Is this an urban legend or did it really happen?

United States
December 11, 2006 12:53pm CST
A woman from La Mesa, California, went to Tijuana, Mexico, to do some shopping. As any visitor to this border town knows, the streets near the shopping areas are populated with stray dogs. The woman took pity on one little stray and offered it a few bites of her lunch, after which it followed her around for the rest of the afternoon. When it came time to return home, the woman had become so attached to her little friend that she couldn't bear to leave him behind. Knowing that it was illegal to bring a dog across the international border, she hid him among some packages on the seat of her car and managed to pass through the border checkpoint without incident. After arriving home, she gave the dog a bath, brushed his fur, then retired for the night with her newfound pet curled up at the foot of her bed. When she awoke the next morning, the woman noticed that there was an oozing mucus around the dog's eyes and a slight foaming at the mouth. Afraid that the dog might be sick, she rushed him to a nearby veterinarian and returned home to await word on her pet's condition. The call soon came. "I have just one question," said the vet. "Where did you get this dog?" The woman didn't want to get into trouble, so she told the vet that she had found the dog running loose in the street near her home in La Mesa. But the vet didn't buy it. "You did not find this dog in La Mesa. Where did you get the dog?" The woman nervously admitted having brought the dog across the border from Tijuana. "But tell me, doctor," she said. "What is wrong with my dog?" His reply was brief and to the point. "First of all, it's not a dog — it's a Mexican sewer rat. And second, it's dying."
3 responses
@Rtlsnk316 (1197)
• Mexico
21 Jun 07
I'm from Tijuana and that's so not true, I mean, even if a rat can look like a dog (?) I don't expect it to behave like one. Regards
@ezzrssi (11187)
• Italy
11 Dec 06
this is just an urban legend
@suedarr (2382)
• Canada
11 Dec 06
This is an urban legend. This legend dates to 1983, at least. Bow-wow? There is some reason to believe the tale's popularity fluctuates with how topical the subject of immigration is — the more immigration stories are in the news, the more the Mexican Pet gets passed around. And it does get passed around — the story was every bit as popular in the late 1990s as it had been at any time in its long history. In 1992, a reporter with the Orlando Sentinel attempted to get to the bottom of a story he'd heard about a little doggie that had been pulled from the sea by three local men (and of course the rescued pooch later turned out to be a Guatemalan water rat who had subsequently devoured a household cat). Though this sighting of the legend was far from the first, the reporter's experiences in attempting to put some verifiable facts next to the persistent tale affords a unique perspective on how these bits of lore are passed along as something that actually happened locally. You can read all about this myth alnog with it's variations here. http://www.snopes.com/critters/lurkers/mexicanpet.asp