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Shep was the name given to a herding dog that appeared at the Great Northern Railway station one day in 1936 in Fort Benton, Montana, and watched as his deceased master's casket was loaded onto the train and left. The dog remained at the station, waiting for his master to return for the next five and a half years, until he was killed by an ...
Shep (1 May 1971 – 17 January 1987) was a Blue Peter dog, a Border Collie. He was bought by the BBC to replace Patch, one of Petra's puppies, born in 1965. Shep became the main Blue Peter dog when Petra died in 1977. Shep debuted on Blue Peter on the 16th September 1971 and was named a week later.
Shep is the name of a dog whose principal claim to fame is that he graces the screen in the capacity of a star, frequently appearing in the title roles of startling and melodramatic 'thrillers.' Shep is a Thanhouser collie, a valuable acquisition to that studio, and, according to the directors, goes about his work with a determination and ...
The network explains on its website that it features 24/7 programming "created to meet specific attributes of a dog's sense of vision and hearing and supports their natural behavior patterns."
Shep (American dog), a dog that lived in the Great Northern train station in Fort Benton, Montana, in the late 1930s; Shep (British dog), a Blue Peter dog, a border collie, remembered by British TV viewers as inseparable from John Noakes; Shep (dog actor), a dog which became known for appearances in Thanhouser films of the silent period
Bouncer, played a dog also called Bouncer in the Australian soap opera Neighbours.; Bullet, "the Wonder Dog", a black and silver AKC registered German Shepherd (originally: "Bullet Von Berge") was a regular on the '50s TV show The Roy Rogers Show; his taxidermic remains (along with Trigger) were displayed at The Roy Rogers & Dale Evans Museum and he was sold in 2010 at Christie's for $35,000.
Luc's faithful dog. [9] [10] The Angriest Dog in the World: unknown The Angriest Dog in the World: David Lynch. An angry black dog stuck in one position, tied to a pole. [11] Andy St. Bernard: Mark Trail: Ed Dodd: Mark's faithful dog. Andy: close to a Chihuahua or a Dachshund: Pearls Before Swine: Stephan Pastis
Soon after this angry confrontation, Noakes relinquished Shep, who went to live with Edith Menezes. Noakes subsequently appeared in a series of television advertisements for Spillers "Choice Cuts" dog food, using a dog that was indistinguishable from Shep but named Skip. [10] The subterfuge led to a deeper rift between Noakes and Baxter. [11]