The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #68747   Message #1945120
Posted By: JohnInKansas
23-Jan-07 - 12:46 AM
Thread Name: BS: I Read it in the Newspaper
Subject: RE: BS: I Read it in the Newspaper
How to save a hairless dog?

'Hairless dog' species beats extinction

Peru protects 'punk' animal given its ancient lineage
By Andrei Khalip , Reuters, Jan 22, 2007

LIMA, Peru - His eyes gleaming with joy underneath a natural yellow mohawk, Josh the Peruvian Hairless Dog heads out to greet tourists at Lima's Pucllana ruins.

About the size of an English pointer, Josh and his kin are not guard dogs, instead they are guarded behind the walls of this and other historic monuments on the Peruvian coast — the hairless hound's habitat for more than 3,000 years.
...
Its history is long and rather sad, especially after the Spanish conquest starting in 1532.

Native pre-Incan civilizations used the dogs for hunting and as pets for company. They are represented on the ceramic pottery of the Chimu, Moche and Chancay cultures found on the coast. They were sometimes mummified and buried along with people to help the departed find their way to the world of the dead or to continue serving their owners in the afterlife.

The Spanish brought giant war dogs to fight the natives and would often amuse themselves by setting off one such dog against a small pack of the smaller local breed.

"There are reports it could tear four, five hairless dogs in pieces easily," Vargas said, caressing Josh's head.

For centuries afterwards, it mostly ceased being a pet animal and would roam along the coast feeding on mollusks, often hunted by people simply for fun or for skins, believed to help with arthritis and used sometimes as thermal bags due to a popular myth that they retain heat.

As a result, the breed got to the 21st century on the brink of extinction, and that's when the government decided to safeguard it by ordering all archeological sites along the coast to have at least a pair -- after Huaca Pucllana's 1989 initiative. They are now also Peru's only own world-registered breed.

"We know there are quite a few now, and there are people breeding them and people buying them here and for export — it is a luxury dog now," Vargas said, adding though there was still a lot of prejudice against the dog's naked skin.

"Ugly dog, they call it, dirty dog, 'punk' dog. But it is much cleaner than hairy dogs — leaves no hair around the place, has no fleas, does not provoke allergies. And it is a great company and a live thermal bag in winter."

Josh, his mother, Jala, and brother, Cuni, feel quite at home at the Lima ruin, where the breed had lived for millennia.

"It's rather curious," Vargas said. "As soon as the museum closes it's like they say: 'Our home is ours again,' and start walking up and down the walls of the ruin. They are the masters here."

Copyright 2007 Reuters Limited.

[If you wanna dig, you gotta get TWO DOGS!]

[Full story and photo at link, for now]