Scooter could be world's smallest dog
DRINK ME? Six-month-old Maltese pup Scooter sits dwarfed by this tea cup as owner Cheryl McKnight admires her 'tiny ball of fluff'.
Related Links
Relevant offers
CuteStuff
At barely the height of a tea cup, Maltese pup Scooter could well be the smallest dog in world.
The tiny ball of white fluff is just 8cm tall and measures just over 20cm from his nose to his tail.
While Scooter is still young, he appears to have stopped growing.
The Guinness Book of World Records title holder – a long-haired chihuahua in America named Boo Boo – is bigger at just over 10cm tall.
Scooter's size is also evident in his weight, or lack of it. He weighs less than a block of butter at 400 grams – and that is while he is wearing clothes.
Gisborne owner Cheryl McKnight fashioned a regular purple sock into a jersey, which Scooter wears so he is easily seen around the house.
"It really is quite something. I can't take him for a walk or put a leash on him."
Ms McKnight said six-month-old Scooter came from a litter of three and stopped growing before he reached two months.
"He was the same size as the other two pups when they were born but as they grew, he didn't," she said.
Scooter's siblings were sold.
"Dogs have to weigh at least 870 grams before they can leave their mums for the shops, and he has not even reached halfway."
As Scooter scoots around the lounge floor, he is dwarfed by plastic toy figurines belonging to Ms McKnight's grandson.
When friends come to visit, one of the first things they say is that they want to take Scooter home with them.
"For the first 10 weeks or so I didn't really want him. I thought nah, someone else can have him.
"But over time I've fallen in love with him. I would hate to give him away now."
Ms McKnight's previous pet, a miniature orange Pomeranian, was killed in front of her by two other dogs two years ago.
"It took me a long, long time after that to even think of having another dog," she said.
Ms McKnight's sister, who breeds Maltese dogs, eventually gave her one and Scooter arrived a few months later.
Scooter feeds from an egg cup of food three times a day and sleeps in a shoebox, but "does everything a normal dog does", she said.
However, making his way up steps is challenging.
"Because of the height of steps, they would be enormously big steps for him. It must be like living with giants."
Scooter was originally named Pee Wee, but Ms McKnight decided to change the name, saying she didn't want him to suffer an inferiority complex.
-NZPA
Sponsored links
Lively spends Valentine's with dad
World happier place than in 2007
Experience beats romantic gifts
Aniston reveals exercise, diet plan
Gardener's paradise planned for Chch
Celebrity chef puts skills up for auction
Hollywood couple rely on date nights
Your Valentine's Day dinner sorted
Reese plans Valentine's Day surprise
Search for missing Huntly teen scaled down
Man critically injured in Hauraki crash
Pop music star Whitney Houston dies
Gay pride parade may return to Auckland
Phoenix lose game and second place to Roar
Piri Weepu stakes his claim for No 10
Kiwis land big Aussie contract
Ryan Nelsen debuts in Tottenham win
England fight back to edge Italy in Six Nations
Suarez a 'disgrace to Liverpool' in loss to United
Police arrest five at Murdoch's Sun newspaper
Oceania, Fifa roles end in disgrace
Do your pets make you feel loved?
Related story: Pets help people feel loved and secure
