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The Dignified Dingoes of Australia's Fraser Island - P1/2
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Dingoes crave
human contact because
they’re like modern dogs.
All the modern dogs have
to be with human beings.
Halo, vibrant viewers,
and welcome to
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
for part one
of our two-part series
on the delightful dingoes
of Fraser Island, Australia.
Among the nation's
most beloved icons,
it is theorized
these splendid animals
descended from wild
Southeast Asian dogs
introduced to the continent
some 4,000 years ago.
We’re on the beautiful
Fraser Island of
Southeast Queensland,
Australia.
This is the largest
sand island in the world.
It’s over 120 kilometers
long, and it has over
40 freshwater lakes on it.
This is the only place
in the world
where rainforest grows
straight out of sand.
This unique and beautiful
environment is home
to the Butchulla people
and their beloved
dingo companions.
He listens and he sings
a song of the dog
misunderstood for so long.
Dingoes or “wangari”
as they are called by
indigenous Australians,
are typically gold or
reddish-brown in color,
with long, bushy tails
that curl gracefully
over their backs
when they feel happy.
Dingoes are highly social,
and while young males
might live alone,
most prefer to live in packs
with up to 10 members.
Unlike domestic dogs,
dingoes do not bark,
but rather communicate
through a complex system
of wolf-like howls.
Dingoes don’t bark,
or cry for help
Dingoes on the Island
of Paradise
Dingoes don’t bark, but
they still need our help
Dingoes on the Island
of Paradise
Although these beautiful
wild canines were
once widely distributed
across Australia,
over the past few decades
their numbers
have steeply declined.
Another species goes up
against the wall,
now’s the time we should
cherish them all…
Over time dingoes have
mixed with domestic dogs,
causing purebred dingoes
to drop in numbers.
Fraser Island,
a United Nations
Educational, Scientific,
and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO)
World Heritage site,
has the largest population
of purebreds
on the east coast
of Australia and
dingoes have lived here
for at least 1,000 years.
The Butchulla
indigenous people
have resided on this island
for approximately
5,000 years
and consider the dingo
an important part of
their cultural heritage
.
Your traditional role is
caretaker of the land and
caretaker of the dingo?
Oh yes, yes.
The land,
the dingo was included.
Every other animal
that lived there too
was the same.
If people took time to notice
what the dingo does
and what they’re like,
they’d understand them
a lot better, like we did.
They weren’t just
an animal to us.
They were just
like our friends.
They always were
in harmony with us.
Our people used to travel
of course
from Fraser Island
over to the mainland.
If the dingo jumped
in (the canoe) and
came over, he came over.
He was just
part of the family.
Although most dingoes
are gold or reddish-brown
in color, the Butchulla
have often been helped
in special ways
by white dingoes,
whom they believe possess
supernatural powers.
There is a white dingo
in our stories.
If there was anything
that was lost,
anyone or anything,
they always
looked for that dingo.
If he came along,
they knew that they’d find
whatever it was
they were looking for.
Aunty Mallee,
is a Fraser Island resident
and has two dingoes
who are her
constant companions.
Their names are
Pup-Pup and Narawee.
Pup's mom and dad
were there first,
then they had Pup-Pup.
And then
when Pup-Pup grew up,
well he went and got
Narawee, his wife now
(Not churched.)
No, they're married,
but not churched.
And the father and mother
disappeared,
but Pup's been there
and Narawee (as well)
for a long time now.
She’s (Narawee’s)
very playful and that.
If I’m walking
around the place,
she'll come,
and she'll jump around
in front of me,
like she’s dancing.
And I go silly with her too,
and I start dancing
with her, and I said,
“Oh well,
they made a movie
“Dancing with Wolves.”
Well, they can have me
“dancing with the dingoes.”
I dance with the dingoes.
Pup-Pup, he can be
a bit shy sometimes.
But he does
the same thing too.
Dingoes enjoy
a wide variety of food,
and happily consume
many kinds of fruit
as well as the leaves
of several plants.
Yes, yes, they would eat
the figs, the fig fruit.
They'd eat the mangos.
There's passion fruit around.
So yes, they actually ate
a lot of fruit on the island.
Yes,
they love the coconuts.
(It) takes them hours,
sucking on the fibrous
parts of the coconut
to get to them.
So yes, they loved it.
When it comes
to looking for food,
dingoes can sometimes
be quite mischievous,
going right into people's
houses or campsites
in search of tasty morsels.
Norma Hannant, who
has lived on Fraser Island
for over 40 years,
fondly remembers
one dingo who loved candy.
I can tell you some
really funny things about,
I call them “my dingoes,”
because there were
about seven of them that
lived around my resort.
And at the back door
we had a little half gate
so the little kids
couldn’t get in or get out.
