Rare sight as dog spotted on mountain top

The dog was spotted at Mount Kilimanjaro's Uhuru peak by tourists on a mission to scale Africa's highest mountain August 30, 2011. CORRESPONDENT

MOSHI

Four tourists on a mission to scale Tanzania's Mount Kilimanjaro were treated to a rare sight Tuesday as they reached the peak of Africa's highest mountain: a dog.

The sighting has puzzled animal scientists and locals alike with questions raised on how it has managed to survive freezing temperatures.

The dog was spotted at Uhuru peak within an area situated between 5,730 and 5,895 metres above sea level and temperatures of between minus 4 and 15 degrees centigrade.

One of the tourists, Antoine le Galloudec, who was accompanied by his three colleagues Kristina Meese, Irina Manoliv and Monique Indino, took a picture of the dog using his cell phone.

In an email to sent to The Citizen Tuesday, Galloudec said he spotted the dog as he was relieving himself.

“As I was relieving myself I saw the dog lying some one metre away from where I stood on a rock,” he said.

He added that he was puzzled and later took his phone and photographed the animal.

The marketing officer of Ahsante Tours, which had organised the excursion, Abel Edward told The Citizen that a dog was spotted at Baranco camp (3,960 metres above sea level) on the mountain 10 years ago.

“When the tourists showed us the picture of the dog we could not believe. How did it survive in such freezing cold and what was it eating,” said Mr Edward.

A specialist veterinarian Dr Wilfred Marealle said it was common for a dog to live in cold weather but it was unusual for the animal to climb to the top of such mountain.

"A dog climbing to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro is not something common. The dog might be a rabid dog,” said Dr Marealle and cautioned people to stay away from it.

The Ahsante Tours director Cuthbert Swai said the tourists were intent on distributing the picture to different publications across the world.