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Bsl


spyda62
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Whenever we hear BSL, our thoughts usually go straight to Pit-bulls.

I would just like to remind people that in QLD, BSL is very much a problem for our very own Dingoes.

No matter how well brought up, controlled, socialised and etc they may be, you are breaking the law by having one and your pup can be seized and destroyed.

Some councils even to this day still pay a bounty for a Dingoes scalp :(

There is no purpose for this post. It's just a rant out of sheer frustration at the unfairness of our archaic system.

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Yeah QLD is a wee bit off it's chops in regards to the dingo. On one hand the dingo is considered native wildlife under the Nature Conservation Act 1992, and are protected on national parks, then on the other hand outside of national parks dingoes are declared as a pest species under the Land Protection (Pest and Stock Route Management) Act 2002.

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In NSW you can keep them as pets like a normal dog.

They are not fit to be pets either :( A girl I know has one and he was a chronic escape artist, regularly scaling fences and getting out near a very busy road, until one day he was actually hit by a car and sustained serious damage.

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In NSW you can keep them as pets like a normal dog.

They are not fit to be pets either :( A girl I know has one and he was a chronic escape artist, regularly scaling fences and getting out near a very busy road, until one day he was actually hit by a car and sustained serious damage.

Plenty of domestic dogs do exactly the same thing, and plenty of Dingoes kept as pets don't.

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In NSW you can keep them as pets like a normal dog.

They are not fit to be pets either :( A girl I know has one and he was a chronic escape artist, regularly scaling fences and getting out near a very busy road, until one day he was actually hit by a car and sustained serious damage.

Plenty of domestic dogs do exactly the same thing, and plenty of Dingoes kept as pets don't.

This dog was on another level to any domesticated breed I've ever met. It killed livestock in suburbia on multiple occasions, too.

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In NSW you can keep them as pets like a normal dog.

They are not fit to be pets either :( A girl I know has one and he was a chronic escape artist, regularly scaling fences and getting out near a very busy road, until one day he was actually hit by a car and sustained serious damage.

Plenty of domestic dogs do exactly the same thing, and plenty of Dingoes kept as pets don't.

This dog was on another level to any domesticated breed I've ever met. It killed livestock in suburbia on multiple occasions, too.

So do many domestic dogs.

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I used to have a dingo cross. She was a 'normal dog' when we lived in suburbia but when we moved to the country she turned into a dingo. Ocasionally she would bring back wallabies to eat. This was before the days when you locked dogs inside fences (ie 25 years ago). After the second wallaby I did start locking her inside at night. Apart from that she was a great pet - smart and easy to train, good in the house, clean, good with dogs and people. I don't see a problem with having them as pets as long as same rules apply as for any other dog.

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There is every reason to expect a lot of variation among dingos.

Australia is a big place with many different ecosystems. Dingos in the wet north should differ from those in the dry interior or southern coastline. Add differences in history of association with people and differences in inbreeding with domestic dogs, and I'd expect huge differences in behavior.

We had one dingo x in boarding kennel who would jump the fence to get out: she didn't especially like the other dogs. But she'd jump back in for dinner and sleeping. Another who was just a sweet and gentle dog, a little on the quiet and shy side. I'm sure there are problem pet dingos as well, but I'd guess they tend to die young.

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I have a "cream kelpie" who is probably a dingo; chews her nails something fierce, howls at the moon and at anything else; kills anything a tad fluffy. Not really good with humans except her own pack; a touch nervous and a bit flighty. Not that good around other unknown dogs. But really good at the dog park with the dogs she knows.

ricey

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  • 1 month later...

I'd hazard a guess that most kelpies have a bucket of dingo blood in them, especially the cream kelpies.

If I was a farmer that wanted a dog that could go all day in the heat back in the day, I'd have wanted a dingo cross. I'd be surprised if any modern day kelpie breeder would try to deny that dingos were not a major part of the kelpie blood line. The kelpie is recognised as the iconic Aussie dog, but it is mainly dingo, and the dingo is more iconic.

ricey

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  • 1 month later...

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