
Recently I’ve come to realize — through extensive deep dives into the craziest internet nuthouses — that Ohio is not in fact a real state.
This was slightly disturbing since that’s where I graduated high school and met my husband.
Actually looking at that map above, I should have figured something was up. I mean I met MY HUSBAND in a state that is — look at it — vaguely in the shape of a heart. This is not even vaguely plausible.
And also, honestly, it’s the stuff associated with Ohio that makes you wonder what is going on. Because in what but an unreal state would a RIVER catch fire?
So this day of all days, I decided to do a little investigative journalism on the state — or lack thereof — of Ohio.
I spoke to several highly suspicious characters who claim some kind of relationship with Ohio.
The first was a gentleman in trench coat and dark sunglasses who was standing by a dark car in a parking lot that looked like someone had been breaking and stealing the asphalt.
Honestly, he looked like such a shady character, I got to it immediately. “When did you first realize Ohio wasn’t real?
He looked at me a long while and answered,
What?
I wasn’t about to let him off that easy, so I continued: Does the unreality of Ohio bother you?
Nah, I grew up in IA and Ohio was one of those back east schools that filled out our schedule when not playing someone important like Iowa State or Purdue
So, where do you actually live? Kentucky or Indiana?
Classified.
Are there a lot of birds there?
Shhhh….they’re listening
I was about to thank him and leave — fast — when we were approached by… Well…. I’m fairly sure it was a well known writer, one whose middle initials are R. R. Except he looked like he’d acquired a soul since the last time I’d seen him in person and he assured me he wasn’t that writer but a much better one. He gave his name as Fuzzy.
He said he’d always suspected that Ohio wasn’t real because gas was so much cheaper there than in his state of Indiana. The problem is that you have to use it all up before you reach the border, otherwise it disappears on the border.
This led me to wonder whether Ohio was a sort of fairyland.
At which point the first — very suspicious — character said he thought it was maybe a realm of dark elves, because who else thinks of putting Mediterranean spices on ground beef, put it on either hotdogs or…. pasta? and call it chilli? That’s an abomination of such an order that if they were real Texas would probably already have mounted a punitive expedition against them.
At this point a wild Canadian appeared. He was the strangest Canadian with a maple leaf on his chest painted over with stars and stripes. He said he was on a pilgrimage to find a new dwelling place, but when he drove to the US for the first time, one moment he was Michigan then he was in Kentucky and had three hours missing. So he understood the unreality of Ohio.
Which is when George– I mean Fuzzy. I swear that’s what I meant — broke in with: What are the creatures that are supposed to be under the mantle, like the Deep Sevens under the ocean? I’m spacing. But Ohio is a creation of theirs, for whatever nefarious purposes they might have. What would the native Americans have to say about it? Have they ever been to Ohio, which doesn’t exist?
The guy in the dark sunglasses and trenchcoat leaned forward and said, urgently, in a hushed whisper. “No, No. ok listen, I’m only saying this once so they don’t find me, Ohio was created as a cover story to hide the location of Hanger 18…can’t say anymore, I think they’re coming….you never heard of me or saw me, right?”
And then he disappeared. Just. One minute he was there, the next he was gone.
But the twitchy Canadian grabbed my sleeve. “It’s true. I have proof.” And slipped me the world’s grubbiest picture. Who even prints photos anymore?

By then I was thoroughly spooked and got out of there fast, having decided I’d just interview the mathematician, who spent some time in Ohio growing up and also went to college there.
Investigative journalism starts at home, on the comfy sofa, with a bowl of popcorn.
So once more I dove right into it.
When did you first realize Ohio wasn’t real?
I’ve always thought Ohio was a microcosm of the US: The north west was wild and playful, the North East was industrial and overcrowded, the South East was farmland and good old boys and the South West is mostly empty except this one pocket of technology at the southwest extreme. After a while I realized that was a little too pat.
Does it bother you that Ohio isn’t real?
They say that all the cells in your body are replaced over seven years, so a case could be made that the memories of Ohio are an illusion, which would fit with the idea that we’re all living in a simulation.
Have you ever considered the excess of snow is designed to hide the fact that Ohio is not a real state?
You mean Ohio is a state of matter like solid and liquid?
Did Ohio have a lot of birds?
Squirrels. They ate the birds. I don’t remember birds. Just squirrels.
