yes you are right if you take the apex predator out of an ecosystem the whole ecosystem falls apart and becomes unbalanced the dingoes actually could become farmers friends in a symbiotic relationship The LNP is fucked !
Uh, no, they haven't. Dingoes were introduced and completely extirpated the native thylacine population from the mainland. Dingoes are not native at all.
@@Jimmy-1919 That doesn't mean anything. If that's the case, then in a few thousand years I expect my white, European descendants to be considered aboriginals.
The dingo to me is the ultimate wild canid. Because this canine owns the land it lives in unlike dogs nearly everywhere else in the world that have to either compete with or live in the shadow of bears and big cats.
Wolves are the apex predators of North America and Russia and are without a doubt more dominant than bears, leopards and pumas and arguably even more dominant than tigers, dingoes are the size of coyotes and lycaons, if there were big cats and bears in Australia dingoes would also have to live in their shadow
@@nojorooney In Far East Siberia, the tiger is considered the wolf's worst enemy. The wolf packs there are small and rarely reach more than 7 members because tigers limit their growth. We noticed this back when amur tigers were disappearing from persecution and poaching, the wolf population began to overpopulate, but now that the amur tiger is recovering, the wolf population has decreased to more moderate numbers.
@@nojorooneyeasily one of the reasons we cherish them so much. Despite how people frame them they are vulnerable to every exploitation that ferals utilise. There are legends(tall tales indeed) of large cats in Australia. Though the time they’ve been apparently been around plus the variables with population and genetic bottle-necks, probably means that even if a population of large Felids lived in Aus, they’d by now be inbred or have died out. With the ranges that dingos hold tho. It’s unlikely that the two would need to frequently cross paths. A large cat(you pick) Dingos Feral dogs Feral domestic cats Perentie’s Salt water and fresh water crocs Wedge tailed eagles Pretty much are the only carnivores actively hunting the other herbivorous megafauna. So there’s the competition list besides Humans(we are a given) And given Australia’s habits vastness, even if there was a stable population, say in the south, it would be a truely long time fore they’d start competin. Or at least I think.
Surprised the 3 grown adult didn't protect the juvenile more after it was caught. I mean it was only 1 dingo and not a pack. They could have saved their piglet if they wanted to.
And they would, but the helicopter (which, they are hunted from relentlessly) aided the dingo, while the adults fled b/c they fear the aerial threat more or the noise from the heli drowned out its distress squeals or both.
Most definitely a helicopter. I am a drone pilot. The speed, distance likely covered during this chase, and the way the camera moves means it’s being filmed from a Heli. A shadow would have confirmed it, but looks like they edited the video enough not to show the helicopter. It is a feral animal control organization that posted the video. They filmed this during a population control operation and the dingo took advantage of the situation, or at least was aided by it. This is not a drone.
@@willfulford1650 wow that’s a cool job. I just think we don’t really use Helis to film from the sky anymore just because it’s too costly, but since this is by a big organization with maybe funded by government you must be right
I’ve seen this video a while back, but I am still quite impressed by this dingo and it’s stamina. So damn smart, and cunning! I thought it would run them until they were gassed, and then have an easy and safe kill, but it took the pig as soon as it overtook it, I’m supposing it did took conserve its energy and strength. Still, you’ve gotta admire its stamina. It didn’t even look winded.
Come on now, that was impressive! The dingo is fast and super long endurance. He just outlasted that pig. I must say, I’m a little confused with the pigs, though. They must have thought the dingo had company, because they could have formed a circle with the babies in the middle and it’s game over. If the dingo dared to take on a full grown pig from the front, the pig to their left or right would have slashed him something terrible. Maybe they are too many generations away from predators like a sole coyotes to remember how to beat them. Wow, one dingo. Good dog!
That’s damn impressive for a canine. Sure, it wasn’t a full grown pig but it was a good size nonetheless. Hogs are no joke and that dingo took it down by itself!
Amazing footage. I'd never previously considered Dingoes anything more than jackal like dogs that hunted tiny animals or behaved like coyotes around human habitats, but this proves that they're serious predators
@@Latenivenatrix_Mcmasteraedingo packs can grow up to 10 individuals, which could even change in the future in order to keep up with all the new large prey animals to hunt.
