4 reasons you might want a dingo, but the good is not perfect.

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  • Опубліковано 1 жов 2024

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  • @matthewwalker6621
    @matthewwalker6621 Рік тому +3

    Moody clingy sneaky ultra intelligent but lovable, ours turned up one night after shooters shot the mum and she hung around the house but the others went bush so here she is by my side 24/7

  • @TT-kw5nj
    @TT-kw5nj Рік тому +3

    The one with the fish hook tail looks almost exactly like my Carolina dog. Just incredible. I had him 14 years and I would give anything to have him back. More than a dog, definitely a member of our family and we were his pack. Thank you for sharing these videos.

  • @reddog5378
    @reddog5378 2 роки тому +4

    A dingo is for life. Your life is for your dingo. If you can't guarantee those two commitments for the full life of a dingo you plan on adopting or the cute little pup you're about to purchase then walk away. A dingo is not for you. If you expect your chosen dingo to be a dog, don't bring that dingo home. A dingo will never be a pet dog, nor even a pet. A dingo will be your most trusted mate for life for a single person or an adopted family member and equal for the right family. And be prepared to accept anything you value left within reach of a dingo pup and adolescent will be destroyed the moment you walk out of that room.
    I wouldn't have it any other way.

  • @alysiawriedt4495
    @alysiawriedt4495 2 роки тому +6

    I have a dingo and he's very clingy and lovable but he doesn't like when I correct him. He gives a ton of attitude

    • @intrepidworld
      @intrepidworld  2 роки тому +1

      🤣🤣 I can imagine

    • @rogertetrault7981
      @rogertetrault7981 Рік тому +1

      I learned that they don't respond well to discipline because they really can't be domesticated. But they do respond to positive reinforcement. You will never be the master, you can only be their favorite human.

    • @PeterMooney-tq3ek
      @PeterMooney-tq3ek Рік тому

      I've got a dingo Kelpie x hyper intelligent and extremely independent but I wouldn't have it any other way she is 100 percent her own person and I need to treat her with a lot of respect kuv her to death

    • @jamesmichael1512
      @jamesmichael1512 7 місяців тому

      That absolutely sums up my dingo

  • @adrianc6534
    @adrianc6534 2 роки тому +4

    they are very beautiful animals. thank you for giving them a good home, even in these short videos your kindness to them is easy to see.

    • @intrepidworld
      @intrepidworld  2 роки тому

      Thank you. I'm so glad I get to share them with everyone.

  • @wendygarton6428
    @wendygarton6428 Рік тому +2

    It's like having another child at times. But they are amazing animals.

  • @madogmabz
    @madogmabz Рік тому +1

    I got a dingo thought she was a normal dog she digs dens in the back yard. I LOVE HER..I live in SA and she does bark..Pluss she is a good guard dog.

  • @carolehiggins4167
    @carolehiggins4167 8 місяців тому +1

    I have an American dingo, the Carolina dog. They are primitive dogs from the American natives and look completely identical to the dingos you have there. Wild since it's the opposite side of the planet.

    • @intrepidworld
      @intrepidworld  8 місяців тому

      Yes absolutely incredible how canine have spread across the planet, evolving and changing to different environments.

  • @desleybettens5356
    @desleybettens5356 Рік тому +1

    I love your show but you do waffle on abit. I love dingos & believe they should be protected.

    • @intrepidworld
      @intrepidworld  Рік тому

      Thanks for the feedback I will do my best to be more concise with my thoughts.

  • @Tattoopikachu
    @Tattoopikachu Рік тому +2

    i have an american dingo named aspen she is quarky but very loyal and follows me everywhere shes an amazing companion!

  • @Lisargarza
    @Lisargarza 2 роки тому +2

    So much good info coupled with gorgeous background. Although I live in the US, I hope I can say “Thanks, mate!”

    • @intrepidworld
      @intrepidworld  2 роки тому

      You certainly can say that and same to you, thanks mate for the comment and for taking time to watch my video 😃

  • @bmxriderforlife1234
    @bmxriderforlife1234 Рік тому +1

    Basenji might also work for you. Same with a few other breeds. Just for an fyi.

