Does your dog pronk?


Alpacas, gazelles, some deer and baby lambs are all known to pronk. That is, they leap into the air as if leaping for joy, lifting all four feet off the ground at once. The fact that – in some species like sheep – young animals do it more than older ones does suggest playfulness.

Among wild animals, pronking may be a way of avoiding predators. It means something like:

Hey, I’m very fit so don’t bother chasing me.

And dogs? I didn’t find much online discussion about true dog-pronking, although many of us, at one time or another, may have seen our dog leaping for joy. I recall my own dog Snoop (rest his soul) released from the car in a South Dakota meadow, leaping and running like crazy through the long grass for maybe 20 minutes, until we called him back. It was one of the most joyful things I’ve ever seen, and definitely one of my best memories of Snoop.

So enjoy the videos on this page. And, by the way, although it is a survival strategy for some, the very word pronk comes from an Afrikaans verb pronk-, which means show off or strut. It has the same linguistic derivation as our English verb prance.

Okay, well, maybe some sheep and wild animals like this young springbok - in Etosha National Park, Namibia - are the only true pronkers. Maybe you need that downward-pointing head and stiff-leggedness to be considered true pronking. But if you ever see you dog do what the dogs in these videos do, you'll feel happy.

Okay, well, maybe some sheep and wild animals like this young springbok – in Etosha National Park, Namibia – are the only true pronkers. Maybe true pronking has to have the downward-pointing head and stiff-leggedness. But if you ever see your dog do what the dogs in these videos do … you’ll feel happy. Image via Wikipedia

Bottom line: Among wild animals, pronking seems to be a way of avoiding predators. But when you see an animal pronk, you can’t but think it’s leaping for joy. Videos here.

Read more about pronking: The happy dance that should kill you (but doesn’t)



from EarthSky http://ift.tt/2uusMj3

Alpacas, gazelles, some deer and baby lambs are all known to pronk. That is, they leap into the air as if leaping for joy, lifting all four feet off the ground at once. The fact that – in some species like sheep – young animals do it more than older ones does suggest playfulness.

Among wild animals, pronking may be a way of avoiding predators. It means something like:

Hey, I’m very fit so don’t bother chasing me.

And dogs? I didn’t find much online discussion about true dog-pronking, although many of us, at one time or another, may have seen our dog leaping for joy. I recall my own dog Snoop (rest his soul) released from the car in a South Dakota meadow, leaping and running like crazy through the long grass for maybe 20 minutes, until we called him back. It was one of the most joyful things I’ve ever seen, and definitely one of my best memories of Snoop.

So enjoy the videos on this page. And, by the way, although it is a survival strategy for some, the very word pronk comes from an Afrikaans verb pronk-, which means show off or strut. It has the same linguistic derivation as our English verb prance.

Okay, well, maybe some sheep and wild animals like this young springbok - in Etosha National Park, Namibia - are the only true pronkers. Maybe you need that downward-pointing head and stiff-leggedness to be considered true pronking. But if you ever see you dog do what the dogs in these videos do, you'll feel happy.

Okay, well, maybe some sheep and wild animals like this young springbok – in Etosha National Park, Namibia – are the only true pronkers. Maybe true pronking has to have the downward-pointing head and stiff-leggedness. But if you ever see your dog do what the dogs in these videos do … you’ll feel happy. Image via Wikipedia

Bottom line: Among wild animals, pronking seems to be a way of avoiding predators. But when you see an animal pronk, you can’t but think it’s leaping for joy. Videos here.

Read more about pronking: The happy dance that should kill you (but doesn’t)



from EarthSky http://ift.tt/2uusMj3

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