On a windy
autumn day on a green hill near Gisborne in Victoria, Lyn Watson, the
co-founder of the Dingo Discovery Sanctuary and Research Centre, calls out to
Snapple, a male dingo. The red-blond canine trots over and sits patiently as
Watson demonstrates all the ways a dingo is not a dog. First, she puts a hand
under the animal’s chin and one at the top of its head, then – as if it has a
hinge at the back of its neck – she pushes back until the top of the dingo’s
skull touches its spine. Upright again, she turns its ears like radar dishes.
When dingoes hunt, one ear points directly forward and one directly back. Next,
Watson rotates Snapple’s head from side to side, and it travels at least 200
degrees each way. It’s like the famous head-spinning scene in The Exorcist,
except it’s adorable. Why do
dingoes have hinged heads?
I wrote about an amazing dingo sanctuary in The Monthly, subscription only.
Below a video I shot at the Sanctuary. It's a small demo of the dingo's startlingly non-dog-like abilities. Most of the people I showed it to gasped aloud.