• @tictac2OP
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    541 year ago

    “To the ancient Aztec and Maya, man’s best friend was also a hairless, ugly-cute healer, occasional food source, and, most importantly, guide to the Underworld.

    Sometimes known as the Mexican Hairless dog, the xoloitzcuintli (pronounced “show-low-itz-QUEENT-ly”) gets its name from two words in the language of the Aztecs: Xolotl, the god of lightning and death, and itzcuintli, or dog. According to Aztec belief, the Dog of Xolotl was created by the god to guard the living and guide the souls of the dead through the dangers of Mictlán, the Underworld.”

  • @DanglingFury
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    451 year ago

    That thing has resting dont-fuck-with-me face

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      Beat me to it. The character designers took several field trips to Mexico to really get an idea of this dog breed

  • D2L
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    201 year ago

    Our lil part breed, we live in AZ so he wears shirts for sun protection cause he is mostly bald.

    • TwoGems
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      01 year ago

      Isn’t that a pit bull?

      • D2L
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        11 year ago

        Well, that’s another of his parts.

        • TwoGems
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          11 year ago

          Such an interesting combination

          • D2L
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            11 year ago

            He is an odd ball. Really glad the people who bred him didn’t do the ear and tail clipping thing, those big saucers make so much of his personality! We were his foster home after his owner had an accident and couldn’t give him up, our kitties like him a lot too.

      • Piecemakers
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        01 year ago

        Are you just a couple of rocks?

    • TurtleJoe
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      61 year ago

      The breed occurs naturally in two varieties, hairless and coated. Hairless Xolos are the dominant expression of the heterozygous Hh hairless trait.[18] Coated Xolos (hh) are the recessive expression, and breeding hairless to coated or hairless to hairless may produce pups of either or both varieties. Breeding coated to coated will only produce coated pups because they are recessive to the hairless trait and do not carry the dominant H gene.

  • @satanmat
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    161 year ago

    If you break into my house, I’ll guide you to the afterlife…

    What a damn gorgeous pup

  • @kite
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    141 year ago

    This badass-looking fellow immediately made me think of Anubis/jackal hieroglyphics. Now I’m wondering if there is a connection.

    • @niktemadur
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      91 year ago

      No connection. This breed is native to Mesoamerica and was completely unknown across the Atlantic. And you don’t need to invoke these fellas when you are already THE God Of Jackals - which are carrion eaters, and I believe Xolos are not.

      • @kite
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        21 year ago

        Hey, thanks for the info! I didn’t have the mental energy to hit up Wikipedia and fall down that rabbit hole to find it myself last night.

        • @niktemadur
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          71 year ago

          Fun fact: I once dated a girl who had TWO of these Xolos. They have a vibe all their own, let me tell ya.
          The older one didn’t really care too much for me one way or the other, but the younger one… one time I shooed her away from something in my own bedroom, she stared right at me, turned to the floor to throw up, then looked back up to keep staring at me. It was unnerving.

          Another fun fact: the professional soccer team from Tijuana are called The Xolos.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    Also known as a Xolo dog.

    Conveniently, a Xolo dog named Dante was Miguel’s alebrije in the movie Coco.

    Artist Diego Rivera was known to be fond of Xolo dogs, and there are pictures of him with his dog and Frida Kahlo, whose likeness also had a cameo in Coco and identified Dante as both a Xolo and an Alebrije.

    • @DanielCF
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      131 year ago

      Also worth noting, if you don’t know spanish, it’s pronounced sholo not zolo.

  • @CallateLoSico
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    101 year ago

    Xolos and Calupohs have some of the most intimidating façades in dogs. Absolute sweethearts with the face of something you’d hear about in cryptid stories.

  • @crypticthree
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    71 year ago

    Frida Kahlo had several Xolos throughout her life

  • @TIEPilot
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    61 year ago

    Those eyes can see beyond this plane of existence.