Sausage Dogs Are Construction Workers
  • 6 năm trước
'If you need to get a job done, just hire a dachshund'
Crusoe the celebrity dachshund, has the best parents ever! The adventures they have for Crusoe and Oakley are just amazing!

In this adventure, it looks like these dachshunds decide to do some much needed road work by their house complete with their two front shovels, vest, truck, and hard hat! They even have the appropriate signage to make sure people know dachshunds are at work here!

Every time we see a Crusoe video we think we’ve seen the cutest one yet. This one is no different, we couldn’t help but say “aww” as we watched these tough doxies work away!
The dachshund (English: badger dog; also known as the sausage dog or wiener dog) is a short-legged, long-bodied, hound-type dog breed.

The standard size dachshund was developed to scent, chase, and flush out badgers and other burrow-dwelling animals, while the miniature dachshund was bred to hunt smaller prey such as rabbits. In the United States, they have also been used to track wounded deer and hunt prairie dogs.

Dachshunds also participate in conformation shows, field trials and many other events organized through pure-bred dog organizations such as the American Kennel Club (AKC). According to the AKC, the dachshund is ranked in 13th place in popularity amongst dog breeds in the United States
A typical dachshund is long-bodied and muscular with short, stubby legs. Its front paws are disproportionately large, being paddle-shaped and particularly suitable for digging. Its skin is loose enough not to tear while tunneling in tight burrows to chase prey. The dachshund has a deep chest which provides appropriate lung capacity for stamina when hunting. Its snout is long. According to the AKC standards for the breed, "scars from honorable wounds shall not be considered a fault" because the dachshund is a hunting dog.
Dachshunds have traditionally been viewed as a symbol of Germany. Political cartoonists commonly used the image of the dachshund to ridicule Germany. During World War I the dachshunds' popularity in the United States plummeted because of this association. As a result, they were often called "liberty hounds" by their owners similar to "liberty cabbage" becoming a term for sauerkraut mostly in North America. The stigma of the association was revived to a lesser extent during World War II, though it was comparatively short-lived. Kaiser Wilhelm II and German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel were known for keeping dachshunds
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