Tag: giant dog

  • Laika Moved to Siberia

    Laika Moved to Siberia

    Laikaweb

    By Skip Daverman

    MOSCOW – The giant space dog Laika has been relocated to the wilds of Siberia, where she can destroy the countryside in peace without harming “anything of value”, according to the Russian government.

    After destroying a farm outside of Moscow, the Russian government needed to move Laika to some other place for further study.  The farm was all but destroyed, and its fields will take years of work just to make them usable again.  One day, she got loose from the scientists and began marking her territory in a nearby town, nearly drowning the townsfolk.  She needed to be moved to an empty expanse of land where no human would want to live.

    Luckily, Russia has Siberia and lots of it.  President Putin told the people of the Sakha Republic to vacate if they wish because a giant space dog was moving in.  The Sakha Republic is a section of Russia with a little over 950,000 people within an area roughly one-third the size of the United States.  Needless to say, it’s sparse.   The Russian government hopes to contain Laika within the northern regions of Sakha as it is even more remote, which is saying something for Siberia.

    This time, Ural rounded Laika into a giant carrying case and flew her to her new home.  With the extra space, Laika should be able to roam freely while scientists study her, and she can chase Siberian tigers and create new slobber ponds to her heart’s content.

  • Laika Destroys Farm with Slobber and Playfulness

    Laika Destroys Farm with Slobber and Playfulness

    Laikaweb

    By Skip Daverman

    MOSCOW – The giant space dog Laika, who returned from a decades-long trip through outer space, destroyed a farm 120 km east of Moscow with her slobber and rambunctiousness.

    After she “hatched” from the asteroid that brought her back to Earth, Laika was taken to a military facility for study.  The cause of her longevity and increased size is still unknown, but the Russian government assures that she is not radioactive or giving off any malignant radiation.  After a few days of study in the facility, it was clear that she could not stay there, at least without destroying expensive equipment.  She was moved to a state-run farm east of Moscow.  Ural initially tried carrying Laika, but she squirmed too much.  Instead, he just played fetch with her using a tree.

    The plan was to give Laika enough space to exert her energy while scientists could study her.  But she apparently got too excited.  “She just likes everyone and everything too much,” one scientist said.  “We try to take a measurement, and she covers us in slobber.  We try to strap a collar around her neck, and she wants us to scratch her belly, and then when we do scratch her belly, we must fight off giant fleas.  It is a disaster.”

    Laika’s slobber has created several “ponds” throughout the farm, drowning equipment and occasionally people (albeit briefly) with her super-charged saliva glands, and her playfulness has destroyed farm and research equipment.  Reportedly, she chewed on a tractor like it was a bone.

    By all accounts, she seems nice.  Laika has not shown any signs of aggression, and Ural stops by once a day to play with her.  She could have returned angry and ready to take vengeance on a nation that shot her into space to die for science.  “At the very least, she’s happy,” said the scientist.  “Thankfully, she doesn’t know or remember being shot into space with no intent for her to return.”

    “Well, unless she’s developed telepathy.  Then we’re in trouble.”

  • Giant Space Dog Turns Out to Be Laika from Sputnik 2 Launch

    Giant Space Dog Turns Out to Be Laika from Sputnik 2 Launch

    Laikaweb
    Laika, surrounded by scientists and superhero, Ural

    By Skip Daverman

    MOSCOW – The giant space dog that emerged from the Russian asteroid earlier this week turns out to be the space dog, Laika, who was shot into space on the Sputnik 2 in 1957.

    After several DNA tests were conducted that showed the giant space dog had Earth dog DNA, someone in the secret Russian testing facility remarked that the dog looked like Laika.  The photos of Laika from 1957 did look like the giant space dog, but they were not convinced.  After all, she had died within hours of her ill-fated launch.  Cosmic rays have been known to mutate human and animal DNA in the past, but without a DNA sample from 1957, which they didn’t have, they wouldn’t have a way to conclusively determine the giant space dog’s identity.

    Luckily, they had one lead, tucked away in the back of a binder of the Sputnik 2 flight records.  Dr. Vladimir Yazdovsky, one of the Sputnik 2 scientists, had taken Laika home with him to play with his children before the launch.  Yazdovsky has long since passed away, but his children are still alive.  They were brought in to see the giant space dog, and the giant space dog recognized them immediately.  She ran up to them and slobbered all over them (one required medical assistance afterwards), but it was confirmed.  The giant space dog is Laika.

    How she survived all this time is still not known.  It was long thought that she died soon after launching into space, but seeing as the Russians didn’t disclose that fact until 2002, it’s apparent that they kept part of her flight a secret.  What the Russian government will do with her is not known, but rumor has it President Putin wants to ride him like giant horse.

  • Giant Dog Emerges from Russian Asteroid

    Giant Dog Emerges from Russian Asteroid

    By Skip Daverman

    MOSCOW – The creature inside the Russian asteroid has emerged, and it appeared to be a giant dog from outer space.  Despite having been confined to a small rock for so long, the 100-foot space dog was in good spirits.

    It began to run around the containment area, barking and jumping.  The ground shook with every bounce, and it took all of Ural’s strength to make the space dog sit.  Somehow, it understood Ural’s verbal command, surprising everyone.  “If it is from outer space,” said a scientist who has been monitoring the asteroid since it landed, “how would it understand Russian?  Is it originally from Earth, or is it a psychic shape-shifting monster, preying on our species’ close relationship to the dog to lure us into a false sense of security so that it may one day infect our brains and take control of our minds to rule the Earth as its wretched slaves?”

    “Or maybe it’s a lonely psychic shape-shifting monster and just wants to play fetch and such?”

    After several minutes of scratching its giant belly, Ural uprooted a tree and threw it several miles away, and the giant space dog dutifully retrieved it.  Then it licked Ural’s face, and its saliva created a pond.

    Eventually, Ural and the Russian scientists decided to move it to a less populated area for further study.  “After all,” said the scientist, “if it is a psychic shape-shifting monster, we should at least see if it’s radioactive or evil.  Maybe its saliva does the mind control part.  Maybe.”