They may look pathetic and
are hardly at their best sitting in a car boot, but these Tibetan mastiffs are
worth a fortune.
They are prized status
symbols among wealthy Chinese and are bought and sold for up to £500,000.
The puppies were on sale
in Baoding, Hebei province, south of Beijing, with rich buyers across the
country sending prices soaring.
Owners say the mastiffs,
descendents of dogs used for hunting by nomadic tribes in central Asia and
Tibet are fiercely loyal and protective.
Breeders still travel to
the Himalayan plateau to collect young puppies, although many are unable to
adjust to the low altitudes and die during the journey.
Last month, a Chinese dog
owner issued a writ against an animal clinic after his £90,000 Tibetan mastiff
died while undergoing a facelift to make it more attractive to breeders.
The owner, identified only
as Mr Yu, paid 1,000 yuan (£140) for his pet to have plastic surgery at a
Beijing animal hospital last November.
It died on the operating
table 20 minutes into treatment. Mr Yu later discovered that the dog had died
of a heart attack after complications with the anesthetic.
The dogs live for up to 14
years and have fewer genetic health problems than many breeds.
The heaviest Tibetan
Mastiff weighed in at more than 20 stone.
They are fed an organic
diet of tripe, boiled fish heads, powdered egg shells, code liver oil and raw
bones to help them clean their teeth.
Marco Polo supposedly
encountered Tibetan Mastiffs in the 13th century, describing them as ‘tall as a
donkey with a voice as powerful as that of a lion’.
There are only around 300
Tibetan Mastiffs in the UK. They can only have one litter a year.
It is thought
the Tibetan Mastiff genetically diverged from the wolf 58,000 years ago.
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