    • @bmxriderforlife1234
      @bmxriderforlife1234 Рік тому +1

      Do have to disagree. But it's because of personal experience with poachers and being able to make friends with Canadian timber wolves. Specifically Algonquin wolves. Poacher tryna kill the alpha female. Dealt with that, didn't really want to piss off a 175 pound over 7 feet long over 30 inch tall wolf hybrid trained as a high level protection dog and wilderness guide. Carried tow female to a vet. Saved her life. She's was even more scared of people after unless I walk up then shed be fine with me and people with me but never get as close to them as me . Her descendants are still fine with me but not quite as chill as she was. Stopped visiting to let them slowly go back to no people socialization. But kept a pack alive for an endangered species of wolf.
      Know an aussie who has a tame towards his family and people visitors pack he helped same kinda way. Run from most people. Sill just avoid strangers who visit but friendly with his family. Keeps other packs off his land and other animals he doesn't want and helps keep stuff out of his crops and livestock as well as keeping his kids safe.
      Also supports the dingos natural behavior since like ancient times. Not fully domesticated or partly re feral.
      Living close by people and sometimes helping each other and working with each other but not reliant on each other for survival. Cooperative independence and workload sharing. They learn not to hunt your stuff, but keep other stuff out and go hunt if they want but also know you'll share with them. Give em a good spot to stay safely but not necessarily in a house. Confined but with enough space to just go away from humans they don't like or know.
      Keeps local populations protected with normal pack dispersion behavior but gives more wild animals a safe spot to potentially disperse too. None of his dingo wanna mate his dogs. Dogs play with them fine. Wild level protective of human children like theyre pups.
      If many farmers did this and let sick animals be targeted by dingo or in other parts of the world partially tame working wolves. You can prevent waste product if you let them eat it. Also gives you waste disposal for non human grade bits anyways. Or less commonly eaten bits by humans like organ meats.
      Can also prevent disease spread in some cases. If enough farmers did it dingo would automatically become protected valuable and treasured. Plus kept wild and still able for wild essentially dingo to drop off pups with humans for completely domesticated lines.
      Easier then wolves. Means we can keep full genetic diversity and have 2 pools of breeding animals for species preservation.
      Also means we don't accidentally cause domestication syndrome with unfixable results in the entire living population.
      However. Dependant on age. Rescue of injured animals needs to be handled properly. And requires a level of canine behavioral knowledge of the wild species.

    • @bmxriderforlife1234
      @bmxriderforlife1234 Рік тому +1

      One little addendum. With helping injured wild animals. Also depends on local population sizes and other stuff.
      With certain wild canids treated like dingos are in North America genetic bottlenecking to the point of slow and eventual destruction exists all over.
      I know some dingo sub species or ecotypes in Australia are at similar risk. But likely depends heavily on location in Australia. But a few specific types are genetically unique and need preservation even if it requires forcing a few captive held animals.
      Otherwise outcross programs which require specific captive breeding with be required for survival. Or other sub types have to be inserted into the old habitats and hope they diverge the same way again.

  • @simonolsen9995
    @simonolsen9995 2 роки тому +2

    Chill videos mate. I could watch those two beauties play for hours. Big thumbs up to your viewpoints.

    • @intrepidworld
      @intrepidworld  2 роки тому

      Thank you very much. I should be uploading a video soon where I took them for a walk in the hills. That was a bit hectic but a lot of fun.

  • @blakelong6503
    @blakelong6503 Рік тому +1

    I live in America and I got a random puppy and he looks just like your dog with the chopped tail

  • @madogmabz
    @madogmabz Рік тому

    I live in SA what you say about having one is not true...

  • @madogmabz
    @madogmabz Рік тому

    Funny thing is I have a 73 mustang aswell..lol.

  • @NormanF62
    @NormanF62 2 роки тому +2

    When I got an American Dingo, aka Carolina Dog, I thought for a moment I had a true Dingo on my hands because my dog’s resemblance to one was absolutely uncanny! In hindsight, I realised it was a case of convergent evolution since the two dogs are completely unrelated and the similar appearance is due to pariah dogs living in comparable habitats around the world.

    • @intrepidworld
      @intrepidworld  2 роки тому

      It is interesting. Yes I do believe dingoes originally travelled down from India and are related to India singing dogs. Also I'm not 100% sure but I think before that they my have come down from Asia. I believe the Japanese Akita is one of the most ancient breeds of dog on the planet. I wonder if the Dingoes/Indian singing dog and the Carolina dog/Pariah dog are all descendants of Akita or something similar. That was something else that I liked about dingoes, as I mentioned in the video I wanted an Akita and dingoes in some ways look like them and may actually be part of the same family tree so to speak.

    • @NormanF62
      @NormanF62 2 роки тому

      @@intrepidworld They’re primitive landraces not very much modified by man and some have retained a wild existence. What differentiates them from wolves is they have no real fear of man and can be domesticated. Dogs, even wild dogs like dingoes have crossed the line that separates them from true wild canids. Modern dogs are the result of heavy human intervention designed to create breeds serving specific purposes that align with human interests.

