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@jirredvang901
@jirredvang901 5 күн бұрын
New study finds that dingos descended from domestic dogs that came from Asia long ago
@ceebaby5651
@ceebaby5651 7 күн бұрын
I have a dingo as a pet... This sickens me.
@VictoriousWatchman
@VictoriousWatchman 12 күн бұрын
I have a pet dingo. Best pet ever. Lots of work, but totally worth it in every way.
@VictoriousWatchman
@VictoriousWatchman 13 күн бұрын
I also have a pet dingo. Best pet ever. A lot of work though.
@kaylaolivia9537
@kaylaolivia9537 26 күн бұрын
I lernt about wandi at school!!!😅😢🎉❤
@yanliyou9988
@yanliyou9988 Ай бұрын
it's apex predater i read the story Wandi at school
@user-bl2nt1un9s
@user-bl2nt1un9s Ай бұрын
Ive read the wandi book
@zoem3351
@zoem3351 Ай бұрын
Is wandi at this sanctuary?
@tammybeasley4227
@tammybeasley4227 Ай бұрын
I've read wandi he is so cute
@robinfoster9287
@robinfoster9287 Ай бұрын
Dingoes are just adorable. I love their dog cousin hybrids (ACD's, Heelers). Make great life-mates to those who are active and healthy and adventurous. Nice to see them in their natural state - it's a shame that they are culled.
@damienmcilroy1951
@damienmcilroy1951 Ай бұрын
My teacher read the book wandi
@ShellieSpicer
@ShellieSpicer Ай бұрын
I read I read the book at school and and he was picked up by wedge-tailed eagle 🦅
@TreemendousTreeCare-vn6fk
@TreemendousTreeCare-vn6fk 2 ай бұрын
🎉🎉🎉🎉
@moniquebarrett1622
@moniquebarrett1622 2 ай бұрын
I rede a book about him at school
@myallquaystg
@myallquaystg 2 ай бұрын
Rusty story is something like wandi's story
@davinaruka302
@davinaruka302 2 ай бұрын
I am learning about Sandi
@kaylaolivia9537
@kaylaolivia9537 26 күн бұрын
U meen wandi???...
@jamiesheely285
@jamiesheely285 2 ай бұрын
thay shood be ptektid
@jamiesheely285
@jamiesheely285 2 ай бұрын
eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeek sooooooo cutttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttt
@jamiesheely285
@jamiesheely285 2 ай бұрын
i red your book
@ChrisRishworth
@ChrisRishworth 4 ай бұрын
Love his story. I had this one walk past the other day just past Falls Creek. kzfaq.info/get/bejne/b8qSaM-E38_efJ8.html
@briank3727
@briank3727 4 ай бұрын
Our dingo is a great pet usually friendly , runs free on farm always comes back
@timsbike4887
@timsbike4887 4 ай бұрын
Australias Apex predator should be the Thylacine as it was before Humans introduced the Dingo from Asia.
@kyrareneeLOA
@kyrareneeLOA 4 ай бұрын
Great channel.. can you do a video on the dingo mixed breads... like cattle dogs /healers? They are half dingo.... thank you.
@clandestinoh7853
@clandestinoh7853 5 ай бұрын
Thank you for the education!!! But please, how can we complain on an American channel that is miseducating people on some critical issues (wild dog related)? It is called Mouse Farm & Agriculture New and they show a lot of predator control, supposedly in Australia, but it's mostly wrong. They just want to make dingoes/wild dogs look as vermin as possible in order to encourage Americans to keep shooting coyotes and wolves for fun/sport. They also included some Australian feral cats footage so wrong. A lynx killing a deer in the snow in Southern Australia?!!! Gimme a break! I wish we could force them to be serious in their "research". This particular video was called: How American Farmers Deal With Millions Of Wild Dogs Attacking Farms. Just creepy!
@samjones1954
@samjones1954 6 ай бұрын
Sad day, My old girl passed last night. She was the best dog I have ever had the pleasure of training. In her 16 years of life she had many experiences such as accidentally lol bred with a Shepard in the neighbourhood and had 7 pups. The Canadian Military took one claiming that Dingo/Shepard are the best dogs they can get. I had to run her with my car as she liked to run at about 40 Kph. And she would run at that speed for a few Km's. I am already missing her a great deal. I really wish I could get another. Everyone says how hard they are to train. BS, they are trained through love and understanding. In the end I had the most gentle dingo you could imagine. I would like to send you a picture, how could I do that?
