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Be kind to him! Heâll help you hunt down your dinner with a little encouragement!
My Norwegian Elkhounds are supposed to be able to scent a moose at five miles and tell at three miles whether the moose knows heâs being pursued or not. And consequently how to go about hunting him down â the chase or the stalk. The Elkhounds have had this ability for over five thousand years in cooperation with the human hunters. You canât even begin to find a moose that well by yourself!!
Yeah, one of the latest theories is that some segments of the wolf population domesticated themselves by hanging around human encampments so they could scavenge the scraps of meat and bones that the humans threw on the garbage piles.
I read that dogs are the only animals that instinctively (without being trained) understand what you mean when you point. (Not sure about primates, though.)
I can picture Mastroianni at his drawing board, working on todayâs strip:
âOh God, the only way to make this work is to have Wiley kneeling on the ground, but how do I draw that if heâs got that frigginâ peg leg?!? Well, I can either fudge the leg, or else change the book to âThorâs Dictionaryâ. Which one would generate fewer snarky comments on the Internet?â
Wileyâs such an anti-social, misanthropic crank that heâs probably a cat person anywayâŚ
RayC, Yes, dogs are experts at reading our body language and facial expressions. They have at least 15,000 years (probably over 50,000) of experience dealing with humans, and they communicate to us with body language and facial expressions of their own. Ears up, big eyes, happy face, wagging tail = âTake me with you in the car!â
Several experiments have shown that chimps and other primates donât get it when you point.
Thanks for the information, whitecarabao. I believe cats have had far less time with humans, which is why they are not quite as domesticated. But I wouldnât trade my three cats for anything, in spite of the Siamese being a royal pain in the bohuncus most of the time. Being a triple threat: female, a cat, and a Siamese, makes for some interesting interaction.
Wiley looks much younger altogether (brown hair, even.) How long has he been working on his dictionary? Perhaps âwolfâ was one of his earlier entries.
My father lost his right leg below the knee in Korea and Iâve seen him kneeing many time and if you were looking at him from the left side his stump would be out of sight and out of mind⌠What someone needs to do is find a picture of Wiley standing to see which leg is missing as for me I donât recall for the life of me⌠If it is in fact his left leg then this whole peg leg question is a moot point.
Wileyâs wooden leg is shown going all the way to his hip, when heâs standing. I think itâs on his left, but I could be mistaken. (Not worth looking it upâŚ)
I agree that he seems to look younger here as well, but that might be mostly poor coloring. Either that, or Wileyâs invented Pre-Hellenic FormulaâŚ
BigChiefDesoto about 15 years ago
Be kind to him! Heâll help you hunt down your dinner with a little encouragement! My Norwegian Elkhounds are supposed to be able to scent a moose at five miles and tell at three miles whether the moose knows heâs being pursued or not. And consequently how to go about hunting him down â the chase or the stalk. The Elkhounds have had this ability for over five thousand years in cooperation with the human hunters. You canât even begin to find a moose that well by yourself!!
BigChiefDesoto about 15 years ago
Hi Joe,
Yeah, one of the latest theories is that some segments of the wolf population domesticated themselves by hanging around human encampments so they could scavenge the scraps of meat and bones that the humans threw on the garbage piles.
Yukoner about 15 years ago
The northern husky is as close to the wolf as it gets.
Dkram about 15 years ago
I like this wolf.
\\//_
DolphinGirl78 about 15 years ago
Heâs so cute! :)
GROG Premium Member about 15 years ago
Better be nice to the wolf.
andymeijers about 15 years ago
Uh, doesnât Wiley have a wooden leg? or am I thinking of one of the other seldom-seen characters?
pswhitlark about 15 years ago
Forget the silly book. Itâs time to play!!!
Ray_C about 15 years ago
I read that dogs are the only animals that instinctively (without being trained) understand what you mean when you point. (Not sure about primates, though.)
Rakkav about 15 years ago
Yes, Wiley DOES have a wooden leg. But not here.
