Dog carrying something resembling a pipe in his mouth.

Animals in Panama

“One thing I noticed,” I remarked to my travel buddy shortly after going for a run during a glorious morning in Boquete, “is that dogs here do not bark.”

Dogs that do not bark? I could tell from the look that Tori gave me that she was a little skeptical. I might as well have told her that the birds also don’t chirp, the cows don’t moo, and Tickle Me Elmo doesn’t wiggle his belly even more than Shakira, but those would all be false statements. Whereas, I swore that I had already encountered five perros, and none of them had even let out a whimper. Nada.

Two of those dogs had even chased me—as I suppose any dog would do if all of a sudden he saw a strange man dressed in synthetic hi-tech fabrics running down the street in its direction for no apparent reason—and yet, silence. This was even after I yelled out “¡Pare! ¡Pare!” which I had believed was the word for “stop!,” though judging by the dogs’ legs that were turning over with increasing velocity, they were not quite fluent in gringo-speak. (Indeed, later I learned that the proper command is “¡Alto!“).

A few days went by and I still had yet to witness a dog actually make a sound. That is until one night Tori and I were in our hotel room, diligently doing Spanish homework, when in the distance we thought we were hearing some dogs. No, make that several dogs. Were our ears deceiving us or were they barking a mile a minute, for many minutes?

“Dogs don’t bark here, huh?” asked Tori. “Well it sounds like they are having a big party out there!”

“Um, I don’t hear anything,” I replied with a grin, although after a few more moments could not help but bust out laughing. Okay, it really did sound like a ton of dogs were having a huge fiesta! But I refused to believe it until I actually saw one bark in person… er, perro.

I promptly forgot about this until my second-to-the-last day in Boquete, when we walked back into downtown after a coffee tour. We walked by within two feet of a dog lying on the sidewalk (as most dogs seemed inclined to do in this laid-back town), and the dog barely lifted an eyelid, much less open its mouth to even yawn.

“See, it doesn’t bark,” I said to Tori, then busting out my camera and thrusting it in the dog’s face.

“WOOF!” yelped the dog, causing me to jump back.

“It speaks!” I exclaimed in excitement. “It can actually talk!”

Tori, I’m sure, was just rolling her eyes. Yet, there you have it, your intrepid blogger had indeed confirmed that dogs in Panama do bark. Well, sometimes. At least once in a blue moon when they are not having a fiesta.

Here are some more photos of a few other animals besides non-barking dogs, such as this happy pig.

Happy pig.
Happy pig.
"Um, that dog doesn't look too healthy," observed Tori.  Nevertheless, we saw him wandering around Boquete almost every day!
"Um, that dog doesn't look too healthy," observed Tori. Nevertheless, we saw him wandering around Boquete almost every day!
A guy carried this dog in his backpack into the Habla Ya language school.
A guy carried this dog in his backpack into the Habla Ya language school.
Before going horseback riding, I played (or tried to) with this lazy dog.
Before going horseback riding, I played (or tried to) with this lazy dog.
The sleepy dog and his buddy.
The sleepy dog and his buddy.
These were the horses Franklin and I rode in Caldera: Blanco and Mercedes.
These were the horses Franklin and I rode in Caldera: Blanco and Mercedes.
Unlike all the rest of the dogs in Boquete, this dog actually barked.
Unlike all the rest of the dogs in Boquete, this dog actually barked.
Dog carrying something resembling a pipe in his mouth.
Dog carrying something resembling a pipe in his mouth.
The unhealthy-looking dog again on a different day.
The unhealthy-looking dog again on a different day.
After going swimming in the Caldera River, we encountered these pigs.
After going swimming in the Caldera River, we encountered these pigs.