Just spent this week on the Island and only saw one adult male near Eurong. We traversed many on the inland tracks and walked across a few areas high above the coastline where no tourist or Ranger would ever go to and saw some tracks but no dingoes and definitely NO pups. To travel nearly the full length of the east coast and only see 1 dingo leads me to believe the Govt's boast of 250 dingoes on the Island is a complete fallacy.
How can they learn to survive in the wild when they have none of the native animals they used to be able to catch on the island anymore? We saw more dingoes while driving around inland Australia than we saw on FI. They looked healthier too.
Just spent this week on the Island and only saw one adult male near Eurong.
We traversed many on the inland tracks and walked across a few areas high above the coastline where no tourist or Ranger would ever go to and saw some tracks but no dingoes and definitely NO pups.
To travel nearly the full length of the east coast and only see 1 dingo leads me to believe the Govt's boast of 250 dingoes on the Island is a complete fallacy.
that's just outrageous, they are only 8-12 weeks old!!!
How can they learn to survive in the wild when they have none of the native animals they used to be able to catch on the island anymore? We saw more dingoes while driving around inland Australia than we saw on FI. They looked healthier too.
And keep a machete close by