Adorable Great Dane goes viral for the hilarious way he greets his mom every day
There’s nothing wrong with a noisy welcome.
Whenever you get home from work or school, the sound of loud kids and pets giving you a warm welcome home is always fun.
It’s way better than the monotonous sounds of work and traffic, right?
Check out this person’s Great Dane. It gives them one really loud welcome home, and it’s even hard to tell that it’s a welcoming gesture. You’ll see what I mean.
Ray Scott filmed this scene titled “This is how my Great Dane greets me every day.”
Mom walks through the front door, and we hear what sounds like rocks and gravel being ground up in a mixer.
This is no construction vehicle, though. It’s just his Great Dane.
The ultra low-pitched gurgling sound is friendly, at least from the context.
It’s just how this 200-pound dog says “Hey, where’d you go? I was looking for you”.
With each time he makes that sound, he bounds up and down and lets all his weight land on his front paws.
Obviously, with how big Great Danes are, this makes quite the sound too.
It’s a big old “THUMP”, and he won’t stop doing it.
This should go without saying, but it’s pretty intimidating to see.
Great Danes are enormous dogs, and one making a scene like this could scare the wrong person. Their heads alone are huge, and I don’t think that rumbling noise he’s making sounds friendly to everyone.
Dogtime describes the Great Dane’s bark as a “power bark”, and for good reason. With that super-low pitch and loud volume, it sounds less like a dog and more like some 66-million-year-old predator that broke out of a paddock.
I don’t think Great Danes fancy snacking on cowardly lawyers, though.
In case you thought it was over, guess again. The rumbling and thumping go on for a bit more.
Though you might ask, I have zero guesses why the dog’s doing this.
Is he mad? Is he happy? Disappointed? I have no clue.
Even after he plants himself on the ground for a bit longer then rebounds back into a “Grrhghgh”, I’m still scratching my head.
Great Danes are generally gentle-natured dogs. They’re protective, but not particularly aggressive. Though “Not aggressive” doesn’t always mean “harmless”.
At 200 pounds and over 30 inches tall at the shoulder, they can accidentally injure someone or break things just by throwing their weight around.
You can already see how much this Great Dane could do with his weight.
Judging from the loud “thump” this one makes when he hops, he could easily shatter a coffee table or a TV if unsupervised.
If you fancy getting a Great Dane, put obedience-training classes at the top of your priorities. Lest you want to get knocked around and have your chairs knocked over by this massive dog.
Watch this very “great” Great Dane show his owner a warm welcome down below!
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