Wonderland of Vienna: Hungary’s Hundreds of Sauce Chase Records

Budapest, Hungary - On Thursday, they tried to make the country's largest single-travel dog walking record, a group of people in Hungary's rude items.

Hundreds of dogs and their owners gathered in the Budapest City Park and walked a long and noisy loop in the spring sunshine. The parade of the cubs was under the observation of the Hungarian Records Association, whose mission was to determine whether the dog cavalry could be formally incorporated into the record.

The association's registered officer and chairman István Sebestyén said his organization would carefully calculate the number of participating dogs - a challenge he said, when there were a lot of hounds and humans gathered in one place.

"We don't usually walk with dachshunds on little guys, so the experiment has to correspond with our system of rules," he said.

Dachshunds are short and muscular legs that were bred for the first time in Germany and remain one of Hungary’s most popular dog breeds.

They are also called "Winners" or "sausage dogs", and their long, low bodies were originally reproduced for hunting the and other burrowed creatures. But their loyal, curious and playful nature also makes them family pets.

In 1972, in Munich, Germany, a rainbow-colored dachshund named Waldi became the first official mascot in the history of the Olympic Summer Olympics.

Last September, the German city of Regensburg set a world record for the largest Dachshund Dog Walk, with hundreds of breeds passing through the medieval city center.

Although some of the charges in Regenburg brought the dogs to 1,175, the Guinness World Record can only confirm 897.

Lili Horváth and her 1-year-old dachshund Zabos participated in a walk in Budapest on Thursday. Her furry friend, she said, "has a very deep human qualities and is very loyal, and he is indeed a love bomb."

Valeria Fábián is walking along the dachshund Zsebi, which is different.

“Seldom are able to give this selflessness because people don’t have as much love and self-sacrifice as dogs,” she said.

By the end of the record's walk, the Hungarian Records Association determined that 500 times the dachshunds had existed - enough to set a Hungarian record, but still did not have the Guinness Mark set in Regensburg.

The uncomfortable organizers vow to try again next year - give them enough time to call up more bastards to get the title.