Maggie the Kelpie, Potentially The World’s Oldest Dog To Ever Live, Dies At Age 30

Maggie, the Australian Kelpie, passed away after having lived for 30 (human) years, according to owner Brian McLaren. She spent her life with him, roaming around their spacious dairy farm.

While most dogs live between 11-15 years of age (and for some lucky ones, a few years more), this amazing pup more than doubled the average life expectancy.

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Unfortunately, McLaren lost documentation that specified Maggie’s birth date, so the official world record for the oldest living dog still belongs to Bluey, an Australian Cattle Dog that lived to the ripe old age of 29 years and 5 months, back in 1939.

Despite Maggie’s age, the elderly pup remained relatively spry up until a couple days before her passing.

“She was 30 years old, she was still going along nicely last week, she was walking from the dairy to the office and growling at the cats and all that sort of thing,” McLaren said in The Weekly Times,

“She just went downhill in two days and I said yesterday morning when I went home for lunch … ‘She hasn’t got long now,'” he added.

The newspaper also reported that Maggie crossed the rainbow bridge peacefully. “I’m sad, but I’m pleased she went the way she went,” he said of her passing.

Check out this news clip, highlighting the pup’s longevity:

Maggie the Kelpie passed away peacefully in April 2016. What amazing girl – she sure was loved!

Source: The Weekly Times


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