GlobePulses@GlobePulses
Seven stolen dogs in Jilin, China really did escape a dog thief, stick together for roughly 17 km, and make it back to their owners – with a corgi repeatedly checking on the group at the front.
What actually happened:-
The dogs were taken from several homes in a village in Jilin and loaded onto a vehicle headed for an illegal dog meat shop.
At some point, they fell or jumped from the moving truck onto the Changshuang Expressway and began moving as a tight pack along the highway shoulder.
Witnesses and drone clips show them trekking for about two days, covering over 17 km through highways and nearby fields without splitting up.
How the pack moved:-
Footage shows a loose formation: bigger, healthier dogs formed a protective ring around an injured German shepherd that was struggling to walk.
A small corgi at the front kept glancing back and adjusting pace, effectively acting as a guide while staying alert to traffic and stragglers.
Locals and rescue volunteers tracked them in real time via social posts, updating sightings until the group was finally intercepted safely.
Outcome for the dogs:-
All seven dogs were eventually brought back to their owners after about two days on the move and checked by vets.
Examinations found only minor injuries, despite the fall from a vehicle and exposure to traffic and rough terrain.
Owners said these dogs were already neighbourhood friends who played together daily, which likely strengthened their instinct to stay together on the road.
Why this resonates:-
It taps into real canine behaviour: dogs imprint on both humans and fellow dogs, so a known group can function as a mini survival unit under stress.
The story also spotlights China’s ongoing issue with illegal dog meat trafficking, and how citizen videos plus online coordination can directly save animals from slaughter.