[Feb. 2, 1895.] I venture to send you the following story I have lately heard from an eye-witness, and to ask whether you or any of your readers can throw any light upon the dog’s probable object. The dog in question was a Scotch terrier. He was one day observed to appear from a corner of the garden carrying in his mouth, very gently and tenderly, a live frog. He proceeded to lay the frog down upon a flower-bed, and at once began to dig a hole in the earth, keeping one eye upon the frog to see that it did not escape. If it went more than a few feet from him, he fetched it back, and then continued his work. Having dug the hole a certain depth, he then laid the frog, still alive, at the bottom of it, and promptly scratched the loose earth back into the hole, and friend froggy was buried alive! The dog then went off to the corner of the garden, and returned with another frog, which he treated in the same way. This occurred on more than one occasion; in fact, as often as he could find frogs he occupied himself in burying them alive.The rest of the 1895 story, and one possible explanation, is at The Public Domain Review.
06 June 2014
Why would a dog repeatedly bury live frogs?
The following story was published in
Dog
Stories From The Spectator : Being Anecdotes Of The Intelligence,
Reasoning Power, Affection And Sympathy Of Dogs, Selected From The
Correspondence Columns Of The Spectator by J St Loe Strachey (1895):
I've bookmarked this post waiting for some informed commentary, but it seems nobody has any idea...
ReplyDeleteMaybe one of us should post it on Reddit.
DeleteI know I shouldn't say this in the open, but I've never got the hang of Reddit's interface.
DeleteI'm not an active Redditor (I spend my cybertime here), but I did post the question there -
Deletehttp://www.reddit.com/r/dogs/comments/27xgtc/why_would_a_dog_repeatedly_bury_live_frogs/
So far only a handful of silly responses.
I've waited a few days, but I guess my curiosity will remained unsatisfied. The story about that dog getting high was pretty funny though
ReplyDeleteSimilarly to a commenter on Reddit, I was immediately reminded of this story about a dog sucking on toads to get high: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6376594
ReplyDelete"Saving it for later" makes the most sense to me.
Which reminds me of dolphins sucking on puffer fish to get high...
Deletehttp://www.independent.co.uk/environment/nature/dolphins-deliberately-get-high-on-puffer-fish-nerve-toxins-by-carefully-chewing-and-passing-them-around-9030126.html
So what do puffer fish suck on? Is it "turtles all the way down?"