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Small, lightweight, and ready for adventure. (Photo: Getty Images)

Chihuahuas Are the Best Trail Dogs鈥擧ere鈥檚 Why

Editor Adam Roy explains why his ultralight four-legged friend is the ideal backpacking companion

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(Photo: Getty Images)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

From the deck of , you can see the entire Halsey unit of . Below the 50-foot-high fire spotter鈥檚 perch, the forest unfolds in a rolling tableau of ponderosa pine and cedar, split here and there with meadows and tongues of grazed-down grassland and studded with cattle tanks and windmills. I thought it was majestic, but my dog just wanted to get down.

By my feet, Hobbes poked his nose through the bars of the safety fencing and looked toward the ground, his tail between his legs. He looked up at me, licked his nose, and gave his tail a couple of hesitant wags before tucking it down again. All right, he seemed to be saying. This was fun, but don鈥檛 you think we should go back to the ground now? Looking back, I don鈥檛 blame him: Fifty feet is awfully high when you鈥檙e a 5-pound Chihuahua.

Hobbes isn鈥檛 your standard adventure dog. On our local trails in Colorado鈥檚 Front Range, he stands out among the heelers and lab mixes. While they power up the trail, pacing or dragging their owners behind them, Hobbes skitters just to keep up, his nails click-clacking on the rock, or hitches a ride in my pack. But over the years, I鈥檝e become convinced that he and his tiny brethren are the best outdoor dogs out there.

When we first met him in the in Colorado, Hobbes tricked us into thinking that he was a placid dog. He was calm and cool: When we took him on a stroll around the building, he walked at our pace and kept the leash slack. He accepted treats leisurely, and quietly sniffed the noses of any dogs we passed. He had us tricked: Within half an hour of arriving at our house, he was bouncing off the furniture, running laps around our living room and chasing his own tail until he fell over. Our 45-pound 鈥檚 chew toys were the size of Hobbes鈥檚 body, but he stole them anyway, dragging them into the cavernous darkness under the sofa and gnawing on them like a miniature hobgoblin. In true little-dog fashion, he made himself at home by posting up by the window and barking at every pedestrian who walked by.

chihuahua lying on beach
Hobbes catches some rays by Colorado’s Carter Lake.

When I took him on the trail for the first time to a local bouldering area, he brought that same energy with him, chasing butterflies and play-bowing to the other climbers鈥 dogs. If he had little-dog energy, he had little-dog nerves too, but sometimes I found his perspective helpful: As I began to , he took in our surroundings from my pack, then slowly pulled his head inside like a turtle retreating into its shell. Maybe Hobbes was onto something: I stopped and thought again about what I was doing, looking at the rapids downstream and feeling the pull of the snowmelt-laden current around my knees. I backtracked to the bank and found a different place to climb.

Sure, he had a more limited range than the huskies we shared the trail with. But it didn鈥檛 really matter: At 5 pounds, Hobbes was easily light enough to carry when he got tired or I wanted to move fast. (Paradoxically, I was more confident taking him high into the alpine than a bigger dog: If he got injured, I figured, he could always hitch a ride.) Plus, he was good motivation to shake down my pack. On longer trips, I started figuring him and the ounce or two of food he consumed into my base weight, opting for lighter quilts and trimmer tents to make room for the canine I knew I鈥檇 be schlepping.

As for company? You couldn鈥檛 ask for better than Hobbes. While friends鈥 pooches would follow their noses off the trail (and occasionally into the missing pet ads), Hobbes, a hiker with the soul of a lapdog, preferred to stick with the humans. (A good thing, too: A Chihuahua has a lot more natural predators than a Labrador retriever does. At 5 pounds, a determined-enough hawk could theoretically carry him off, and he鈥檚 picked and lost multiple fights with our neighborhood cats.)聽 At night, he鈥檇 burrow his way into my sleeping bag and post up in the bend of my knee, a little snoozing, snoring, living .听

Hikers, by and large, think they know what a good trail dog looks like: Strong, fast, enthusiastic for any adventure at any time. But I鈥檓 here to remind you of a fundamental lesson of modern backpacking: Sometimes the smallest things you carry make the biggest difference. Thanks to my portable surveillance system, I’m confident no mountain lion will ever sneak up on me. But more importantly, I’ve got a partner who always keeps an eye on me, who understands, like the best partners do, that sometimes the best things in the woods are the friends you brought with you. I try to honor that on my end too: bringing my spunky, diminutive companion with me is a reminder to tread a little more carefully, a responsibility where I find my own responsibility to myself. And if that isn’t worth adding an extra 5 pounds into my pack, I’m not sure what is.听

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Lead Photo: Getty Images

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