@therealnickewing
@therealnickewing 7 ай бұрын
I have watched videos from both of you! Long story short I adopted a pup a couple years ago (in Colorado) I was told was a certain mix, yet all the genetic and behavioral traits etc. I see from you guys, say her mother is 100% dingo. Which type I'm not sure. But if either of you from video sees this, I'd love to chat and share pics etc. You may have some insight and knowledge I could always use more of. Either way, great videos I love all the dingoes! Cheers!
@Appophust
@Appophust 7 ай бұрын
They're still a dog though. Canis lupus dingo. They can breed with most wolf species and literally all dog breeds. This absolutely produces fully fertile offspring basically every time. They're dogs. And to top it off, the oldest dingo specimen ever found was around 3,500 years old. Humans arrived roughly 65,000 years ago. Dingoes were introduced. There are no other extant species of canid literally anywhere in Australia except for Canis Lupus Familiaris, and we all know how it got there.
@Itskat1010x
@Itskat1010x 8 ай бұрын
omg the author of the book wandi went to my school!
@seanh.1460
@seanh.1460 8 ай бұрын
If anyone ever makes me get a dog, I will name it "Dingo".
@ladyriethegoldendelmo5441
@ladyriethegoldendelmo5441 9 ай бұрын
any tips on how to get a dingo and other tips on how to take care of one?
@kimigum
@kimigum 9 ай бұрын
This guy, he is so unlikeable for me .I have seen him before talking about the licensing. I think he is an insecure man with a dog, who is a beautiful Dingo. Now, this man, he is "The Law Giver" Dingo's do not do well under man's laws, although they naturally have never upset Mother Earth's. Dingo is your master and is part of your family forever . Bringers of love, feel the strength of that love within your family!? Yes, let the Dingo Dog Cat be your teacher. So listen and quietly observe Dingo, and you will learn to know so much about the nature of god, the nature of dog
@DinoLikes1
@DinoLikes1 10 ай бұрын
Went their today and saw him... Such a beauty
@russellirving1022
@russellirving1022 11 ай бұрын
wonderfully informative and succinct thank you so much
@richowentheemotionlessface1817
@richowentheemotionlessface1817 11 ай бұрын
Is it possible Dingoes are related to the Ethiopian wolf?
@tonysambar
@tonysambar Жыл бұрын
Non native introduced pest.
@rhinuu045
@rhinuu045 Жыл бұрын
pup
@GregoryMcBride-qf7hx
@GregoryMcBride-qf7hx Жыл бұрын
It’s crazy that people don’t see dingoes as a necessary part of the environment, I can kind of understand the thinking that they’re not a native species, but since the thylacine’s extinction that ecological niche needs to be held by something and the dingo is a great choice for that, from what I understand you guys have way too many kangaroos too lol
@kevinpoe8137
@kevinpoe8137 Жыл бұрын
I’ve always viewed wild dogs and feral dogs as two different things, with wild dogs referring things like to coyotes, wolves, foxes, and dingoes you know WILD dogs and feral dogs as just that, domestic dogs that went feral, but I guess not everybody thinks like that
@adelarsen9776
@adelarsen9776 Жыл бұрын
Baiting, trapping, shooting and exclusion fences are what create livestock attack. If you leave dingoes alone they prefer to take a wallaby, roo or emu before a sheep or calf. Any grazier who has just had 100 sheep ripped apart by wild dogs won't believe what's written above but it's actually a lack of knowledge that causes the stock losses.
@adelarsen9776
@adelarsen9776 Жыл бұрын
Graziers and pastoral land holders whom stop shooting, stop trapping, stop baiting and stop building exclusion fences stop having livestock attacks. "But I just want to do what my daddy and my grand-daddy did" - Doesn't make it better and doesn't make it right.