That pig got killed and ate😂a dingo hunting by itself like dat a injury is almost certain death he’s jus be careful and getting it tired so he can grab its neck or its nose and suffocate it💯
@Asura Code they have been known to keep foxes and cats under control. The only issue is that there aren't that many pure bred dingos anymore. You Aussies may have to settle with the hybrids.
Smart as. It went for the young one when it was on the run and separate it while the other heavier pigs were in full flight and not in a position to retaliate quickly. Notice how the little one went to ground and hid momentarily in the grass but the dingo backtracked picked up its scent and then went in all the time mindful of what the others were doing. Once sure the others were not returning it finished the job. That second or two of standing before the final lunge was enough to be sure the others were out of the picture, and catch its breath, before the kill.
It's funny at the end, how it says feral pigs have devastated the native wildlife. Because the dingo made the Tasmanian tiger go instinct. But cool video of the hunt.
Nice control, tires them out until the adults don’t have the energy to come back and fight for the young one. This is why you don’t cull dingos. They rarely hunt farm animals, because it’s easier and safer for them to hunt away from large groups of animals.
This will bring much needed attention to the world of the dogo Argentino that has been needlessly bread to be 120 lbs with a broad chest & bowed legs. Two 40 lb dingoes could bring down that adult pig. You rarely see wild, pack hunters rely on size & strength.
If you take the apex predator out of an ecosystem the whole ecosystem falls apart and becomes unbalanced the dingoes actually could become farmers friends in a symbiotic relationship The LNP is fucked !
NOTHING wrong with Dingo feasting his meal LIKE we all see Lion's or all the cats or dog's hunting their preys, I mean Yellow Stone wolves hunting and feating what is wrong with nature unfolding scenes? Next time do NOT be afraid to show us Dingo ripping his hard-fought meal! California, USA!
Dingo is also feral. They don’t belong to nature. They are Indian dogs that brought by people and because of them Tasmanian wolf doesn’t exist any more.
@@dingodong76 This is pretty much the one instance where an invasive species is actually helpful. With the tasmanian wolf gone, herbivore species would have sored, but dingos are there to keep them in check.
@@dingodong76 if the Thylacine was still around as the apex predator, what good would he be in today’s Australia? Just asking, if a thylacines jaws were too weak to kill a sheep as they’re finding out now, it’d have absolutely nothing for a hog
@@dingodong76 Tasmania Tiger is extinct because of humans get your facts right idiot , Dingos where around with the aboriginals so they can call this home just as much as another Australian
Instead of killing dingos, how about exporting them to Texas? We have a serious feral pig problem and don’t mind if they kill coyotes either. Unlike Australians, we value the dingo as a unique species that should be protected, not hunted for... whatever excuse they’re currently using
Domestic pig breeds (even the ferals) don't have the endurance or heat tolerance a native dingo would. That's why they were crossed into breeds like heelers, for the endurance and heat tolerance. Dingo probably has learned in the open grasslands, just keep running them until all they want to do is get away and cool off, then take down the smallest and weakest. And that looks like it was still a good 20 or 30 lbs of meat.
Is the Dingo an introduced feral species? I mean, they are responsible for most marsupial extinctions on the mainland in the thousands of years they have been here.
@@nicknick493 it’s been proven they came over thousands of years ago, yes. We don’t know if they were bought by ppl or a land bridge that is now gone. Aborigines have been proven to be in Australia for around 60,000 yrs ago. And that’s just what we have evidence for. They claim to have been here for 100,000 yrs. AND, Its even been considered that ancient Chinese explorers brought them (Asian wolf) over Sometime. BCE. WE just don’t know for sure.
Exactly. That dingo could be on day 2 of no food and absolutely needs to kill prey to survive. I imagine the most hungry I've ever been and imagine that multiplied, and what I'd do to eat out of desperation in the wilderness. I love all animals and would cry while eating it afterwards, but best believe I'd hunt a piglet. Life is brutal, that's just a part of the natural cycle of things. We exist simply to participate in it and do our part within the food chain.
