CN Loyal Camel Walks 100 Km Through Desert to Return to Previous Owners After Being Sold - and I would walk 100km


A homesick camel recently managed to melt the hearts of millions of Chinese people after it was reported that it traveled 100 kilometres through the desert to return to its former owners, eight months after being sold.

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Chinese media recently featured the heartwarming story of a loyal camel who allegedly spent days crossing the barren desert of North China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region to reach its former home after being sold to another farmer eight months prior. The injured animal was spotted walking through the desert earlier this month by another herdsman who took it in and tended to its needs while trying to find its owner. News of the camel’s discovery reached its owner who rushed to retrieve it, but after hearing about the animal’s arduous journey, its former masters wanted it back.

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Temur, the camel’s former master and his wife had sold it to another farmer back in October 2019. The man took it to his home 100 kilometres away and raised it in their hometown in winter and grazed it in the mountains in spring. The animal seemed to have adjusted fine to its new home, but on June 27, just one day after its summer shearing, it ran away.

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According to a viral Pear video, the homesick camel walked more than 100 kilometres through the desert, wading through mountains, crossing highways and fences before finally approaching its old home, which was when the herdsman spotted it. It certainly had the scars to show for its adventure, and when its former owners heard about its risky journey, they decided to take it back.

“When we heard the news, we wanted to bring back the camel, but its current owner had already caught it back to his place,” Temur’s wife said. “So we contacted the buyer and decided to replace the old camel with a 3-year-old female. After we got it back, I was so distressed when I found that it had lot of wounds on its body, as it must have got crossing the fences.”

“We will not sell it to anyone else anymore, as camels are intelligent animals,” the woman added. “It will be free for the rest of its life”.

Temur and the aging camel’s current owner reached an understanding where Temur and his wife would get their camel back and they would offer a younger, 3-year-old camel in return.

As of Wednesday, the Pear video documenting the loyal camel’s journey though the desert had been watched 16 million times, with many viewers declaring themselves impressed by the animal’s endurance and its ability to find its way home.

“This has brought me to tears. Animals are so pure. Please take good care of it from now on,” one person commented.

“I can’t imagine the hardship it encountered. It must have missed its home so much,” another person wrote
 
just one day after its summer shearing

So either it's smart enough to wait until New Human does Thing to it before it jumps ship, or the new owner got rough and it was angry enough about the experience after the fact to formulate a plan and act on it.

Pretty much every mammal is a little bit smarter and a little bit more emotionally complex than people realize. I've raised cattle and while they probably have one of the more...let's say...glacial intellects and obviously can't process much, they still do little things here and there that surprise you, and each one has its own slightly different cow-personality. Camels, I would guess, are somewhere between cows and horses on the intelligence scale.
 
So anyone else want to know how?

Like, did it use the stars or some shit? Or do camels really just have that insanely good of a memory when it comes to spatial relations, or what?
So horses and camels are typically used for the same purposes, and living near the Amish, I can tell you that horses are marvelous creatures when it comes to memory. Amish people can fall asleep from behind the harness and the horse will get them home fine. I've seen it happen. I'm gonna go out on a limb and say that a camel is smart enough to figure out how to get back to their traitorous former owner. It could probably back track from where it was sold to and get home.
 
So horses and camels are typically used for the same purposes, and living near the Amish, I can tell you that horses are marvelous creatures when it comes to memory. Amish people can fall asleep from behind the harness and the horse will get them home fine. I've seen it happen. I'm gonna go out on a limb and say that a camel is smart enough to figure out how to get back to their traitorous former owner. It could probably back track from where it was sold to and get home.
Agreed.

People really underestimate how smart horses are, and how good they are at memorizing trails and locations. Horses have been known to take their riders home when they've either fallen asleep at the reins or are injured and can't give proper commands. They've also been known to also return to their prior homes when sold. It's rare, but it's known to happen. I have little doubt a camel could do the same.
 
Herd animals are unfairly judged as dumb, in reality, they have to be smart to some degree to recognize threats and stay alive and uneaten. And even among the smart of them, there's a few REALLY smart ones. For example: Here's a horse smart enough to recognize that his own reflection in a mirror is not another horse....

Most don't "get" it and try to walk around the edge of the mirror to where the "other horse" is, and then be confused/frustrated that it suddenly disappeared....

But he obviously knows it's HIMSELF, and that things happening in front of him are actually behind him, that's some seriously developed thinking that not all animals can do.

And of course, it's kinda fascinating how he reacts, doing what little kids do in front of a mirror, making faces :P
 
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He also killed his dog in a Berlin bunker if I am to believe that Downfall movie.

He did, fed it one of his cyanide capsules to make sure they'd work, his biggest fear was they'd only knock him out, and he'd wake up in a Red Army infirmary......
 
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