The million dollar dog |
In what has been described as the
most expensive dog sale ever, a Tibetan mastiff puppy has been sold in China for
almost 2 million dollars, a report said recently.
A property developer paid 12 million
yuan (1.9 million dollars) for the one-year-old golden-haired mastiff at a
“luxury pet” fair on Tuesday, in the eastern province of Zhejiang, the
Qianjiang Evening News reported.
“They have lion’s blood and are
top-of-the-range mastiff studs,” the dog’s breeder Zhang Gengyun was quoted as
saying adding that another red-haired canine had sold for six million yuan
(about a million dollars).
Enormous and sometimes ferocious,
with round manes lending them a passing resemblance to lions, Tibetan mastiffs
have become a prized status symbol among China’s wealthy, sending prices
skyrocketing.
The golden-haired animal is 80
centimetres (31 inches) tall, and weighed 90 kilogrammes (nearly 200 pounds),
Zhang said, adding that he was sad to sell the animals.
“Pure Tibetan mastiffs are very
rare, just like our nationally treasured pandas, so the prices are so high,” he
said.
One red mastiff named “Big Splash”
reportedly sold for 10 million yuan (1.5 million dollars) in 2011, is the most
expensive dog sale then recorded.
The buyer at the Zhejiang expo was
said to be a 56-year-old property developer from Qingdao who hopes to breed
dogs himself, according to the report.
The report quoted the owner of a
mastiff breeding Website as saying that last year one animal sold for 27
million yuan at a fair in Beijing.
But an industry insider surnamed Xu
said that the high prices may be the result of insider agreements among
breeders to boost their dogs’ worth.
“A lot of the sky-high priced deals
are just breeders hyping each other up, and no money actually changes hands,”
Xu said.
Owners say the mastiffs, descendants
of dogs used for hunting by nomadic tribes in central Asia and Tibet, are
fiercely loyal and protective.
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5 comments:
Na wah o
if he die nko. all d money go jus go like dat
CHAI!
WETIN BE D WORK OF THE DOG?
Oop!
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