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Foreword
Preface
Learn From This Book
Quick Reference

1. What To Know

Buying A Dog
New Puppy
Dog Feeding
Housebreaking Dogs
Dog Exercising
Sleeping
Dog Bathing
Dog Clipping
Eyes Care
Ears Care
Dog Teeth Care
Feet Care
Determine Age
Breeding
Spaying
Love Life
Tail Docking
Dog Diseases
Vitamins
Dog Language
Homing Instinct
Why Wag Tail?
Enema
Dog Is Sick?
Dog Is Healthy?
Dog Medicines
Give Medicine
Restraint
Veterinarian

2. What To Do

Distemper
Canine Hepatitis
Rabies
Worms
Vomiting
Itching
Sneezing
Injuries
Bloody Urine
Pus Dripping
Excess Weight
Carsickness
Paralysis
Persistent Twitching
Running Fits
Convulsions
Heart Diseases
Constipation
Pass Stool
Painful Swallowing
Body Swellings
Abdominal Enlargement
Prostate Trouble
Uremia
Excessive Urination
Prolonging Life

3. Dog Training

Basic Fact About Dog Training

4. Dog Anatomy

Atlas Of Dog Anatomy
Bibliography
Resources
Dog Care
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Homing Instinct In Dogs


While it is a generally accepted belief that the homing instinct is the strongest in the pigeon, it is also reputed to be fairly well developed in the dog. Homing instinct in dog has become a universally acknowledged proverb. It is understandable that a dog can find its way home in its own neighborhood, for here it is guided by its sensitive smell and its recognition of familiar land­marks. But the mechanism by which it returns home over great distances from entirely unfamiliar surroundings is be­yond the sphere of our present knowledge of animal behavior.

In the course of history, dramatic demonstrations of the homing instinct in dogs have been reported. From Italy comes the story of a dog that followed its master in Napo­leon's expedition to Russia. On crossing a river, the dog was separated from its master by ice floes. A year later, the dog came back home after having traversed half of Europe, guided solely by its marvelous instinct. In India a dog is said to have traveled three hundred miles to find its master. A dog in our own country made its way home from Indiana to Oregon, covering the three-thousand-mile distance in six months. Feats of returning home over long distances have also been reported in the cat.

The homing instinct of pigeons and other birds has been thoroughly publicized. The voyages of these animals over fabulous distances and their seasonal excursions to suitable climates are among the wonders of the animal world. Bees may wander a mile or two from their hives and then return. It is thought that they use both their eyes and landmarks as guides. Salmon and eels travel enormous distances—sometimes thousands of miles to their birthplaces where they discharge their eggs and die.

Notwithstanding the stories about dogs returning home, animal psychologists are generally of the opinion that the homing instinct of dogs is highly overrated. On the basis of carefully controlled experiments, psychologists have come to the conclusion that, while a certain amount of homing instinct does exist in the dog, it is not particularly well de­veloped and the likelihood of these animals returning home from far away is rather remote.

Be that as it may, the homing instinct in dogs, as its name implies, is an unlearned activity. The animal does not have to be taught to return home. It simply knows how; it is just born that way.

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