



There was a rumor circling in regards to the photo of a bizarrely beefy canine that, this is the strongest dog on the planet and work for Russian military. At first quick look, huge numbers of you may think that this photograph is Photoshoped. However, the picture above is bona fide and describes a true creature.





As per a July 2007 Daily Mail article , the massive canine in the photo is a whippet named Wendy who was born with a hereditary deformity which made her develop bigger and considerably more bulky than others of her breed.





While her inner body organs like head, heart, lungs and legs are the size of those of a typical whippet, her gene deformity implies she is "double muscled”.





She weighs 4st4lb - twice to the extent that she ought to - and has swelling neck muscles, brawny shoulders and backside like a baboon. Dissimilar to common whippets known for their agile and thin frame, this pedigree doesn't simply have a six-pack stomach, she has a 24-pack.





According to 2007 New York Times article Wendy and other similar to her – named “bully whippets” - have turned into the subjects of exploratory testing.





When mutant, muscle-bound puppies began appearing in litters of champion racing whippets, the breeders of the typically sleek pooches invited researchers to take DNA tests at race meets here and the nation over. They expect to discover a genetic reason for the condition and a way to cleanse it from the breed.





It lived up to expectations. “Bully whippets," as the chunky dogs are known, turn out to have a genetical change that intensifies muscle improvement.





A June 2007 Canada.com article reports that, according to The National Institute of Health study, whippets with one single imperfect copy of the gene have grown muscularity that can improve racing capabilities in the breed, known for velocities up to 37 miles per hour. But whippets with two difective copies of the gene get to be “double-muscled," like Wendy. As per the same study, this mutation has been seen before in one human, and also in mice, cattle and sheep.





“People have alluded to Wendy as Arnold Schwarzenegger”, says caring owner Ingrid Hansen. “Wendy is same as the other dogs who likes nothing better than a decent back scratch and isn't bashful about sitting in your lap to request one”. Far from carrying on with a strict straightforward life as a Russian Army dog, Wendy delights in a stress-free and vigorous life on a farm in Victoria, Canada.