Wood38. Dingoes had thousands of years to make the Tassie Tiger extinct yet they were still on the mainland when Europeans arrived, so you are wrong with that statement. Humans hunted them into extinction because they feared what they might do to the sheep herds.
Sus scrofa, which includes domestic pigs, is actually native to Australia in the form of Papuan hogs. Komodo dragons should be reintroduced to mainland Australia to regulate Captain Cookers.
Such a bad Mama she could easily have chased the Dingo off but left her helpless baby for the Dingo instead! They probably assumed it was a pack chasing them,pigs cant count!
freeurmindnow. A dozen wild pigs couldn't kill a 6 month old dingo let alone an adult . They are way too agile and fast . Years ago 2 of my pig hunting dogs chased 2 shin high dingo pups in the spear grass and just got run silly before the pups snuck out the back door and were gone. Out smarted and out endured.
Nice statement. Only that Homo sapiens sapiens especially the ones who are native to Europe and not Australia are having a far worse impact on the whole world. Australian version of this species being a prima example by emitting more Co2/capita than any other of these species changing ecosystems worldwide...Also: theur nonnative crops, theur nonnative cattle and their nonnative poison used on their nonnative crops is devastating far more than any so called nonnative animal does. But true to style these feral homo sapiens sapiens tend to point fingers to others and they have taste to kill others when they are deemed strangers. That includes other Homo spaiens with a slightly different genetic make up.
@@countrygirlxo7188 women, in my part of the world doesn't known anything about wild life. They don't even bother to know. In real meaning they don't understand what is being unconditional! Animals have an unconditional life. Specially their love. You can talk to me over this thing for ages. Meet me at amber.cologne@gmail.com
This why dinogo are important
yes you are right if you take the apex predator out of an ecosystem the whole ecosystem falls apart and becomes unbalanced
the dingoes actually could become farmers friends in a symbiotic relationship
The LNP is fucked !
And Fauci.
Dingoes have been in Australia long enough to be considered native. We need to protect them
There as a Australian as we'll ever be
Uh, no, they haven't. Dingoes were introduced and completely extirpated the native thylacine population from the mainland. Dingoes are not native at all.
@@a.m11558 yeah but they have been here for as long as any of us aussie. They've even starting howling rather than there traditional bark
@@Jimmy-1919 That doesn't mean anything. If that's the case, then in a few thousand years I expect my white, European descendants to be considered aboriginals.
@@a.m11558 that's the dumbest thing I've ever herd
The dingo to me is the ultimate wild canid. Because this canine owns the land it lives in unlike dogs nearly everywhere else in the world that have to either compete with or live in the shadow of bears and big cats.
Wolves r still apex predators u know
Wolves are the apex predators of North America and Russia and are without a doubt more dominant than bears, leopards and pumas and arguably even more dominant than tigers, dingoes are the size of coyotes and lycaons, if there were big cats and bears in Australia dingoes would also have to live in their shadow
@@nojorooney In Far East Siberia, the tiger is considered the wolf's worst enemy. The wolf packs there are small and rarely reach more than 7 members because tigers limit their growth. We noticed this back when amur tigers were disappearing from persecution and poaching, the wolf population began to overpopulate, but now that the amur tiger is recovering, the wolf population has decreased to more moderate numbers.
@@nojorooneyeasily one of the reasons we cherish them so much. Despite how people frame them they are vulnerable to every exploitation that ferals utilise.
There are legends(tall tales indeed) of large cats in Australia. Though the time they’ve been apparently been around plus the variables with population and genetic bottle-necks, probably means that even if a population of large Felids lived in Aus, they’d by now be inbred or have died out.
With the ranges that dingos hold tho. It’s unlikely that the two would need to frequently cross paths. A large cat(you pick)
Dingos
Feral dogs
Feral domestic cats
Perentie’s
Salt water and fresh water crocs
Wedge tailed eagles
Pretty much are the only carnivores actively hunting the other herbivorous megafauna.
So there’s the competition list besides Humans(we are a given)
And given Australia’s habits vastness, even if there was a stable population, say in the south, it would be a truely long time fore they’d start competin. Or at least I think.
Oh and the larger dasuyrids. Like quolls and tassie devils
The moms like "all I gotta do is outrun my baby" even tho she coulda saved it easily. This was one dingo
Jay C they panic
prey mentality
@@misconceptions5613 Not true, many pigs stand their ground.