Are the squirrels real?
I don’t know I haven’t seen black squirrels anywhere else. There’s a lot of black squirrels. They might be CIA drones.
Of course, doubting Ohio made me doubt my own existence.
So you also are a construct by the CIA? Is that what you’re confessing to?
I can neither confirm nor deny.
Um… So I’m sitting here, with my bowl of popcorn and suddenly I’m worried about Ohio, about constructs, about the nature of reality.
But more importantly, is the Mathematician a construct of the CIA? I mean I should have guessed something was up when he had a name two letters off from the main character I invented for my space opera series when I was fourteen.
… The birds have gone very quiet.
If I disappear, look in Ohio. Which doesn’t exist.
It’s all true, you know.
LikeLiked by 3 people
Guys, the Air Force is a conspiracy.
Think about it, why would we want to split off the Army Air Corps? At the policy level during WWII, Army leadership of aviation was perfectly balanced and had no bugs.
Ira Eaker is living still, and is directing the conspiracy of Army officers pretending to be the Air Force from an office in Fort Sill, Oklahoma.
Edwards and so forth are all fake installations, all of the ‘Air Force’ pilot training, and all of the fixed wing vehicle development actually takes place at Fort Rucker.
Wright-Patterson AFB does not actually exist, those documents are forged at Aberdeen Proving Grounds.
Have you ever met anyone who has seen Hill, Robins, or Tinker AFB? The buildings don’t exist, they are cardboard cutouts.
The ICBMs, the B-2, the B-52, the C-130, and the F-15 are actually all handled in upstate New York.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I have been to both WPAFB and Offutt AFB/SAC HQ.
LikeLike
I drove by Space Command, back when it was a single (?) building on Perterson ARB in Colorado Springs. Now it’s its own military branch, top-heavy with DEI chiefs and conspicuously short of worker-Indians.
I dunno. Maybe Space Command’s purpose is simply to have a place to put DEI officers where they would do less damage than in a real branch.
LikeLiked by 2 people
I have been to WPAFB, since I live in Dayton, but have also been to Scott AFB, and Tinker AFB, due to my other best friend being in the Air Force.
LikeLike
The Reader has been to Hill, Robbins and Tinker multiple times. He notes that Tinker is odd. It might have something to do with the peak power output of the AWACS radar.
LikeLike
There’s an SR-71 on display at Warner-Robins. I put greasy fingerprints on it.
Driving through OKC once, the police had Interstate 40 blocked off as it passed through Tinker. Big sections of fence had been removed, and the USAF was taxiing some B-52s from north to south across the freeway.
Most of the drivers seemed angry at being delayed. I got out of the truck and sat on the hood to watch. I had forgotten how BIG a BUFF is. They were a quarter mile away, but the cars at the head of the line gave them scale.
LikeLike
We spent a couple of days going through the Air Force Museum. We’ll worth a trip.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Next stop, Willoughby…Ohio?
LikeLiked by 1 person
I may or may not have worked in Willoughby, Ohio for 20 years. I could tell you, but (redacted by Ohio Space Program operatives).
Cincinnati chili is a problem, but the reason Texas hasn’t mounted a punitive expedition is (redacted by Ohio Space Program).
LikeLike
Hey!
Ohio cuisine is AWESOME!
Have you tried Cincinnati chili? It totally rocks. And does NOT give you heartbutn.
And the hot dogs in Toledo! Tony Paco has to be visited to be believed.
Think of Ohio as Brigade in. It only surfaces periodically, between winter snowstorms, spring thunderstorms, summer high winds and tornados, and harvest time.
When you do experience Ohio, you want to stay forever.
LikeLiked by 2 people
I grew up in Toledo and we make a pilgrimmage to Tony Packo’s whenever Ohio reappears.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I’m in Colorado, where it’s spelled chile and served over eggs, burritos, or hamburgers. That said, I like me some Skyline…whatever it is.
LikeLike
In Arkansas, they call that a “chili size” for some reason. A local mom-n-pop restaurant used to serve them. They don’t look particularly appetizing, but I liked them a lot after I tried one.
LikeLike
Technically, Cincinnati chili is Greek food.
LikeLike
Texas is still sorting out the Great Bean Schism.
LikeLiked by 4 people
There’s much worse than beans for Texas to worry about.
