Bobi, who was this year named the oldest dog in the world by Guinness World Records, has died at the age of 31.
“We have better memories of a long life where he was happy and, above all, where he made a lot of people happy, especially his family,” Bobi’s owner, Leonel Costa, told journalists in Portugal on Monday.
A purebreed Rafeiro, a Portuguese livestock guard dog whose normal life expectancy is between 12 and 14, Bobi was not supposed to make it beyond puppyhood.
He was born on May 11, 1992, alongside three other pups in a wood storage shed owned by the Costa family in the village of Conqueiros.
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Because the family owned so many animals, the father decided they could not keep the newborn puppies and the parents took them from the shed the next day, while the mother dog Gira was out, said Leonel Costa, who was eight years old at the time.
But they didn’t realise they had left one puppy behind, and that puppy became Bobi.
“He died at the age of 31 years and 165 days,” the Guinness World Records said.
After he was declared the world’s oldest dog in February, media and curious onlookers from around the world paid Bobi a visit.
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