@@neallawler1308 Nope wrong, its individualism, many prey stand their ground.
Write her an email bitch
This is amazing footage!
Heliox who knew Australia's native wildlife would fight back against the boars.
more for the fact that those 3 "parents" didn't even try to protect their young - just ran off like seeya.
Boars seem to have zero warthog DNA
chateau pig they along with warthogs and other prey animals panic. It seems warthogs are a bit smarter
I didn't expect the dingo to really handle that pig like that, great hunt, great footage
Surprised the 3 grown adult didn't protect the juvenile more after it was caught. I mean it was only 1 dingo and not a pack. They could have saved their piglet if they wanted to.
And they would, but the helicopter (which, they are hunted from relentlessly) aided the dingo, while the adults fled b/c they fear the aerial threat more or the noise from the heli drowned out its distress squeals or both.
@@willfulford1650 I don’t think it’s a chopper but a drone. They simply don’t know if the dingo is alone or pack and usually they’re pack
Most definitely a helicopter. I am a drone pilot. The speed, distance likely covered during this chase, and the way the camera moves means it’s being filmed from a Heli. A shadow would have confirmed it, but looks like they edited the video enough not to show the helicopter. It is a feral animal control organization that posted the video. They filmed this during a population control operation and the dingo took advantage of the situation, or at least was aided by it. This is not a drone.
@@willfulford1650 wow that’s a cool job. I just think we don’t really use Helis to film from the sky anymore just because it’s too costly, but since this is by a big organization with maybe funded by government you must be right
@@willfulford1650 absolutley
To all the people saying dingoes are feral . Don't you think that 5000 ( at very least) qualifies as native?
I’ve seen this video a while back, but I am still quite impressed by this dingo and it’s stamina. So damn smart, and cunning! I thought it would run them until they were gassed, and then have an easy and safe kill, but it took the pig as soon as it overtook it, I’m supposing it did took conserve its energy and strength. Still, you’ve gotta admire its stamina. It didn’t even look winded.
Yeah he was making sure he didn't let that one slip by
Great and beauty footage! In Argentina we have the same problem: feral pigs another's exotic animals destroying the native environments
Like humans?
@@thejack9178 like your moms cooter
@@timd7043 that's brutal
@@thejack9178 your right !! 🤣🤣😂😂😭😭😏😏
@@thejack9178brutal but it’s true
Come on now, that was impressive! The dingo is fast and super long endurance. He just outlasted that pig. I must say, I’m a little confused with the pigs, though. They must have thought the dingo had company, because they could have formed a circle with the babies in the middle and it’s game over. If the dingo dared to take on a full grown pig from the front, the pig to their left or right would have slashed him something terrible. Maybe they are too many generations away from predators like a sole coyotes to remember how to beat them. Wow, one dingo. Good dog!
They were sows. No tusks. Dingos don't mess with big boars
Good job Dingo!!!!!!!!!
Versus piglet🤣
@@tajsonpjetri2948 I don’t eat pork!!!!😂😂😂
@@erictucker4412 I didn't say that I said that the dog beat just a piglet thats all
@@tajsonpjetri2948 I hear ya! I’m not tripping! We are good!✊🏽✊🏽✊🏽✊🏽
The bigger one runs away like it's none of it's business.
I laughed a little to hard at this 😅
"Today on the world's craziest dingos chases"
"Suspect is now on foot"
Just like the wolves and boars in North America
That’s damn impressive for a canine. Sure, it wasn’t a full grown pig but it was a good size nonetheless. Hogs are no joke and that dingo took it down by itself!
That dingo never gets tired.
Amazing footage. I'd never previously considered Dingoes anything more than jackal like dogs that hunted tiny animals or behaved like coyotes around human habitats, but this proves that they're serious predators
Jackals hunt largish animals too
Dingoes are essentially no different from wolves in simplest terms
@@Latenivenatrix_Mcmasterae but wolves hunt in pack and this dingo hunt alone, more like coyotes.