In several places I’ve encountered “chili” that lacked the basic ingredient: chilis. Just beans in tomato sauce, not appreciably different from canned “pork and beans.”
Then there’s the whole “pizza without marinara sauce” thing. No, alfredo sauce is not an option. Without marinara it’s not pizza, Q.E.D. I expect “pizza without cheese” will pop up Real Soon Now…
LikeLiked by 1 person
No…… MEAT?!?!?! What kind of Californication is THAT???
LikeLiked by 3 people
Could that be called a Californication of the fifth kind?
You know a Californication of the first kind would be adding avocado’s or something like that.
LikeLike
Chile in Colorado and New Mexico has no beans. Roasted chiles, tomatillos, onions, garlic, comino, spices. Make with pork shoulder as a main dish,
LikeLiked by 1 person
Communist Chili
LikeLike
No, that’s potatoes. Just potatoes. What you think we’re made of Tomatoes? You must be a spoiled capitalist, tovarish.
LikeLike
And now Steve will be forming the Texan forces for the punitive expedition against Ohio. They’ll occupy and force them to make and eat proper chilli…. :D
LikeLike
Sometimes, you can use one problem to solve another…. as long as Ohioans are made of meat….. 8-)
LikeLiked by 1 person
My daughter does not like marinara. We’ve made pizza with garlic-infused olive oil and it’s very good. I’ve also seen pesto-based pizzas.
Plus Indian crossover pizzas. Those are fun. Need a more spongy crust to really shine, though.
LikeLike
I exclusively eat Pizzas with cauliflower crusts, ‘cheese’ that is not a dairy product (so it is a fake synthetic product), and real meat.
No sauce.
I like Tomato ketchup, but a lot of other tomato based substances I do not care for.
LikeLiked by 1 person
We have gotten “light sauce”, as in almost none, for decades. Add extra cheese to compensate. Why? I couldn’t tolerate tomato sauces. Fine for limited fresh tomatoes, but not the acidic sauces. Now I’ve been cut off from pizza crust (bread in general). The cauliflower crusts? Um, no thank you.
LikeLike
Portugal did pizza without tomato sauce. just cheese. Until 10 years ago.
LikeLike
Wait a minute! I live here………… or is that just part of a false reality? Maybe those of us here are just living in a false front hiding access to another world?……. I’m confused, am I real? Maybe more coffee will help.
LikeLiked by 2 people
On behalf of my rabidly pro-Michigan wife, we believe Ohio is real.
I asked her once if Michigan had plans to re-take Toledo.
“No,” she replied, “We’d never get rid of the stink.”
—
The honest crypto-geographer must admit that Belgium is fake as well.
LikeLiked by 3 people
Hey there – Watch your language!
LikeLike
Ohio’s State Constitution was written in 1802 – but Congress “forgot” to pass the resolution ratifying it.
From 1803 -> 1953 it was Schrodinger’s State.
Eisenhower got Congress to ratify in 1953 because proposed Interstate Highways 70, 80, 90, 71 & 75 all purportedly passed through Ohio…
LikeLiked by 2 people
How did people make it through the cornfields for a century and a half without the interstates to guide them?
LikeLiked by 1 person
They followed crows, duh.
LikeLike
“We’d never get rid of the stink” sounds like Terre Haute, Indiana…which is, unfortunately, quite real.
LikeLike
Or it was until Steve Martin failed to keep the Nazi cheese bomb from eating it, anyway.
LikeLike
Ohio is definitely weird! I spent a week there one day!
LikeLiked by 4 people
In Michigan there’s a saying:
“Oh how I hate Ohio – ‘state?'”
Bear in mind that Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin were all spun off from Ohio, leaving only a gaping void in the cosmos.
And when you look long into an abyss, you find Cleveland.
LikeLiked by 3 people
“We don’t give a damn for the whole state of Michigan/The whole state of Michigan/The whole state of Michigan/We don’t give a damn for the whole state of Michigan/We’re from (redacted by Ohio Space Program operatives)”
LikeLiked by 3 people
Never forgave us for the Keweenaw Rocket Range, did they … 😂
LikeLiked by 1 person
Dad was a Michigan Fan, and a fan of whoever was playing Ohio State
LikeLiked by 1 person
Dad was an Indiana U. fan, but ditto :)
My wife and myself, as well.
