stepbystep wrote:I've been told there are dogs in the February Plains area still, and they come down as far as the Pelion Plains. I wouldn't have believed it but the guy who told me is trustworthy and spends a lot of time in the area...
Miyata610 wrote:I was at WOJ a couple of weeks ago with another forum member. We saw many clear dog footprints between trappers hut and wild dog creek.
Overlandman wrote:stepbystep wrote:I've been told there are dogs in the February Plains area still, and they come down as far as the Pelion Plains. I wouldn't have believed it but the guy who told me is trustworthy and spends a lot of time in the area...
I have heard this as well, They have been heard howling around Pelion Hut area. When there is a full moon![]()
Ask any Ranger that has been up at Cradle for a few years, they can tell you the stories about dogs in that area, Rarely seen but sometimes heard.
Regards Overlandman
north-north-west wrote:Overlandman wrote:stepbystep wrote:I've been told there are dogs in the February Plains area still, and they come down as far as the Pelion Plains. I wouldn't have believed it but the guy who told me is trustworthy and spends a lot of time in the area...
I have heard this as well, They have been heard howling around Pelion Hut area. When there is a full moon![]()
Ask any Ranger that has been up at Cradle for a few years, they can tell you the stories about dogs in that area, Rarely seen but sometimes heard.
Regards Overlandman
*snigger*
It was somewhere up that way that poor old Dicky Dwyer had his run in with the cocker spaniel. Probably near the Arm River Track. And that was more than thirty years ago.
north-north-west wrote:You're getting a tad overdefensive again, corby.
I was laughing at the memory of an almighty kerfuffle that occurred more than thirty years ago, when the Cradle RiC shot a privately owned cocker spaniel who had been tethered to a tree whilst its owner was out walking. Lord, that was one of the sillier media beat-ups I've come across.
Although the point was more about the dog packs being in that area for a fairly long time.
curwalker wrote:Why do you think that this could be a problem? If they were likely to attack livestock, why didn't they do so already? If they really are descendents of dumped dogs why didn't they go for easily accessable livestock already? And what damage to wildlife could they do? If the people solely blaming the dingo for the dissapreance of mainland thylacines are right than the dogs would take the ecological niche of the thylacine in Tasmania.
And what exactly happened in their backyards? The article isn't clear and considered the topic of big predators newspaper usually aren't a reliable source and there is alot of hysteria especially in case of ferals. If the dog numbers could explode why didn't they do so already?
So what basis is there "to do something about it now?"
And if research from Australia, Europe and North America is any indication, killing of them would only increase the problem and definitely lead to attacks on livestock.
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