@@JoseRRodriguez sometimes but most times I see dingoes they’re hunting in packs of 2-4(?) or something but yeah
@@Latenivenatrix_Mcmasteraedingo packs can grow up to 10 individuals, which could even change in the future in order to keep up with all the new large prey animals to hunt.
I don't see any footage of the dead pig, legend has it the pig is still running in circles with the dingo in hot pursuit
Idiot
That pig got killed and ate😂a dingo hunting by itself like dat a injury is almost certain death he’s jus be careful and getting it tired so he can grab its neck or its nose and suffocate it💯
This is why dingoes could be used in Australian conservation,
@Asura Code they have been known to keep foxes and cats under control. The only issue is that there aren't that many pure bred dingos anymore. You Aussies may have to settle with the hybrids.
Healthy sows normally have 8 or so piglets at a time. Here there was only one left, so looks like these might be a major food source for that dingo.
When nature steps in to tackle the invasive species
Smart as. It went for the young one when it was on the run and separate it while the other heavier pigs were in full flight and not in a position to retaliate quickly. Notice how the little one went to ground and hid momentarily in the grass but the dingo backtracked picked up its scent and then went in all the time mindful of what the others were doing. Once sure the others were not returning it finished the job. That second or two of standing before the final lunge was enough to be sure the others were out of the picture, and catch its breath, before the kill.
*Dingo Ate My Baby!*
Me: I'm so f*ckin clever!
Aussies: Yaaaaaaawn...
Bro that dingo literally chased them For Miles & Milessssss… Do y’all see how Far They Actually Ran ?
It's funny at the end, how it says feral pigs have devastated the native wildlife. Because the dingo made the Tasmanian tiger go instinct. But cool video of the hunt.
@Aaron New But they weren't hunted to instinction
@Aaron New The r/whoosh went over your head
@@depizixuri58 I think humans killed them to protect their livestock
Their is actuall not much evidence for it.
@@crocodile9156 In Tasmania, the dingoes got them on the mainland
I am more surprised that the dingo was hunting solo.
dingo's hunt solo alot
Catch & released?
Now imagine a pack of them taking on a full grown boar.
Risky business, even for dingoes.
Why would they, they aren't stupid and probably wouldn't want to eat such a delicacy anyway if tender easier young ones are available
Both the dingo and the pigs, has disturbed by the drone. The adult sows run not because of the dingo, but because of the drone.
Facts!
rubbish pigs run away so as they detect a dingo near by
Nice control, tires them out until the adults don’t have the energy to come back and fight for the young one. This is why you don’t cull dingos. They rarely hunt farm animals, because it’s easier and safer for them to hunt away from large groups of animals.
This will bring much needed attention to the world of the dogo Argentino that has been needlessly bread to be 120 lbs with a broad chest & bowed legs. Two 40 lb dingoes could bring down that adult pig. You rarely see wild, pack hunters rely on size & strength.
Well guess this little piggy, never made it to market. 🇨🇦 🐶
It made it to market man, never just came home
If you take the apex predator out of an ecosystem the whole ecosystem falls apart and becomes unbalanced
the dingoes actually could become farmers friends in a symbiotic relationship
The LNP is fucked !
That sow must of used all her babies for bait😑
How about the kill and eating video ?
why ?
@@lawlerscorner4420 because this is just chasing it.
Dingo : would you mind I'm trying to get a pig
why the dislike ratio?
NOTHING wrong with Dingo feasting his meal LIKE we all see Lion's or all the cats or dog's hunting their preys, I mean Yellow Stone wolves hunting and feating what is wrong with nature unfolding scenes? Next time do NOT be afraid to show us Dingo ripping his hard-fought meal! California, USA!
Dingo is also feral. They don’t belong to nature. They are Indian dogs that brought by people and because of them Tasmanian wolf doesn’t exist any more.
@@dingodong76 This is pretty much the one instance where an invasive species is actually helpful. With the tasmanian wolf gone, herbivore species would have sored, but dingos are there to keep them in check.
@@dingodong76 if the Thylacine was still around as the apex predator, what good would he be in today’s Australia? Just asking, if a thylacines jaws were too weak to kill a sheep as they’re finding out now, it’d have absolutely nothing for a hog
@@dingodong76 Tasmania Tiger is extinct because of humans get your facts right idiot , Dingos where around with the aboriginals so they can call this home just as much as another Australian
Mother pig: "The dingo ate my BABY!"
