1116 King of the King of Dogs (1/2)

Pet King Jie Po 31650K 2022-07-19

Saline-alkali land.

Refuse landfill.

Most of the stray dogs coming from the dog market were large dogs. It could be said that only large dogs could survive the competition of the jungle. Although their blood was not so pure, if they had been small dogs like Pomeranians or poodles, they would have basically all been carried home and raised already.

The rest were odd mongrels, some of which were the second generation of stray dogs mated with each other, and some of which were experimental products that villagers near the dog market had intentionally crossed with purebred dogs in order to beat their opponents in dog fighting and earn money.

When outsiders first came to the landfill, they had already been frustrated by stray cats, and they were also hit head-on by the Aborigines.

For a very long time, wild dogs wandering nearby had long regarded this place as their own territory. Although they were all mixed dogs, not purebreds, they had accumulated abundant fighting experience in the cruel competition, especially in group fighting. They were even crazier than pure, large, fierce dogs when fighting.

More importantly, dogs were social animals that spontaneously created class distinctions in the population. Whoever had great strength and fought desperately would overwhelm other wild dogs and become the dog king here.

A motley crew, beaten up by stray cats and temporarily gathered, were already weak and hungry. Suddenly, they met a group of organized and experienced bandits. Even if the former had been an official army, they might not have been able to do well against the latter.

In fact, the new stray dogs were driven out of the landfill by Aboriginal wild dogs and dared to wander around.

Outside the landfill was far less abundant than the central area.

Every day, a garbage truck dumped fresh rubbish near several garbage hills. The garbage was mainly domestic garbage, including construction garbage like bricks, tiles and ceramics. There was also harmful garbage, which was theoretically non-recyclable, but there was also a good deal of recyclable garbage mixed in, because sometimes the cost of recycling and reusing garbage was higher than making a new thing completely.

Domestic garbage mainly consisted of organic substances, such as leftovers, bones, and peels, which were treated by biotechnology to accelerate degradation and then buried in the soil, waiting for decomposition.

However, there was another ”biotechnology” at work—that is, before the garbage was buried underground, the wild dogs would find the bones and meat that had not yet completely decayed and have a good meal.

It was just that the stray dogs that were waiting around the outer ring of the landfill could not enjoy that sort of good treatment.

It had been some time since the stray dogs had been driven out of the dog market and arrived here. They wandered around and gradually formed several small groups, each of which had its own leader.

Animals gathered by species. Dogs separated by groups.

Stray dogs that were alone had to join these small groups. Otherwise, they had little room to survive.

Among the stories handed down by landfill workers, there were four well-known groups of stray dogs: the Pit Bull Band, the German Shepherd Club, the Fierce Dog Group, and the Local Dog Circle.