Toronto Star

STRAY YOU’LL BE MINE

Marathon runner to adopt puppy that showed up at starting line and followed him on gruelling race through the desert,

- AMY B WANG THE WASHINGTON POST

It’s still unclear how or why the scrappy, apricot-coloured dog with pointy ears showed up to the starting line of the 249.55-kilometre ultramarat­hon in June. The closest village was several miles away, and all that lay ahead was the vast, unforgivin­g Gobi Desert.

Dion Leonard, a distance runner from Scotland, noticed the pup scampering alongside a group of American runners, but didn’t think she would last long — much less through most of the six stages of a gruelling, weeklong endurance race.

Until she reappeared by his side at the start line on the morning of Day 2.

“This little dog’s sort of sitting next to me, looking up like, ‘Are we going to run together today?’ ” Leonard told The Washington Post. “I didn’t really think that much of it. I thought, let’s see how long this dog lasts.” The dog, whom he soon nicknamed Gobi, followed him through all 37.03 kilometres that day, climbing nearly 6,000 metres in elevation as they crossed the Tian Shan range and journeyed into the Gobi Desert.

At times, she would charge ahead of Leonard, motivating him to run faster. At other points, he stopped to give her beef jerky and water from his own pack.

At their campsite that night, Gobi lay down next to him in his sleeping pad, wedging herself against his armpit to snuggle.

“She literally stayed with me all day,” said Leonard, 41, an Edinburgh resident who has competed in numerous multi-stage ultra-marathons. It’s still a mystery why Gobi followed him, of all the 101 competitor­s in this year’s Gobi March. “I didn’t do anything in particular to gain her attention. She chose me. I was the one that she was going to stick to.”

Over Day 3, Gobi continued to fol-

“This little dog’s sort of sitting

next to me, looking up like, ‘Are we going to run together today?’ ” DION LEONARD ULTRA-MARATHON RUNNER

low Leonard, this time over increasing­ly harsh terrain. Leonard picked her up and carried her over multiple river crossings up to19.11metres long, with rushing water up to his stomach.

“I started to realize then that we were really close,” he said. “I wasn’t going to leave her behind.”

In all, Leonard estimates Gobi accompanie­d him for169.05 kilometres of the seven-day race, through stages 2, 3 and 6. Because of the heat — temperatur­es peaked around 51 C around the middle of the course — Gobi wasn’t allowed to run stages 4 and 5.

However, race organizers drove her to the finish lines on those days, where she waited faithfully for Leonard to cross.

“Day 5 is actually 80 kilometres. You’re obviously pretty tired. It’s a big day. It’s very hot,” he said. “To come in to the finish line and to see her wagging her tail . . . was just amazing.”

Ultimately, Leonard took second place in the race. At the final finish line, event organizers produced a matching medal for Gobi, too.

By then, he knew they shared a special, inexplicab­le bond. Leonard began researchin­g what it would take to bring Gobi back to the United Kingdom: a host of medical examinatio­ns, paperwork and quarantine­s, at a cost of more than $6,500.

He and his wife started a crowd- funding campaign online. Within days, it surpassed its fundraisin­g goal, attracting donations from all over the world.

“We’re really thankful,” he said. “I think everyone’s been keen to seeing good news.”

He doesn’t know Gobi’s age, breed or medical history — just that they now are incomprehe­nsibly connected.

Leonard has since returned to Scotland and estimates that the process for Gobi to make it to the U.K. could take up to four months.

“We’re looking at having her here for Christmas in an ideal world,” he said.

His wife is thrilled. Their cat remains unaware she will be getting a “sister” soon, Leonard said.

While they wait, Leonard is preparing for his next ultra-marathon in October, a similar 249.55-kilometre trek across the Atacama Desert in Chile that, like the Gobi March, is part of the 4 Deserts Race Series.

“I’m hoping a horse or an alpaca doesn’t follow me there,” he said, laughing. “I may not get away with bringing that back.”

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 ?? 4DESERTS PHOTOS ?? Dion Leonard, who won second place in the Gobi March 2016, holds the dog who ran alongside him throughout the gruelling seven-day ultra-marathon.
4DESERTS PHOTOS Dion Leonard, who won second place in the Gobi March 2016, holds the dog who ran alongside him throughout the gruelling seven-day ultra-marathon.
 ??  ?? Dion Leonard and the dog he nicknamed Gobi take a break after a hard day’s running in the desert.
Dion Leonard and the dog he nicknamed Gobi take a break after a hard day’s running in the desert.

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