    • @bmxriderforlife1234
      @bmxriderforlife1234 Рік тому

      Carolina dogs are a true dingo. Just a different species. Like new guinea singing dogs.
      They are also a species still genetically diverse enough with enough pre colonial genes to potentially breed back a small line of essentially pure pc dogs. Along with genetically related enough to be used on the artic clade of dog breeds meaning all the Nordic breeds have a primitive genetically diverse and non bottlenecked relative for outcross programs. Aussie dingo could be used.
      They're basal canines. Not true dogs but not true wolves. And often contain a slightly different or older genetic lineage to many dog breeds.
      Chihuahua and xolo are modernized versions of such breeds. The chihuahua being more dingo type then the xolo. Xolo being more ore colonial dog.

    • @bmxriderforlife1234
      @bmxriderforlife1234 Рік тому

      ​@@intrepidworld Akita aren't even close to one of the most ancient breeds. Some of the rare siberian breeds are older and some Japanese breeds are older.
      Canaan dog is roughly 7000 years old as it is anatomically now. Versus I'm not even sure if dogs had entered Japan by that point yet. At least not modern dog lineages. I believe salukli and cane corso are also both technically older breeds then Akita. 9500 years ago is when the first dogs entered Japan roughly.
      Canaan dogs were already present in a modern sense by then.
      You also have the taimyr wolf descended breeds that are between 35000 and 16000 years old. Modern show huskies probably won't show as much of that as the primi4ive lineages and native type and still divorce Un bottlenecked types.
      If it wasn't almost extinct. Sakhalin husky or the Labrador husky.
      Dingo come from grey wolves from Asia. But might not be a direct evolution but like a sister and brother type line. Like dogs and grey wolves.
      Carolina dogs contain pre colonial dog genetics up to 33 percent. And a decent amount of both pre colonial contact dogs and old Nordic clades that include the northern breeds and huskies and sled breeds plus most of the European spitz types. Then the Asian Spitz types.
      Probably a direct relationship but different foundation stock to eastern timber wolves and Algonquin wolves. Coyotes descend from wolves but different line. The eastern timber and the Algonquin wolf a wolf coyote hybrids but their wolf species might be genetically separate from other grey wolves or even a red wolves species.
      Essentially they're all related. But likely from different divergent groups and some groups are too closely related to not enough time has passes for us to be able to fully genetically tell. And we don't have full archeological records.
      Dingo come from Asia. But may be part of the same group that created Asian humans and Europeans of certain groups.
      Certain migration period out of Africa into India then through Asia for natives. Some related groups distantly and thousands kf years separated going elsewhere. And likely similar routes and paths the melanesians followed just later. Some of them ended up in Czech and Ireland. Gypsies or Roma in Europe are essentially some of the later groups of migration peoples or groups that didn't find homelands.
      If I'm not mistaken Akita are like 5000 ish years old. And it's ancestors and the shibas ancestors go way back before that.
      You'd have to breed out the siberian dog lineages. And then cross all the other Japanese breeds that don't contain admixture from outside breeds. Creating a supermutt breed. That'd still be genetically bottlenecked from the original breeds to enter Japan.

    • @truthseeker803
      @truthseeker803 Рік тому

      Hi..
      and how is your dog behaving? since I am looking for a companion dog who follows rules and not loud..

  • @barry7608
    @barry7608 2 роки тому +1

    Thanks another good vid. They can make a very, bark like sound, and this goes for all 3 of ours, but its few and far between. I will say ours are fairly fond of a howl and are sometimes triggered by sirens. The thing is when they do howl it lasts no longer than a minute and often less than 30sec. no where near as annoying as a barking canine.

    • @intrepidworld
      @intrepidworld  2 роки тому

      Yes I have heard Rusty Gruff once in 12 months and growl a bit, usually after he has had enough of Jalba. Jalba has gruffed twice in 6 months, that I have heard. Both times after I told him off for chewing and chased him out the house. He hasn't chewed anything in a while so his time outs seemed to have worked. Sirens don't set mine off but when my kids egg them on to howl they join in haha

  • @vladimirberegovoy2886
    @vladimirberegovoy2886 Рік тому +1

    How about hunting with dingo? Can it become helpful?