LikeLiked by 1 person
My Dad was an OSU grad (’54), football fan, and fan of whoever was playing Michigan. As well as the Cincinnati Reds.
LikeLiked by 2 people
If you stare long enough into Cleveland, eventually, Cleveland stares into you.
LikeLiked by 1 person
The Reader notes that Ohio was part of the original Virginia colony grant.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Probably was; the grant went to the Mississippi and north to who knows where, Canada?
LikeLiked by 1 person
I don’t think Canada is real, if it is I know it’s not sane.
LikeLike
Keep in mind the great John Denver, who chronicled much of the geography of the United States, explicitly denies the existence of Ohio in his song “Saturday Night In Toledo, Ohio (Is Like Being Nowhere At All)”.
LikeLiked by 4 people
Add to this that in Portuguese Toledo means Madness
LikeLiked by 2 people
Having been in Toledo on a few scattered Saturday nights, I can’t argue with Denver.
LikeLike
Ohio doesn’t exist, it’s the western reserve of Connecticut.
LikeLike
Here in Connecticut, I’ve seen a number of black squirrels.
LikeLike
Moo.
LikeLike
“Are we dead, or is this Ohio?”
LikeLiked by 2 people
Shh, nobody tell Neil Young https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JCS-g3HwXdc.
LikeLike
There’s no telling that man anything – his mind’s already made up.
LikeLiked by 3 people
NY has a mind to make up?
LikeLiked by 3 people
And he’s so often wrong
Except saving Lionel. I’ll give that as an example of him being right.
LikeLike
What’s the line, frequently wrong but never in doubt?
LikeLiked by 1 person
“I hope Neil Young will remember / A Southern man don’t need him around anyhow!”
I’m neither Southern nor a man, but I will adopt that identity for this purpose.
LikeLiked by 5 people
You have the right attitude; we’ll make you an honorary citizen.
LikeLiked by 2 people
I was purportedly born in Ohio while Dad Red was in the Navy Reserve there. Much is explained.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Thankyou for reminding me what day it is before I read any email or news/blog sites. My aluminium hat is on and my hands are set on backslap.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I always try to make my jokes obvious and not try to fool anyone, because being fooled annoys me and is not funny.
LikeLike
I entirely forgot about the date, and just figured you found the jest astoundingly funny for some reason.
I would blame sleep issues, but I feel it is fairly evident that I can have significant oversights well rested and otherwise in full possession of my wits.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I set the workroom calendar to March 32. It wasn’t until after noon that someone changed it to April 1. Spoilsport.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Just what I need before coffee. [Crazy Grin]
LikeLiked by 1 person
“Given the choice of going to Hell or Ohio, I’d pick Hell.” 🤣
LikeLike
If nothing else, it might be cooler.
LikeLike
You and Bocephus……
LikeLike
Hell is in Michigan
LikeLike
Google Maps assures me that Toledo is 76.7 miles from Hell. OTOH, it’s only 395 miles from Paradise. Or 2296 miles, depending on your definition of Paradise.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Forgive me for quoting myself “It turned out hell looked just like Cleveland.”
LikeLiked by 1 person
‘Salright. You all go right on telling yourselves that. All the more Cleveland for me. :-)
LikeLike
The twitchy Canadian drove back north in the winter, and the weather went from no snow in sight while driving through Kentucky, to suddenly snow falling and all over the ground as I crossed into Michigan. Yet strangely there was no transition. It was very weird.
LikeLiked by 1 person
So, I have been living in a coma for the last 68 years? Who knew!
And here I thought Indiana wasn’t real!
LikeLiked by 1 person
You have probably been living in a comma. Writers have lots of commas.
LikeLike
Indiana is very real.
Indiana wants you, but you can’t go back there. ;-)
LikeLiked by 2 people
Oh, I know Indiana is real. My best friend lived in Indianapolis from 1980-2004. They followed her husband’s job to Boston, MA. I drove out once a month because she had kids and I didn’t. It was 108 miles driveway to driveway, as I lived in the NW part of Dayton, and she lived in E Indianapolis.
Before Indiana did Daylight Savings time, I used to joke that they stayed on ‘real’ time, and the rest of the country went on ‘fake’ time.
