Don’t take Fido for a walk here.

Residents of West Dunbartonshire, Scotland, love strolling over Overtoun Bridge, a picturesque 19th-century bridge. But dog owners steer clear of the structure, which has developed a reputation as a doggie suicide bridge.

Fifty pooches have leapt off the 50-foot bridge since the 1950s — and no one’s sure why, according to Vice UK. The Daily Mail reported in 2006 that five dogs jumped to their deaths in six months alone a year before.

Some 600 more dogs are said to have flung themselves off the bridge from the same exact spot and survived — after which some of them get back up and try to jump all over again.

Local Donna Cooper lost her collie, Ben, in 2005 to the deadly bridge. She tells the Daily Mail, “His paw was broken, his jaw was broken and his back was broken and badly twisted. The vet decided it wasn’t worth putting him through the pain, so we had to let him go.”

Some believe that the bridge and Overtoun House, a former estate, are haunted. (“In Scotland, everything old and Scottish is said to be haunted,” Vice UK writes.)

Another theory goes that the pups are being lured over the edge by animals hiding beneath the bridge, such as squirrels, mice and minks, which give off enticing scents to the pups.

Long-nosed breeds, such as German shepherds and Scottish terriers, seem to be the most affected, Vice UK reports.

The Scottish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals has investigated the bizarre phenomenon. But it hasn’t figured out what’s happening — and until it does, local dog owners aren’t taking any chances.

“They need to put up a fence or something, they really do,” dog owner Jenna tells Vice UK.