Najeeb QA
HAHAHAHA!
I remember that one!
Dingo brilliance in attacking1:15 to 1:25.rounded the bush and attacked by coming in front swiftly.
the stamina is INSANE
Instead of killing dingos, how about exporting them to Texas? We have a serious feral pig problem and don’t mind if they kill coyotes either. Unlike Australians, we value the dingo as a unique species that should be protected, not hunted for... whatever excuse they’re currently using
Feral Pig: catch me if you can
Dingo: il catch you in 2minutes and 11seconds.
Me: this reminds me of my friends
Not funny.
Dingo , you got hunting licence??
WILD HOGS KILLED A NURSE AS SHE WAS GOING HOME HERE IN BAYTOWN,TEXAS
Are these pure Dingo or have they some Feral dog blood? They look a bit big to be 100% dingo.
Who'd have guessed that a feral species like wild pigs would have no naturally camouflaging coloration?
I’m pretty positive 2 boar could gore a single dingo to death , maybe Australian boar aren’t that aggressive like here in the states
Domestic pig breeds (even the ferals) don't have the endurance or heat tolerance a native dingo would. That's why they were crossed into breeds like heelers, for the endurance and heat tolerance. Dingo probably has learned in the open grasslands, just keep running them until all they want to do is get away and cool off, then take down the smallest and weakest. And that looks like it was still a good 20 or 30 lbs of meat.
Those Hogs could have kicked its rear...but the Dingo had confidence and once fear sets into prey it's all over
never unestimate a dingo
This is great footage, though motherhood does not rank high in those Pigs. "I feel as if She could have fought off one Dingo😒"
and the dingo would have killed her instead
Top dog is bringin' home the bacon tonight....
Mom gave up too fast!
The dingo is the only Australian predator capable of controlling animal overpopulations.
"A Dingo ate my baby"
Is the Dingo an introduced feral species? I mean, they are responsible for most marsupial extinctions on the mainland in the thousands of years they have been here.
@@nicknick493 it’s been proven they came over thousands of years ago, yes. We don’t know if they were bought by ppl or a land bridge that is now gone. Aborigines have been proven to be in Australia for around 60,000 yrs ago. And that’s just what we have evidence for. They claim to have been here for 100,000 yrs. AND, Its even been considered that ancient Chinese explorers brought them (Asian wolf) over Sometime. BCE. WE just don’t know for sure.
RIP, little one, back to the life of cycle. ~ a good hunt for dingo ~
Exactly. That dingo could be on day 2 of no food and absolutely needs to kill prey to survive. I imagine the most hungry I've ever been and imagine that multiplied, and what I'd do to eat out of desperation in the wilderness. I love all animals and would cry while eating it afterwards, but best believe I'd hunt a piglet. Life is brutal, that's just a part of the natural cycle of things. We exist simply to participate in it and do our part within the food chain.
Instead of introducing dingos who will haunt everything else, why don't you cut beef and introduce feral pigs to your new diet?
the mother totally abandoned this baby
Awesome footage
The DINGO is doing what any hunting dog does only naturally Cool 😎 👌
Exactly. I hunted feral pigs with dogs in Central Queensland for years. 2 Dane X Wolfhounds and 2 Boxer/Pitbull/Bull arab crosses.
I really thought Dingos would have hunted in a pack.
And this little piggy went,"wee wee wee, all the way....,for nothing:( No thanks to the useless"parents"!
A single dingo couldn't take down a full grown hog.
and?
Yes they can
Wait do feral pigs not have tusk? Why didn't they have the instinct to protect their young?
Wood38. Dingoes had thousands of years to make the Tassie Tiger extinct yet they were still on the mainland when Europeans arrived, so you are wrong with that statement. Humans hunted them into extinction because they feared what they might do to the sheep herds.
They went extinct on the mainland well before settlers arrived.
The Thylacene died 1000s of years out before europeans arvied
Hail Giratina The true god not quite. The last one died in captivity so you need to do a bit more research.
