Representational image of Lurcher dog. 
World

'Britain's loneliest dog' finally finds home

Lurchers are primarily hunting dogs. Hundreds of people from all over the world offered to re-home him after a campaign by Little Valley Animal Shelter in Exeter, Devon, went viral, the BBC reported.

From our online archive

LONDON: A lurcher called Hector, branded as the 'loneliest dog in Britain' has finally found a home.

The two-year-old lurcher had been in a shelter for over 500 days since he was rescued over welfare concerns in 2017. A lurcher is a sighthound such as a Greyhound crossed with a terrier, herding breed, or large scenthound.

Lurchers are primarily hunting dogs. Hundreds of people from all over the world offered to re-home him after a campaign by Little Valley Animal Shelter in Exeter, Devon, went viral, the BBC reported.

The lonely lurcher, who spent more than 500 days at the shelter, had been its longest-staying resident.

"We couldn't be happier for him," the shelter said. "We can't stop smiling." Staff at Little Valley said they were overjoyed their "longest-staying resident had finally found his forever family."

The centre was "inundated" with messages from would-be owners worldwide after its campaign to re-home Hector went viral at the start of February. The shelter thanked its "amazing supporters" for helping Hector find his "happy ever after".

White House postpones sending Vance to Switzerland for talks with Iran on its nuclear program

Shiv Sena (UBT) initiates disciplinary action against six rebel MPs for violating party whip

NDA-backed independent candidate Parimal Nathwani wins RS race in Jharkhand, gets 28 votes

Kerala Shigella cases hit 110 in June; Nipah patient remains critical

Vance says US Navy has lifted blockade on Iranian ports as part of deal

SCROLL FOR NEXT