@DixieTheDingo
@DixieTheDingo Жыл бұрын
Soooo cute
@PuckDudesHockey
@PuckDudesHockey Жыл бұрын
I really appreciate your advocacy for the protection of dingoes. But with respect, the argument in the chapter on "Dingo Culture" bothered me a bit... it almost sounded like, "we need to make sure people understand dingoes aren't just wild dogs, so they might be less inclined to treat them in this way". That argument sort of implies that it MIGHT be okay to mistreat wild dogs in that way (if they weren't dingoes). I know you didn't say that specifically, but that's actually the implicit subtext of the logic being argued. I'm not sure why the status of being either dingoes or wild dogs should change whether they are accorded the respect not to be mistreated. Full disclosure... I admit that I am an outsider... I live in rural Canada, and don't pretend to know the issues surrounding dingoes in Australia. But I live with my own dogs on my property with coyotes often nearby at night and the odd small pack of wolves in our area. I have to take precautions to keep my dogs safe, but I still respect the coyotes and wolves and their right to be on this land. If I saw an animal treated like the one at the start of this video, I'd be steaming irate, and it wouldn't matter to me whether it was coyote, wolf, wild dog or domesticated dog. It wouldn't be about the definition of which category they belong to... the shocking treatment of that animal would be equally infuriating regardless of which Canis we're talking about. I'm not saying you meant to imply this mistreatment would ever be justified, but after focusing so much on the point about the distinction/confusion between "dingo" and "wild dog", it might have been good to say SOMETHING about how horrible this treatment would be regardless of whether it's a dingo or a wild dog. (Added note: I have previously lived in Egypt and Malaysia, and in each location we adopted a dog from a wild pack, and those two dogs went on to be cherished members of our family, despite always remaining a little wild. That's my context for this note... wanting to accord that respect for BOTH dingoes and wild dogs.)
@ninacallander7780
@ninacallander7780 Жыл бұрын
its not fair that dingoes get treated like that and every politician in Austrailia should watch this :)
@sashamellon822
@sashamellon822 Жыл бұрын
It always make me laugh , when I watch border control , the most havoc was recked by Europeans invaders and now they are worried about people brining in a packet of crisps 😂😂😂😂.
@kangarooislandkelpiexworki2722
@kangarooislandkelpiexworki2722 Жыл бұрын
Oh come on wild dogs ARE a thing. Saying they dont exist is simply untrue. Wild dogs are very different and more destructive than dingos. Wild dogs are cross breeds from escaped or lost farm and hunting dogs. The ones I have seen are huge, one in central QLD just nth of the dog fence was so big it looked like something out of a horror movie. Saying they do not exist does nothing for your cause.
@that.schamp
@that.schamp 10 ай бұрын
You describe feral dogs and feral mixes. Here in the US, it is rare, but we sometimes get self sustaining populations of non-mixed feral dogs. More commonly, we get coydogs... They ain't coyotes, and while I wouldn't normally kill either a coyote or a dog, a coydog can be dangerous and has no place in the home or in the wild. Coydogs are frequently difficult to distinguish from dogs or coyotes, and I imagine that dingo/dog mixes are even harder to identify. Selectively removing the mixed feral dogs from the population of coyotes (or Dingoes) can be very difficult, but that difficulty does not justify indiscriminate slaughter. I consider dogs like the Carolina Dog to be truly wild dogs. They are dogs, but are more comfortably living wild than in a domestic environment. I suspect that Dingoes fall in this category as well... But in Australia, there has been deliberate confuscation of the terms "wild dog" and "feral dog" in attempts to justify eradication... The combination of deliberate misinformation on the part of ranchers with the difficulty of distinguishing mixed feral dogs from native canid populations being used to obscure or justify indiscriminate slaughter is probably why greenies try to dodge the topic.
@lyndonrex4764
@lyndonrex4764 Жыл бұрын
Hi, we have a pack of dingoes that come in via the state forest every night, have lost our pet dog and more than 10 calves and a few cows, in the past month. Pretty tough watching the carnage that dingoes can do. I’m trying to find the benefit the dingoes can do to our farm. Very willing to listen. This video seemed very biased, as there was no footage to what dingoes can do to cattle, or even pet dogs. As we have had our pet dog mauled by dingoes less than 100mts from our house, is it safe for our kids to be outside? Can or could dingoes attack people wasn’t mentioned in this video? When did dingoes become native animals? Not trying to poke a bear, but from what I’ve been reading it says they are introduced from Asia.
@80aussiepride08
@80aussiepride08 11 ай бұрын
They won’t respond and it doesn’t take much searching to find where their “science” comes from .. bias one sided green propaganda.