    • @intrepidworld
      @intrepidworld  Рік тому

      Oh mate they would be great at finding stuff for you but it would be hard to point them in the direction you wanted them to go. You would cut them loose and they would go where there heart desired even if that was towards farm land that would cause issues for you. If you were miles away from anywhere you could probably get away with it. It also might help if you have other trained dogs that the Dingo would follow. There is another guy on UA-cam who used to hunt pigs with a Dingo if I can find the link I'll send it to you.

    • @intrepidworld
      @intrepidworld  Рік тому

      Okay I found the channel I was looking for. If this kind of thing interests you have a look at the UA-cam channel called Clark McGhie's Wild Country and watch the video titled Ernie the Dingo. This video will give you an idea what hunting with a Dingo would be like. I found this video interesting. Just so you know this guy targets dingoes as well in his videos if that's not something that interests you, I'm just letting you know. I love my boys and want positive change for dingoes but I'm open minded to a farmers point of view. Hopefully one day we can find a way to keep both sides happy.

    • @vladimirberegovoy2886
      @vladimirberegovoy2886 Рік тому

      @@intrepidworld how to get there to read the details?

    • @intrepidworld
      @intrepidworld  Рік тому

      @@vladimirberegovoy2886 type Clark McGhie's Wild Country Ernie the Dingo into the UA-cam search bar and the video should come up. Or just do a search for Ernie the Dingo and you should find it as well. I hope I answered you correctly, I think that's what you were asking.

    • @vladimirberegovoy2886
      @vladimirberegovoy2886 Рік тому +1

      @@intrepidworld thank you very much. Interesting. Any other examples of hunting for a human pure dingo?

  • @jonwhipple3135
    @jonwhipple3135 2 роки тому +1

    Can you post a few links of rescues? I had to put mine down a few months ago, 5 weeks before her 19th birthday, and am in search of another. I got her by chance and she was the best dog I’ve ever had, even though she wasn’t a dog. Please and thank you.

    • @intrepidworld
      @intrepidworld  2 роки тому

      Where do you live? SAFE Carnarvon are in WA and sometimes have dingoes that need adopting. SAFE Carnarvon also have a variety of other dogs and cats that need new homes. Dingo Den in NSW are all about rescuing dingoes and adopting them out to new homes. I'm pretty sure they send dingoes around the country provided they feel the home is going to be suitable. When I get a chance I will try add links to their websites in my description and let you know.

    • @jonwhipple3135
      @jonwhipple3135 2 роки тому

      Thank you. I would love to save one! Maybe two.

    • @gupcakes7795
      @gupcakes7795 Рік тому

      Desert Dingo Rescue are one i highly recommend, they've recently branched out into NSW so will soon have a NSW based rescue.
      Never, ever go through Sydney Fox And Dingo Rescue however, terrible place that is more a hoarding situation than anything. Dont believe in dna testing, demonize good, reputable places that have done worlds of good for the dingo as a species. They also put one dingo in their care through months of invasive 'treatments' before his body gave up and he was finally able to rest.

  • @lorenzomagazzeni5425
    @lorenzomagazzeni5425 2 роки тому

    It's the original dog, from South America to Asia you see them any day. No big deal.

  • @betsyhua9697
    @betsyhua9697 2 роки тому

    Adopted a dingo/Carolina from shelter for almost 6mo but last few months her aggression terrorized all of us, don’t know how to handle “help “

    • @intrepidworld
      @intrepidworld  2 роки тому +2

      Are you in the USA? I'm not a dog trainer and need help in this area myself. My only advice would be to contact people in your area that have Carolina dogs/ American dingoes and ask them who they use for dog training.

  • @colincampbell4261
    @colincampbell4261 2 роки тому

    Are those dingos nuetered? Or do the males testticles not show on dingos.

  • @andreaamplified
    @andreaamplified 2 роки тому

    From US, are Dingos cross breed able with certain types of dogs, wolves, coyotes etc? Just curious.

    • @intrepidworld
      @intrepidworld  2 роки тому +1

      Yes Dingoes can breed with other canine.

    • @Thamixa1
      @Thamixa1 11 місяців тому

      Is the Carolina Dog not a Dingo crossbreed type?

  • @gupcakes7795
    @gupcakes7795 Рік тому +1

    Dingoes do bark, but its different to our domestic dogs.

    • @intrepidworld
      @intrepidworld  Рік тому

      Yeah I think I've heard Rusty bark 3 times in the 15 months that I have had him. Each time it was just 1 bark or gruff then he was done. Jalba has done it 5 or 6 times in about 12 months of us having him. But yeah they don't bark like dogs continually day in day out which is great.