Wow, too many cartoonists are getting careless these days. Either that or theyâre messing with our minds, but Hanlonâs Razor applies here:
âNever ascribe to malice what can be adequately explained by stupidity.â
twj0729 about 15 years ago
Yeah, RayC, my westie knows what I mean when I point at a squirrel. He goes bananas and runs off in the direction Iâve pointed!
COWBOY7 about 15 years ago
Wolfie just had to put his paw mark on that dictionary. Good thing it wasnât another kind of marking!
Trainwreck_1 about 15 years ago
Hey for not having an opposable thumb I think âWolfâ did a fair job at making a self-portraitâŚ
chubbygirlcomics about 15 years ago
Yup, that sounds about right. Wonder what the definition of âcatâ looks like?
unaweepjim about 15 years ago
LOVE THE WOLF
IndyMan about 15 years ago
What favor did Wiley do to get that kind of a greeting from a wolf? Another question, how did Wiley get down on the ground with his âpeg legâ?
r.haza about 15 years ago
reminds me of my cat
alviebird about 15 years ago
I think, maybe, JoeAllen is more right than he knows. Must be a pre-panel going all the way back before Wiley lost his leg.
Silly theory, I know. But hey, it works.
fritzoid Premium Member about 15 years ago
WILEY GOT LEGS!!!
I can picture Mastroianni at his drawing board, working on todayâs strip:
âOh God, the only way to make this work is to have Wiley kneeling on the ground, but how do I draw that if heâs got that frigginâ peg leg?!? Well, I can either fudge the leg, or else change the book to âThorâs Dictionaryâ. Which one would generate fewer snarky comments on the Internet?â
Wileyâs such an anti-social, misanthropic crank that heâs probably a cat person anywayâŚ
whitecarabao about 15 years ago
RayC, Yes, dogs are experts at reading our body language and facial expressions. They have at least 15,000 years (probably over 50,000) of experience dealing with humans, and they communicate to us with body language and facial expressions of their own. Ears up, big eyes, happy face, wagging tail = âTake me with you in the car!â
Several experiments have shown that chimps and other primates donât get it when you point.
Ray_C about 15 years ago
Thanks for the information, whitecarabao. I believe cats have had far less time with humans, which is why they are not quite as domesticated. But I wouldnât trade my three cats for anything, in spite of the Siamese being a royal pain in the bohuncus most of the time. Being a triple threat: female, a cat, and a Siamese, makes for some interesting interaction.
BigChiefDesoto about 15 years ago
Because in Norwegian what we would call a moose is called an âElgâ so thatâs what it got translated to in English.
In Norwegian itâs âNorsk Elghundâ, âhund â is typical Germanic language for dog.
JP Steve Premium Member about 15 years ago
Wiley looks much younger altogether (brown hair, even.) How long has he been working on his dictionary? Perhaps âwolfâ was one of his earlier entries.
dead.theologians.society about 15 years ago
chubbygirlcomics.com - âWonder what the definition of âcatâ looks like?â
From Baldrick in Black Adder Season 3 - âNot a Dogâ
Trainwreck_1 about 15 years ago
My father lost his right leg below the knee in Korea and Iâve seen him kneeing many time and if you were looking at him from the left side his stump would be out of sight and out of mind⌠What someone needs to do is find a picture of Wiley standing to see which leg is missing as for me I donât recall for the life of me⌠If it is in fact his left leg then this whole peg leg question is a moot point.
fritzoid Premium Member about 15 years ago
Wileyâs wooden leg is shown going all the way to his hip, when heâs standing. I think itâs on his left, but I could be mistaken. (Not worth looking it upâŚ)
I agree that he seems to look younger here as well, but that might be mostly poor coloring. Either that, or Wileyâs invented Pre-Hellenic FormulaâŚ
fritzoid Premium Member about 15 years ago
A Møøse once bit my sisterâŚ
Mynd you, møøse bites Kan be pretty nastiâŚ