claws apparently act as an opposable thumb would!
Am I the only one who is freaked out somewhat by a dog that can hand me my morning coffee?
Apparently these mutant traits make them excellent Puffin hunters!
http://dogbreedinfo.com/lundehund.htm
Are there any other "mutant" dogs out there with unusual talents?
Am I the only one who is freaked out somewhat by a dog that can hand me my morning coffee?
Apparently these mutant traits make them excellent Puffin hunters!
http://dogbreedinfo.com/lundehund.htm
Are there any other "mutant" dogs out there with unusual talents?
Comments
Pop quiz on useless trivia factoids: What is the only other quadruped than can get their arms out 90degrees, making its chest tough the ground?
More "useless" facts?
- The average Mastiff can knock a grown man down with one paw and can break a leg with one bite!
- Neapolitan Mastiffs supposedly fought and won against elephants!!!
- A female Anatolian lived to see her 28th or 29th birthday (can't remember exactly)
- Border Collies are said to hypnotise sheep with their stare.
More will follow as I remember them.
The mastiff thing just makes me want a TM more! lol!
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Moto HATES bull terriers
Piglet hates yellow labs and goldens
Miko like everyone, but terrorizes pugs
The only other quadruped (other than the Lundehund) that can get its arms out to the sides and touch the ground with its chest is the reindeer.
As for freak dogs, my Skella (and most Iceland Sheepdogs) has double dewclaws on her hind legs so that she can search for lost sheep in the rugged Icelandic terrain.
The Dalmatian was known, for a while, as Little Dane, because the breed was thought to be related to the Great Dane, the harlequin variety. Genetic research has found that the black patches on the Great Dane are caused by a different gene tan the one that is responsible for the Dalmatian's spots.
The Great Dane isn't a Dane at all. After some discussion between Denmark and Germany, Germany got the origin of the breed. The actual "Great Dane" is the Broholmer (which might be one of the rarest breeds), and the Great Dane is the Deutsche Dogge.
Double dew claws:
Flexibility:
Snf
http://www.breeders.net/detail.php?id=137386