When I was in school, I always went to Chaoyang Park to play basketball with a few good junior high school classmates during the holidays. For a while, a classmate always talked to us about raising dogs. He wanted to raise a Samoyed or a husky in the future, just like the sled dog in the movie. He likes this kind of dog, tall and powerful, with sharp eyes. He was already working part-time at that time, and his financial strength was stronger than ours. At the time, I had no doubt that he could achieve his goals. It's just that as time goes by, we find it easier to think about the problem. The classmate started complaining about how difficult it was to buy a purebred Samoan or Husky. It is too expensive to go to a regular dog farm, and the cheap ones are unreliable. This problem has plagued his graduation work. Later, he graduated and worked, got a house and a wife, and actually raised a dog, but it was neither a Samoan nor a Husky, but a Schnauzer. He told me that he was very envious of the neighbor who kept a black shell, tall and mighty, with sharp eyes, but his temper was too wild and not suitable for the city.
I also often see a middle-aged woman walking around with a husky. Whenever the dog wants to spread flowers, the woman will pull a chain fiercely, and then loudly say: "Be good!" Huskies are trained to be pugs with wagging tails. There are too many restrictions in the city, maybe only the ice and snow in the movie is their world, and the city is not suitable for sled dogs.
There are Tibetan Mastiffs who suffer the same fate. This once king of the plateau has now doubled in value, and it can easily be in the millions. What's even worse is that the king of the grassland is really enjoying the treatment of an emperor now. He is picked up by plane, sent by car, greeted and embraced, and he is swaying through the market. I really don't believe that these millions of babies living in greenhouses can be the opponents of jackals and tigers. What's even more ridiculous is that breeders are also willing to regard ornamental pets as representatives of majesty and majesty, and use them to set off their majesty and majesty. It seems that physical impotence is not terrible, but mental impotence is truly hopeless.
In the ice and snow in the movie, those dogs are really tall and mighty, with sharp eyes. I love them!
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