Dogs are not allowed on the National Trails; The Bicentennial National Trail, parts of the Hume and Hovel Walking Track, the Australian Alps Walking Track and The Great Divide Trail. There are numerous baits laid throughout the country for wild dogs and foxes. You can read on these trail sites, "Please leave your dog at home." In the US it is common for dogs to be trail dogs, which isn't a practice here, that I've seen.
In state forests, particularly in the Tumut, Tumbarumba and Brindabella Regions, wild dogs are a serious problem. State forests employ professional dog trappers who use soft jaw traps, satellite tracking devices, and aerial baiting. Not knowing where the next hot spot is, it will always pay to ring State Forests in your region.
One of the issues State Forests are concerned about is, there is a growing use of dogs for hunting pigs. These dogs are taken from pounds for the purpose. The pig hunters are not the slightest bit concerned if they lose a dog. These dogs are left to starve in the forests or move on to attack sheep or even people and their pets. If you do lose your dog in the bush don't expect it will be sympathetically returned to you ...
http://s225.photobucket.com/albums/dd30 ... Donors.jpgIn state forests sand pads are also used to monitor feral dog numbers and a domestic dog running freely can create a great deal of havoc concerning false readings.
Certainly don't get it wrong with a dog, near Sydney Catchment Authority land. The penalty is up to $11,000 ...
http://s225.photobucket.com/albums/dd30 ... r-01-4.jpghttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y1GxAPXrUCQIn our front garden there was Roo attack just recently, that didn't make the news, until now. I thought that one of my screaming neighbours was being killed and I raced into the front garden with a 4" long screw driver to save anybody still remaining alive and I ran straight into this dog and Roo fight, I soon stood back.The dog killed the Roo for once, it wasn't a pretty event, it really was terrible. The ACT Parks Rangers were not happy when they arrived ... and went looking for the unknown dog owner and the dog.
The Dunlop Ponds massacre a few years earlier happened close to where I live. The Dunlop Ponds are on the 'Bicentennial National Trail'. What, dogs on the BNT? - the following article was taken from the 'Amazing Australia' web site.
"Killer kangaroos claimed the lives of two dogs and injured at least one person in Canberra during the first week of July 2004. Christine Canham was walking her four golden retrievers around Dunlop Ponds in Canberra's northern suburbs when her dog, Summer, had a run-in with a kangaroo who then held him under water and drowned him. Drought conditions have made the kangaroos change their usual behaviour and become active in daytime and fiercely defend water sources and feed patches.They have moved from nature reserves to Canberra's better-watered areas, such as sports fields and around ponds, where locals like to walk their dogs at dusk. Locals living in the National Capital have been told how to avoid attacks by the mad marsupials. Don't approach a kangaroo when it is standing up and looking straight at you, especially if it growls or snorts. People have also been told to keep their dogs on a leash. In the same week a woman was badly scratched while she was walking with a small poodle and got too close to a large male kangaroo. Authorities can not do too much about it as culling them within city limits is out of the question because of ACT firearms laws. In the past former governor-general Bill Hayden and his successor William Deane became irritated by kangaroos overrunning their gardens at Yarralumla and asked unsuccesfully for them to be shot. Near the city at Googong Dam authorities did start culling kangaroos but animal liberationists protested and stopped them temporarily."
The Territory Government eventually ended up killing 880 kangaroos ... in an attempt to protect our pets? The assassins herded the Roos into fenced off areas and gave them a shot of the green dream.
Warren.