    • @gupcakes7795
      @gupcakes7795 Рік тому +1

      @@intrepidworld Yup! I think out of the 40+ dingoes ive worked with over the past 6 years ive only ever heard maybe 6 of them make that gruff/bark sound. Usually when we have visitors to the sanctuary and they want them to know they dont want them in their space. I work at Bargo Dingo Sanctuary :)

    • @intrepidworld
      @intrepidworld  Рік тому

      @@gupcakes7795 oh sweet I follow Bargo on Instagram. Yeah was the same with my boys. They gruff at people that make them uneasy. We have a pesky woman over the back fence that keeps climbing on a ladder to look over the fence and watch them. The boys don't like her 🤣 Jalba barked at me once when we first adopted him because I caught him chewing the corner of the couch and shouted at him no and chased him out the house. Once he was outside he turned and gruffed at me so I said no then shut the door and left him outside by himself.. he didn't like that. Great thing is he hasn't touched the couch again so that's great.

    • @gupcakes7795
      @gupcakes7795 Рік тому

      @@intrepidworld Funny thing is i run the instagram account for the sanctuary haha
      Yeah they really dont like anyone being up higher than them, ive found with our shy dingoes they're unsure if we're standing, but if we crouch/sit down they're more curious and likely to approach us.
      Oh wow! They really dont like getting into trouble haha, good thing it seemed to stop him chewing though!

  • @BStrapper
    @BStrapper 2 роки тому

    very interesting!
    can you have them run free near you or they would escape never to come back?

    • @intrepidworld
      @intrepidworld  2 роки тому +1

      I believe they would come back because their den is in my back yard, my last video shows that. But I can't let them out the yard because I literally have farmland on the opposite side of the street. They would ended up killing someone's Chickens, sheep or goats. When I bush walk them they are always on a lead.

    • @BStrapper
      @BStrapper 2 роки тому +1

      @@intrepidworld fascinating animals!

    • @afarez1438
      @afarez1438 2 роки тому

      @@intrepidworld
      In your previous video
      DJ mini footage exploring the outskirts of Carnarvon western Australia
      Between 0.45 1.42
      Two dingoes can be seen walking of lead..
      And one has a long black lead attached as you can see it in the sand .
      And can't see a lead on the other one
      from the
      drone footage from above

    • @intrepidworld
      @intrepidworld  2 роки тому +4

      @@afarez1438 yes the one with the lead is Rusty the other one belonged to a lady up there. The rope that Rusty was dragging behind him was 20m long to help us catch him and the other dingo was the pack leader. Pack of 3 including Rusty. She had recall skills in other words when the lady called her she would come back. But the other cool thing was if the other 2 dingoes didn't come back she would round them up by running a head of them and snarling at them essentially telling them off and making them come back, it was pretty cool to watch. Side note, I was told that female dingoes are the boss in a pack that's why Rusty would listen to her and come back.
      We were also 30min out of town so there were no other people and no farms either so we could let them be more free.
      Where I live the local council has a rule that your dog (and dingo) can't be on a lead longer than 2m so I can't just let Rusty run around on a 20m lead as I might get in trouble, plus there are to many people and dogs around. So I can't risk something bad happening like a fight with another dog. You would have to check with your local council for the different rules like how long the lead can be and stuff like that.

  • @beaverundercover3479
    @beaverundercover3479 2 роки тому

    what is a parentis?

    • @intrepidworld
      @intrepidworld  2 роки тому

      I may not have pronounced it clearly. A Perentie is a large Australian lizard and I think the 3rd or 4th largest in the world. They can grow up to 2m long and weigh about 15kg which would be a formidable predator for a young dingo cub. Jalba was about 8 weeks old the first time I saw him and his tail had already been removed by then. He still had claw marks around his back legs but was healing up nicely.
      Hope that information helps sorry for not being clear enough in my video.

  • @mydogswilkickurass
    @mydogswilkickurass Рік тому +1

    I was told when I got my dog it was half shiba and half korean jindo, but he's a spitting image in look and manurisms to eastern dingos idk, getting a DNA test for him.

    • @intrepidworld
      @intrepidworld  Рік тому

      If he is pure dingo he will have 4 white paws and white tip at the end of his tail. If you live in Australia you can try reach out to the School of Biological Earth and Environmental Science (AKA School of BEES) and see if they will run a DNA test for you. They would need to know your dog's history 1st to see if it fits their study

    • @mydogswilkickurass
      @mydogswilkickurass Рік тому +1

      @intrepidworld he's got the "white socks" on his feet but his tail has black towards the tip, otherwise he's looks just like the thumbnail of the video.