LikeLike
Before Indiana went to statewide daylight savings time , they had three time zones during the summer.
It was county option for daylight savings time.
The northwest, near Chicago,and the southwest, around Evansville, are in the Central time zone. The rest of the state is in the Eastern time zone.
The northwestern counties used daylight savings time. So did a set in the southeast, near Cincinnati.
The result: the southeast was Eastern Daylight time, UTC+4, the bulk of the state was either Eastern standard time or Central Daylight time, both UTC+5, as the southwest used Central Standard time, UTC+6.
LikeLike
Of course Indiana is real. We would go there to visit my grandparents when I was a child. But they would always caution us to stay away from the beach on Indiana’s east coast. Funny goings on, they said.
LikeLike
LOL! And comments. Writers have lots of comments.
LikeLike
Canada isn’t real. I mean, have you seen those wacky AI videos that have been trending the last week? No way that’s an actual country.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Don’t have much to say on the subject of this alleged state of Ohio. I’m just here looking to see if Sharkdip Thieves is available for pre-order yet!
LikeLiked by 2 people
Sharkdip Thievs keeps not being there.
Maybe it took a wrong turn in “Ohio?”
LikeLiked by 1 person
LOL
LikeLike
OK, somebody had to: 😁
LikeLiked by 2 people
I used to drive for a living, for a time. I’ve seen signs that say “Welcome to Ohio” and “Ohio- 210mi,” even “now leaving Ohio.” I have met people that have claimed to have seen Ohio. I have driven from the Southern Appalachians to the Great Lakes region.
I have not seen Ohio, though. As such things go, it sits comfortably amongst things unseen by me, such as Bigfoot, Cthulu, commercially available fusion, peak oil, climate change, magic spells, Narnia (though I looked for it a bunch as a child around amazing attic and basement spaces, no dice), and on-internet trolls.
LikeLiked by 1 person
*non-internet trolls, though I’ve yet to meet the internet trolls in realspace within face punching range, too.
LikeLike
Fusion is 20 years away.
Every year.
LikeLiked by 1 person
no matter how you put it together…
LikeLiked by 1 person
Used to be it was 15 years, so I hear. Back in the 70s or so. Inflation must have got to it, too.
LikeLiked by 1 person
THAT and rejuvenation.
LikeLiked by 1 person
What’s going to happen is they’ll get life extension when I’m 90, but rejuv will then be 20 years away.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Psst! Birds aren’t real!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Not once Neighborcat gets to them. They exist as temporary flying fast foods with feathers.
LikeLiked by 1 person
EXACTLY why I asked. Trick question.
LikeLike
Alas, Ohio is real. It just doesn’t exist in this universe. It’s one of the reasons why they transport toxic chemicals from Indiana to Pennsylvania so often, the hazardous materials don’t actually pass through U.S. states that way. Why do you think Buttigieg was so unconcerned when the train derailed and spilled all that waste? Not our universe. Too bad, so sad for the minions in the parallel one, but then they don’t vote in OUR elections.
LikeLike
I’ve mentioned the popular Ohio post card that had a fake mountain in the background. Now it all makes sense! It wasn’t just the mountain! It was *EVERYTHING*!
LikeLiked by 1 person
LikeLiked by 2 people
I’ve never felt like a real person, and having been born in “Ohio” this actually makes a lot of sense.
LikeLiked by 1 person
LikeLike
LikeLiked by 2 people
The Reader’s first wife was from Ohio – or so she claimed.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Ohio may, or may not exist. I have, however, driven on the interstate across that section of the planet labeled as such by Rand McNally.
I can assure you the rancid condition of the rest areas on that forlorn stretch of interstate is all too real.
If hades has rest areas, they are Made in Ohio.
Abandon all Hope, Ye Who Enter Here.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Someone needs to ask Tom Kratman if Leinenfeld is in Ohio.
LikeLike
Ohio is not real, what is there is a simulacrum.
LikeLike
OT: Artemis II is up!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Not a joke: I watched a stream, and decided to quit just now because I think it might be safely on its way.
LikeLiked by 1 person
From what I’ve read the up part was pretty solid – It’s the uncrispy down part that is at question.
Godspeed, diverse crew of four!!!!
LikeLike
And betcha dollars to donuts the Earthrise segment of this mission has zero bible readings.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Don’t know about Bible readings, but the pilot, Victor Glover, is a Christian.