@that.schamp
@that.schamp 10 ай бұрын
You need Livestock Guardian Dogs. Maremma, Great Pyrenees, Akbash, Anatolian Shepherd, etc. At least two, likely more possibly more depending on the size of the property, size of the herd, and number of dingoes. It will take time to bond them to your cattle and acclimatize the cattle to the dogs. Once done, the dogs will not leave the cattle, and in the unlikely event dingoes approach the cattle when the dogs are present, the Dingoes will lose either their ability or willingness to harm your cattle. I see Dingoes as very similar to coyotes - small packs, mostly solo or family unit hunting, mid-size mesopredators. I see no reason that LGDs would not be as effective in Australia as they have been in the US. Here in the US, LGD's have hard core shutdown coyote attacks when bonded correctly and used as a cohesive pack. Even with the Western European breeds of LGDs, two good dogs can handle 200 acres or ~100 head, and are very effective against coyotes, bears, cougars, and even lone wolves. Larger operations needs to add dogs depending on area and head count, and might consider a multiple breed pack - ie Kangals and Great Pyrenees are known for periodically going on search and destroy missions, covering 10+ miles a day, and keeping predators far away from the herd, while Akbash and Maremma are usually more close in guardians that stay with the herd. While LGDs have a reputation for slaughtering coyotes, the reality is that conflict is rare. Most of the time, the coyotes are aware of the dogs presence, unwilling to challenge them, and quickly learn to avoid the dogs, which means staying away from the herd. So the dogs are a mostly non-lethal means of predator control, and a pretty good way of living with the predators. Sometimes predators get killed, occasionally dogs are hurt, but most of the time, predators (other than wolves) assess the risk and GTFO. Honestly, in your position of already taking losses, I would ask rescues for help. If you can deploy a pair of adult dogs who have experience with cattle, you will see immediate effects, even if they do not immediately bond to your cattle, because your cattle are wary of dogs. If you have to start the bonding process with puppies, they are often not mature until they are two years old... The problem is keeping the dogs contained. Most LGD losses are caused by cars and guns. If those risks are limited where you live and ~10 miles surrounding, then you don't have to fence them in. In our area, the average property size is only ~100 acres, and we have a highway less than two miles away, so it is critical that we keep our dogs contained. We fence to keep our livestock and dogs inside the fence. It is impossible to fence predators out, but with our dogs out there, if a predators gets inside our fence, that's it's problem. Unless it's a skunk and the dogs carry it to the house while it's still alive.... 4' sheep/goat fence with a hot wire above the fence is usually sufficient to contain dogs, but some are escape artists. For a new fencing projects, 5' woven wire sheep/goat fence on 9' posts buried 3' - 3 1/2' deep and a hot wire on the top is sort of the gold standard. We bury 2' tall sections of woven wire or cattle/hog/sheep/goat (whatever is cheapest) at the fence line to stop digging. Look on the bright side: Not only does shooting a dingo not get you 10 years of prison, but you don't have to deal with a pack of 20 or more 100+# wolves hunting as a pack. Nor do you need to manage the giant pack of huge, constantly infighting dogs that are able to convince such a wolf pack that sheep taste bad.
@that.schamp
@that.schamp 10 ай бұрын
This pamphlet from he Australian Bureau of Rural Science is absolutely one of the best, most complete resources I've seen on using guardian dogs to protect livestock. Better than even Texas A&M publishes. pestsmart.org.au/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2020/06/Guardian-Dogs-web.pdf
@SquaficleDude
@SquaficleDude Жыл бұрын
I have a half dingo/Pyrenees puppy.. going to be an interesting dog.
@mirathurner2641
@mirathurner2641 Жыл бұрын
I applaud how sensitively you have addressed this. My first instinct was to be angry about this senseless killing of such an important, keystone species. Just so great to see continued education change the perception of the dingo and its place in the ecosystem.
@affordabledesertliving3487
@affordabledesertliving3487 Жыл бұрын
Lovely fascinating interview. I was pumping water at a remote well 800 KM west of Alice Springs and a beautiful but wary black dingo came in to see what the noise was all about. It remained secretive and I only got brief looks at it in the distance. Many thanks!
@aussieshootandhuntadventur4973
@aussieshootandhuntadventur4973 Жыл бұрын
What a load of crap poorly researched attitudes like this are killing many small marsupials through wild dog numbers besides the sheep they kill by slowly ripping there guts out.. you wouldn’t know a dingo from wild dog if you fell over one
@NebraskaGonvilleJones
@NebraskaGonvilleJones Жыл бұрын
You sound angry
@aussieshootandhuntadventur4973
@aussieshootandhuntadventur4973 Жыл бұрын
@@NebraskaGonvilleJones no just disappointed