@@davidkeep6526 I was talking about the australian Australian mainland. The last thylocene from tasmania dies in 1936
@@davidkeep6526 More research, and locate facts
The heart of a Heeler!
Warning : Real life may disturb some viewers
What about feral humans?
Does it mean dingo are useful for ecosystem?
Dingoes are magnificent animals.
*Remember folks*
Take your kids hiking.
...or a fat smoker.
Sus scrofa, which includes domestic pigs, is actually native to Australia in the form of Papuan hogs. Komodo dragons should be reintroduced to mainland Australia to regulate Captain Cookers.
El poderoso dingo y pastor australiano lleva esa sangre por tal motivo es tan terco y sabe cazar de una forma efectiva.
I bet Dingos will evolve to become larger in order to take the larger prey now available in Australia.
Such a bad Mama she could easily have chased the Dingo off but left her helpless baby for the Dingo instead! They probably assumed it was a pack chasing them,pigs cant count!
freeurmindnow. A dozen wild pigs couldn't kill a 6 month old dingo let alone an adult . They are way too agile and fast . Years ago 2 of my pig hunting dogs chased 2 shin high dingo pups in the spear grass and just got run silly before the pups snuck out the back door and were gone. Out smarted and out endured.
Nice statement. Only that Homo sapiens sapiens especially the ones who are native to Europe and not Australia are having a far worse impact on the whole world. Australian version of this species being a prima example by emitting more Co2/capita than any other of these species changing ecosystems worldwide...Also: theur nonnative crops, theur nonnative cattle and their nonnative poison used on their nonnative crops is devastating far more than any so called nonnative animal does. But true to style these feral homo sapiens sapiens tend to point fingers to others and they have taste to kill others when they are deemed strangers. That includes other Homo spaiens with a slightly different genetic make up.
Okay Kunte Kinte,
Dingos got me baby
Why not offer bounty to hunters to eradicate them? In texas they hunt with tracers at nite and they kill hundreds i saw video very impressive..
Well imagen a giant dessert bigger than Texas, but with less than 100.000 people. You can understand why it is not a viable sollution
And their pig problem is getting worse. Tells something to those who want to work it out.
Pest control and hunting for fun are very different
I would hate to be a prey animal. They panic too easily, and the intelligence is usually low
And PETA will protest in 1. 2... 3
Not as good as a African wild dog but damn close.
Bull scheice, better, 1 dingo does the work of half a dozen painted dogs.
I'd love to cross one with a greyhound, make excellent lurchers,,,obviously brilliant hunting dog as is but more speed never hurts in any thing.
gonna make it fast and anxious?
Ferrite pigs are strong like rubbed ox. Dingo fast like horse ox.
Good doggie 🐶. You. Could see the dingo look up at the helicopter 🚁 a couple of times
Lol those were some awful parents. Seemed almost like they were hoping the little guy wouldn’t make it. No wonder why they only had 1 piglet left
You must be a gorgeous woman. I have said this to u before as well. Didnt I?
The People aww thank you, and honestly I’m not sure 💕
@@countrygirlxo7188 women, in my part of the world doesn't known anything about wild life. They don't even bother to know. In real meaning they don't understand what is being unconditional!
Animals have an unconditional life. Specially their love.
You can talk to me over this thing for ages. Meet me at amber.cologne@gmail.com
I’m disturbed
Sounds like a personal problem but the first step is admitting the problem. Now you can seek help.
How Dingoes saved my property and helped my cattle business - David Pollock, Landholders for Dingoes
th-cam.com/video/inXXzgnS3RY/w-d-xo.html
The European has had the same effect on the indigenous people!....
good to see Dingoes taking out feral pigs. they're a huge problem in Australia along with other invasive species.
Pigs don’t make good protectors.
Here’s hoping that was a dingo not a feral cross, but good to c the cunning.
Life, uh, finds a way
Piglet not Pig
Dingoes are merely wolves of hot climate!!!!
Bad mother.Didn't protect son.😩
Texas Hog Dog From Another World.....
Yeah really disturbing poor baby pig💔 but thats a cirle of life😓
I feel freedom when I watch Dingos chase down their prey. I'm truly happy for them when they win their prize, as long as it ain't a human 😁