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Owner finds dog after seven years

2012-02-16 10:31 China Daily     Web Editor: Zang Kejia comment
Beijing resident Chen Yiyang cannot control his tears of joy when he meets his long-lost pet dog Benben at a roadside in the city on Feb 6. (Photo: China Daily)

Beijing resident Chen Yiyang cannot control his tears of joy when he meets his long-lost pet dog Benben at a roadside in the city on Feb 6. (Photo: China Daily)

Elephants may be renowned for not forgetting but canines also have an uncanny ability to remember.

Seven years after going missing, a dog managed to recognize the voice of its owner.

Chen Yiyang, a 21-year-old Beijing resident, was dramatically reunited recently with his lost pet.

"I was riding a motorbike to my parents' home after work on Feb 6 and I saw a dog crouching on the roadside," Chen said.

"The dog looked like the one I had that went missing seven years ago. I stopped, took off my helmet, whistled and called out the name. She stood still and looked at me for three seconds and then rushed crazily toward me."

The reunion occurred, fittingly, on Lantern Festival, an occasion for family reunions.

Chen got Benben in junior middle school in 2002, when she was just a month old. He was visiting a friend. "I saw her at my friend's home, so I asked if I could have her."

Benben went missing in 2005 when Chen took her out for a walk in a nearby park. Benben, without a leash, went into the bushes and seemed to vanish into thin air.

"I was distracted, talking to someone and didn't notice she was gone," Chen said. "Even if she had heard me whistling and calling her name, the bushes might have blocked her from coming back."

Chen searched around the park for a week before giving up.

 

Photographs Chen took to mark the unexpected reunion show him crying tears of joy and also relief.

"I don't know if I was crying or smiling. I was so excited. Stray dogs are often captured and killed in Beijing."

Chen is certain that the dog he claimed on Feb 6 was Benben. "I'm the owner. I knew that's my dog when I saw it. Benben's tail and paws are white."

Benben's condition, considering her ordeal, is surprisingly good.

"She hasn't changed much, except for getting thinner. Now she is a little slow and doesn't run so much as before."

Seven years later, some habits have changed as Benben became streetwise and had to fend for herself.

"She used to be very picky with food. Now she eats almost anything, and scavenges food from trash heaps."

And she is more timid. Chen recalled when Benben bolted away at the sight of reporters carrying a camera and refused to return no matter how many times Chen whistled and called her name.

"She's afraid of people, especially when they hold something in their hands She lets nobody near except me and my parents."

Chen has received a large number of online comments.

A micro blog user going by the moniker of Zhuziqing said: "I have a dog. I know the feeling between man and dog. I cried when I saw you and Benben got together again."

But there are criticisms too, especially for not having Benben on a leash seven years ago.

Ostreich, another micro blog user, said: "Walking an unchained pet dog in the city not only frightens other people but also makes it more likely that dogfights will occur. It's your fault for not putting your dog on a leash."

A regulation on dog management in Beijing, which took effect in 2003, stipulates that people should put a leash on their dogs in public.

Xu Dongsheng, deputy secretary-general of Beijing Kennel Club, said it takes time for dogs to get rid of habits formed after they strayed.

 

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