Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Chaser could identify and retrieve 1,022 toys by name, [5] which was the result of a years-long research effort initiated by Pilley on June 28, 2004. [6] Pilley documents the following milestones as Chaser’s vocabulary grew over time: 50 words at 5 months, 200 words at 7.5 months, 700 words at 1.5 years, and 1,000+ at 3 years.
Second fastest dog: Saluki. Top speed: 42 mph. Hailing from the Fertile Crescent in the Middle East, Salukis are an ancient breed of hunting dog. They were used by kings to hunt down speedy game ...
The American Kennel Club announced its fastest dog of 2024, and it's the third year in a row that this breed has won the title. The race was held in Glendale, Arizona on February 22nd and 23rd ...
Bols is a dog agility trainer. She teaches classes and travels the U.S. to teach seminars and conducts online classes with students all over the world. ... but we had the fastest time in the ...
Sylvia, a matchbox-size Yorkshire Terrier owned by Arthur Marples of Blackburn, England, was the smallest dog in recorded history. The dog died in 1945 when she was almost two years old, at which point she stood 6 centimetres (2.4 in) tall at the shoulder, measured 9 centimetres (3.5 in) from nose tip to tail, and weighed 0.11 kilograms (3.9 oz).
In 2012, Miike's Hara-Kiri: Death of a Samurai premiered in Competition at the Cannes International Film Festival, the first 3D film ever to do so. Recent releases include David Cronenberg's A Dangerous Method , which premiered at Venice and Toronto Film Festivals in 2012, and the epic adventure Kon-Tiki , based on Thor Heyerdahl 's best ...
NEW YORK (AP) — When the Westminster Kennel Club dog show added an agility competition a decade ago, it opened U.S. dogdom's most elite door to mixed breeds for the first time since the late 1800s.
The "Lion" variant was predominantly found in the north-east regions of Georgia. Physically, these dogs are strongly-boned, muscular, and athletic, with a large head and powerful legs. The shape of the head of the Georgian mountain dog is almost rectangular, proportional in size to the body.