LikeLiked by 1 person
They launched a return to lunar orbit flight on:
April 1
Night of the full moon. Eep!
LikeLiked by 1 person
so the moon could be easy to find at night…….
LikeLiked by 1 person
Right?!
Just like you would shoot for the sun during the day. Of course it’s hot so, better to land at night.
With the moon, better to land at night, lest the cheese is all sticky and gets on your landing gear.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Good point. That way they don’t get lost.
LikeLike
Of course, there’s nobody out there to ask directions. (Even though there’s a woman in the crew.)
LikeLiked by 1 person
Just wait until they get to the dark side of the moon, where there is no light …
As long as they don’t suddenly turn left. The pictures the media shows the projected slingshot around the moon has the ship entering the slingshot from the left of the moon, and swinging clockwise, so at the backside turning left would be not-good. If the media has lied to us (not ruling this out), and the ship will be slingshotting counterclockwise, then turning right at the backside of the moon would be ill-advised.
As far as having a woman on the team, since there are no compass directions to worry about, the team will be just fine.
LikeLike
This is the first time in 54 years anybody has gone more than 400 miles above the ground. Let’s hope it’s not the last.
LikeLiked by 1 person
While it wasn’t on April 1, I fondly recall the time my beloved convinced my father (who loved pulling my leg) that the armadillo was an endangered species in the state of Florida.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Knew a guy who used armadillos to measure potholes, worked for the state of Texas. They’d call him up and he’d ask how many armadillos would it take to fill it. If it was more than two he’d fill it, less than two and he’d tell them to call back when it got to two.
LikeLike
In fact, Rhode Island doesn’t exist either.
LikeLike
And it’s full of Portuguese. who frankly are highly improbable.
LikeLike
I guess there had to be something not quite right about a State where I used to drive past a building shaped like a picnic basket.
LikeLiked by 1 person
One of the musicals we did in High School was Wonderful Town. A recurring song was
Why o Why o Whyo?
Why did I ever leave Ohio?
I have not been able to get that out of my head all day. Thanks a lot. Only song I remember from that one. We did How to Succeed in Business, South Pacific and I have the whole libretto memorized.
LikeLiked by 1 person
As someone who lived there first seventeen years in Dayton, I can assure you that Southwest Ohio exists. I cannot vouch for any other area. And I have proof, Dayton is mentioned in the movie Road House.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Well! Movies make up all sort’s of things. ;)
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yep, there have been at least three movies set in Wakanda.
Try finding it on a Real World map of Africa. [Very Big Crazy Grin]
LikeLiked by 1 person
Well yes, but Jungle Jim’s International Grocery is not far from Dayton. It really does need to be seen. (The skinned rattlesnake in plastic wrap at the meat counter was…interesting).
LikeLike
Tastes just like chicken?
LikeLike
Um. No. Just No.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Ah. We have that kind of store here in town. I love it. It puzzles my husband.
LikeLike
Okay, aside on a totally awesome Japanese thing today from Driscoll over on Insty:
“Cheese violence” (チーズの暴力 / chīzu no bōryoku [CHEE-zoo no BOH-ryoh-koo])
I am a ‘merkun and I endorse this concept.
LikeLike
If Ohio is fading in and out like Brigadoon that would actually explain since I do live in Ohio. I can also neither confirm or deny that I have been to Hanger 18 which may or may not be in King’s Island amusement park somewhere in Ohio.
LikeLiked by 1 person
https://twitchy.com/brettt/2026/04/01/april-fools-day-fun-police-introduce-elite-unit-of-sausage-dogs-n2426717
As hilarious as this is, dachshunds were bred for underground and narrow spaces. Someone on X did point out that they have been used as drug sniffing dogs.
Small dogs are used by search and rescue after earthquakes to locate victims underground after larger dogs have indicated possible survivors.
Small dogs are used as service dogs for medical and non-weight bearing mobility tasks. Smaller dogs aren’t usually going to be used to take down anyone larger than a small child.
A pack of small dogs, where the perp is confined, have tripped and mobbed adults; one even got laughed at in court when complained of dangerous dogs. The sign at the gate, the perp lept over, with a sign the perp ignored/laughed-at, read “Chihuahuas on Duty”.
LikeLike