Dog Walked 4 Miles Every Day To Say Hello To Everybody In Town

Nov 23, 2019 by apost team

When we see dogs out roaming the streets, we usually worry that they are lost or homeless – but that isn’t always the case! A dog from Longville, Minnesota name Bruno proved that sometimes a dog just likes to make the rounds through town.

Bruno was a familiar face around the town of Longville as he used to make the four-mile trek into town for over twelve years simply so that he could go around and visit with the townspeople. With his perky ears up and his tongue hanging out, Bruno looked like a dog that is full of confidence and knows exactly where he’s going and why.

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The townspeople came to know and love Bruno, many of them looking forward to his visits. Bruno had a daily routine that started at Tabaka’s grocery store where he stopped around back to get a bite to eat. After enjoying his breakfast, Bruno went to the city hall and then wound up at the ice cream shop. While those were his regular daily stops, Bruno had many other places that he liked to visit on occasion.

Bruno was certainly well-fed and lavished with love since many people stopped to pet him, give him something to eat, and provide him with drinks when he was exhausted from his long walk.

Bruno belonged to a man named Larry LaVellee. Larry managed to wind up with Bruno in a very unusual set of circumstances. The pup had been left in his driveway and a passerby mistook him for Larry’s dog. When the little brown ball of fur was presented to Larry, he decided that he didn’t want to let the puppy go. After he adopted Bruno, Larry tried multiple things to keep Bruno confined at home; however, when all methods failed, he finally determined that Bruno deserved his freedom.

The people in Longville certainly are glad that Larry made the decision to let Bruno walk where he pleased. The dog became so much a part of their town that they have erected a monument of him along with a large plaque, even before he, unfortunately, passed away in 2018. His statue is still visited regularly, with many who remember Bruno fondly leaving dog toys and flowers beside it.

“That’s because he wasn’t a dog,” Beth Holmdahl, who runs the information center for the Chamber of Commerce, told the Star-Tribune of Minneapolis. “He was a townie.”

Are there any special animals in your town? Let us hear about them and then invite your friends to read this amazing story.