Stray dogs can learn to drive better than your 16-year-old niece

My Fox Spokane Biz
Stray dogs can learn to drive better than your 16-year-old niece

By Natt GarunProvided by

Dogs are some pretty smart creatures. Cops use them to for search-and-rescue missions or drug hunts, the blind use them for street guidance, and Digital Trends' Andrew Couts trains his pup for pure, heart-warming YouTube fun. They've also been known, on several occasions, to be extremely heroic and loyal, saving numerous owners from fires, storms, and assaults. Since these canines are so good at learning various tricks, New Zealand's Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) decided to teach them how to drive.

You've read that right: Drive. An activity most humans can't even perform properly. In a recently released video, the SPCA showcases three dogs -- Porter, Ginny, and Monty -- being taught to drive a Mini Cooper, and focuses on Porter making a right hand turn on a giant racing course. The car has been outfitted with custom, extended push pedals so most dogs can reach and control the mechanics.

"We train them to do different actions, touch is the first thing and then we teach them to touch the different objects with the right paw and left paw," dog trainer Mark Vette told News.au. "They've all come through at this point and they're all going really well."

What's even more impressive: The Mini still has a manual transmission, meaning the dog would be required to shift its own gears to successfully maneuver the road. Although the sample video shows Porter making a simple and slow turn, the idea that dogs can potentially drive a manual transmission car is just mind-blowing, to say the least, because that's clearly more than I can do.

Will dogs eventually become the new designated drivers? If so, this just gave a whole new meaning to these pups as man's best friend. Watch the video here to see Porter hitting the race track and schooling most 16-year-old Americans.

Correction: MIKEDV points out that the Mini Cooper being driven is actually automatic transmission. I'm no car expertise, but either way, Porter's ability to drive stands impeccably impressive and maybe he'll manage a manual transmission car one day. We can dream!

In Case You Missed It:

Nissan ponders reviving Datsun brand Jumping 3D printed spider-bots created to help save lives not enslave them Car security: Japanese engineers develop seat that knows who's sitting on it Space Comrades: Russia seeks US and EU help in building collective moon base

This article was originally posted on Digital Trends   Content provided by

Most Popular Stories

Spokane County Sheriff's Office: Adult Male Arrested For Four McDonald's Robberies

Spokane County Sheriff's Office: Adult Male Arrested For Four McDonald's Robberies
PRESS RELEASE FROM THE SPOKANE COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE: On Thursday, May 23, 2013, Spokane County Major Crime Detective Kirk Keyser arrested 23-year-old Sean Martin for three counts of first degree robbery.  Through his investigation, Detective Keyser determined Martin was

Journalist and author Haynes Johnson dies at 81

Journalist and author Haynes Johnson dies at 81
By BARRY SCHWEID and BRETT ZONGKERAssociated Press WASHINGTON (AP) - Haynes Johnson, a pioneering Washington journalist who won a Pulitzer Prize for his coverage of the civil rights movement and migrated from newspapers to television, books and teaching, died Friday. He was 81. The Washington Post

UK court: Lawmaker's wife's tweet was libelous

UK court: Lawmaker's wife's tweet was libelous
LONDON (AP) - A tweet posted by the wife of Britain's parliamentary speaker about a politician wrongly linked to child sex abuse was libelous, the High Court ruled Friday. A BBC report last year led to widespread Internet chatter that falsely linked politician Alistair McAlpine to decades-old