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Michael Myland

Phone: +61 7 4097 6098



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25.01.2022 Dingoes have an awesome bodyThey're so powerful and this is what makes them such efficient predators. They are naturally very lean and muscly. Their back secti...on is straight and strong. The loin (the part of the body that runs either side of the spine from the ribs to the hipbone) is long and arched, the croup (the area around the pelvis) is long. The loin shows a rise and, along with the structure of the muscle, indicates speed and agility. Their ribcage is long and extends to the rear. The croup is broad and straight. There is great length from their hip to hock (the dingo's heel), the knee and hock angle is moderate, There is enough length of rear pastern to act both as a spring for jumping and as an efficient lever for speed and endurance. Their entire hindquarter is powerfully muscled. Their head is wide and coupled with a narrow chest. This allows the entire body to follow where the head can squeeze. Their head holds a very large brain and extremely large jaw bones. Their hearing is so acute with ears that rotate backwards that nothing goes unheard, even the heartbeat of a snake can be heard. They also have 180 degree peripheral vision. Their feet are medium sized and oval shaped and have no hind dew clews. The tail is set well behind the hipbones, and is of medium length. It's flattish, broadening from about one third behind the base to mid length then tapering to the end. A scent gland is on the tail, which is identifiable by a dark spot, about a third of the way down....



23.01.2022 SAVE US ALL FROM 1080 .IT KILLES EVERY LIFE FORM . E V E R Y !!!!! INCLUDIND HUMANS . WAKEUP MY FRIENDS ---SHARE AND EDUCATE ----

17.01.2022 i shared this on my page 5 yrs ago ----not much happened . still killing dingoes and wildlife

11.01.2022 THE DARK SIDE OF MICHAEL ...........LOLOL



05.01.2022 Some extremely important information about the Dingo by Lyn Watson.... Dingoes differ greatly from almost all domestic dogs in that they are able to maneouver themselves through the tiniest of winding spaces, or fall from great heights, or meet with combat of such violence as to render fractures in domestic dogs, with no injury at all. Nature has given them the physiology to get to places where water and prey may be hidden. Dingoes can cross their elbows and swivel their ...heads and straighten out their hind legs, all the way from hips to toes. They are formed by nature to function at their job description without any help from humans or vets in their natural lives. Each and every joint is furnished with connective tissue which can accommodate hyper extension from head to toe and tail tip, similar to a human contortionist. Veterinarians, trained to read domestic dog X-rays, based on the world's most populous modern breeds, German Shepherds, Labradors, and Golden Retrievers, apply arbitrary measurements and angles may notice this natural laxity of what is a normal dingo hip joint, and wrongly call hip dysplasia when there is no disease or degeneration present at all. Not many of them would see a dingo or an x-ray of dingo hips in their entire career, and to our knowledge there exists no data on which to make declarations of what is normal for this ancient species which is not a breed at all. It is probable that every normal dingo has laxity of hip joints. The only way that degeneration could occur would be from faulty diet during development, or extreme obesity, or from trauma, or from the ravages of old age. Wild dingoes would rarely live naturally much beyond 5 7 years. In captivity, well cared for they can make two decades, with hip function the very least of their geriatric issues. See more

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