And if we’d left that open
after the boys had brought
a load of groceries
or something in, the
dingoes would be outside
just lying under the trees.
And we’d hear a noise
in the shop and we’d say,
“Oh, there’s nobody
come through
the front door.”
And we’d walk
around the side, and he’d
be just walking along,
sniffing at the lollies.
Joanne McKay,
who gives guided tours
of beautiful Fraser Island,
has become friends
with several dingoes.
Now this is a perfect
example of the dingoes
on Fraser Island.
They’re
very social creatures.
As you can see,
they’re quite relaxed.
Now this is an offspring
of a pup last year.
Now this, “Little Mum,”
we nicknamed her, because
she was a little mum.
And of course Little Mum
had seven pups.
This is one of the three.
We are privileged.
I feel so fortunate
to have lived here
for two years,
and have them allow me
to be in their life,
to watch them interact,
to watch them
raise their pups.
Sadly, the current
estimated population of
dingoes on Fraser Island
is less than 100.
Debbie Witteman,
another member
of the Butchulla people,
helped put together
a music album
to raise awareness
about their
fast dwindling numbers
and the need to save them.
If you listen,
you’ll hear the call,
of the land that’s been
singing a song…
It’s a call for everybody
to try and help us
and be aware of
what’s happening
on the island, because
they’re the last purebred
dingoes in Australia.
The dingoes were
a big part of our life and
interacted with our people.
And they were just like
a domestic animal with us.
When Aunty Ethel
used to talk to us as kids,
she used to say
that they used
to gather all the dingoes
around the little kids,
and they were used as
body warmth in winter.
So they were actually
a major part of our family.
They would help, gather
the food and everything.
And we always made sure
that they had a full belly
as well as us.
When I was young,
we had dingoes
in the backyard,
and we used to always
play with them all the time.
They’re not like
any normal dog,
domestic dog.
They’re very smart,
very intelligent.
And it’s just great
being around them.
Dingoes don’t bark
or cry for help
Dingoes on the Island
of Paradise
Dingoes don’t bark, but
they still need our help
Dingoes on the Island
of Paradise
To support
dingo protection efforts
on Fraser Island,
Robin Wells, keyboardist
for the band
Badtjala Wangari,
composed a loving tribute
to these canines.
Other members
of Badtjala Wangari
include lead vocalist
Cathy Tapper
and her two daughters –
17-year old guitarist Pania
and 12-year old
bass guitarist Erana.
The Tappers,
who have their own band
called “The Tapper Girls”
as well, live in Kandanga,
a small town
on the eastern coast
of Australia.
The song is
“Dingoes Don’t Bark.”
Robin Wells approached
a friend of ours,
Debbie (Witteman)
and she approached us
about the song.
Debbie is a descendant
from Fraser Island,
and is very passionate
about the song,
and the cause and
the dingoes, (which are)
pretty well near extinction.
And, this song is
a beautiful song.
It’s very simple,
but has a strong message.
It talks about
cherishing the species
and reflects on all sorts
of animals and species,
not just the dingo.
But the dingo is
in a sad position
at the moment, and
we are only too happy
to perform the song.
That’s fantastic.
Have you come across
dingoes yourself, and
what effect did it have
on you personally
when you saw them?
How did it feel?
Oh it’s nice to see them,
and I’ve been so lucky
that we could just
take a day trip
over to Fraser Island and
they were pretty much there.
There were a couple
on the beach, they were
watching and looking.
Cathy you are from
a Maori background.
Do you find
any similarities
between yourself and
the indigenous people
of Fraser Island?
Definitely.
Aboriginals and Maoris
have, I believe,
the same responsibility to
the land and the animals
and the birds,
so we have a deep respect
for the land, the animals,
and the birds.
And, I think
that’s very important,
and a lot of indigenous
people around the world
would feel the same way,
I believe.
I’ve heard the album.
It seems to have
a very powerful effect
on people when they hear it.
Can you tell us
the message
that you intended
to put into the song,
when you wrote,
when you sang it?
We have to
cherish the species, and
the dingo in particular
and that we have to
understand, and listen.
And through listening
you will understand
that it’s important
that this species
stay alive forever.
How do
dingo family members
treat each other?
What is unique
about a dingo greeting?
Learn the answers to
these intriguing questions
and find out
many more fun facts about
these marvelous animals
by joining us again
tomorrow on
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
for the conclusion
of our two-part series
on the dingoes
of Fraser Island.
Badtjala Wangari’s CD
“Dingoes Don’t Bark”
is available at
Thank you, gentle viewers,
for your company
on today’s show.
Coming up next is
Enlightening Entertainment,
after Noteworthy News.
May you be always graced
with wisdom
and inner peace.
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