Dog Never Left His Owner’s Grave, And The Reason Why Is SHOCKING…
A loyal dog called Capitan has died after sleeping at his master’s graveside every night for 11 years. The black Alsatian was some four years old when Miguel Guzman, who had bought the dog as a present for his son, Damian, passed away in 2006 in Villa Carlos Paz, near Cordoba, Argentina’s second city. The dog disappeared not long afterwards and the family thought he had found a new home or had been killed.
But several months later, on one of their visits to the cemetery during 2007, there was Capitan. To their astonishment, neighbours told them how they started to feed him when they realised he slept by the grave each night. And so the grieving hound continued his sad vigil until dying himself a few days ago at about 15 years of age, the daily newspaper La Voz reported.
What amazed the family the most was that the cemetery was a long way from where they live and Capitan had never accompanied them there before he disappeared. Six years ago, Mr Guzman’s widow Veronica, reflecting on the pet’s graveside vigil, told Argentina’s Cordoba newspaper: ‘We searched for him but he had vanished. We thought he must have got run over and died. ‘The following Sunday we went to the cemetery and Damian recognised his pet. Capitan came up to us, barking and wailing, as if he were crying.’
She added: ‘We had never taken him to the cemetery so it is a mystery how he managed to find the place. ‘We went back the next Sunday, and he was there again. This time, he followed us home and spent a bit of time with us, but then went back to the cemetery before it started getting dark. ‘I don’t think he wanted to leave Miguel on his own at night.’
The cemetery’s director Hector Baccega added: ‘He turned up here one day, all on his own, and started wandering all around the cemetery until he eventually found the tomb of his master. ‘During the day he sometimes has a walk around the cemetery, but always rushes back to the grave. And every day, at six o’clock sharp, he lies down on top of the grave stays there all night.’
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Staff at the cemetery fed and took care of the faithful pooch. Mr Guzman’s son Damian said he had tried to bring Capitan home several times, but he always went straight back to the cemetery. Poignantly, he added: ‘I think he’s going to be there until he dies too. He’s looking after my dad.’
The story is similar to that of Hachiko, an Akita who is said to have waited at a Tokyo train station for its master to return each day for nine years from May 1925, following owner Hidesaburo Ueno’s death at work.