While living in Istanbul, the street dogs were some of my favourite everyday sights.
Among them, I had day friends and night friends. The day friends, I never saw at night, and the night friends were nowhere to be seen when the sun was up.
This particular one-eyed dog captured both my imagination and my heart. It seemed to have its personal jurisdiction of a few blocks and would be waiting for me once I entered. After a short and dignified greeting, very unlike the exuberant greeting of the day friends, it accompanied me at my side back to my flat.
As I greeted to say goodnight and goodbye on my last night in the city (my right hand to my left breast, with a slight bow of my head), I could've sworn that I'd received a deliberate wink of its good eye in return.
I spent a month in Turkey when I was in my 20s, I loved it. I wasn't in Istanbul very long though. It's amazing that these dogs just live on the street? Do people feed them?
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They're sort of taken care of collectively by the residents and shopkeepers in which ever area they live. I love that whole sense of community and how it extends to the four-legged ones, too.
They're tagged, too (I'm not sure if you can see that in the photo) as the government makes sure they get their shots, from what I've heard.
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We could learn something from the Turks I think ... especially in the Eastern Cape!
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