New Guinea Singing Dog

Royal foot in mouth

Britiain's newly-wed royals Prince William and Princess Kate are touring North America with great success and without slip-ups, so far. A big contrast with Prince William's grandfather Prince Philip, husband of Queen Elizabeth who turned 90 recently. Over the years on Royal tours and on official duties Prince Philip made an amazing number of public gaffes. This list was compiled by the British Daily Mirror highlighting one gaffe for each of his 90 years.

AS husband of Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Philip has dedicated much of his life to official royal duties.

Despite turning 90 on June 10, with official celebrations on June 12 this year, the prince will be remembered for some amusingly quirky comments.

1. After being told that Madonna was singing the Die Another Day theme in 2002: "Are we going to need ear plugs?"

2. To a car park attendant who didn't recognise him in 1997, he snapped: "You bloody silly fool!"

3. To Simon Kelner, republican editor of The Independent, at Windsor Castle reception: "What are you doing here?" "I was invited, sir." Philip: "Well, you didn't have to come."

4. To female sea cadet last year: "Do you work in a strip club?"

5. To expats in Abu Dhabi last year: "Are you running away from something?"

6. After accepting a conservation award in Thailand in 1991: "Your country is one of the most notorious centres of trading in endangered species."

7. At a project to protect turtle doves in Anguilla in 1965, he said: "Cats kill far more birds than men. Why don't you have a slogan: 'Kill a cat and save a bird?'"

8. To multi-ethnic Britain's Got Talent 2009 winners Diversity: "Are you all one family?"

9. To President of Nigeria, who was in national dress, 2003: "You look like you're ready for bed!"

10. His description of Beijing, during a visit there in 1986: "Ghastly."

11. At Hertfordshire University, 2003: "During the Blitz, a lot of shops had their windows blown in and put up notices saying, 'More open than usual'. I now declare this place more open than usual."

12. To deaf children by steel band, 2000: "Deaf? If you're near there, no wonder you are deaf."

13. To a tourist in Budapest in 1993: "You can't have been here long, you haven't got a pot belly."

14. To a British trekker in Papua New Guinea, 1998: "You managed not to get eaten then?"

15. His verdict on Stoke-on-Trent, during a visit in 1997: "Ghastly.

New Guinea Singing Dog - News


Where to Go With the Kids: July 11-17

Tropical Trinkets Explore objects like a necklace made from dogs' teeth and a pendant with tusks of a boar from the Abelam people of Papua New Guinea! Design your own unique piece of jewelry to take home. Brooklyn Children's Museum, 2:30 pm, ages 3+,



Royal foot in mouth

To a British trekker in Papua New Guinea, 1998: "You managed not to get eaten then?" 15. His verdict on Stoke-on-Trent, during a visit in 1997: "Ghastly." 16. To Atul Patel at reception for influential Indians, 2009: "There's a lot of your family in



I Don't Think We're in Pleasantville Anymore...

And while Tulchin doesn't think she'll ever get sick of singing and dancing, she's also a big animal lover, and is looking forward to returning home to her dog, guinea pig and hamster. "I want to [keep] performing," she said, "but, I also want to be a




New Guinea Singing Dogs - The Nihon Ken Forum

@brada1878 - Interesting you should say that. I find Tyson completely attached to me. If I leave the house and leave him out with Candice and the Shibas, he sits at the gate and cries softly for 30 minutes (when he was a younger puppy, it used to last 2-3 hours). When I'm home, he follows me from room to room, and if I leave him inside while working in the yard, he sleeps at the door waiting for me. When I let him out of the bedroom in the morning, he waits at the top of the stairs to make sure I'm following him down. Perhaps he is a bit extreme of an example when you consider his sex (and my comment above regarding sex)... But, again, that was just my opinion. Obviously environment plays a big role in "clingyness", our environment is unique and may promote aloofness in our dogs, I dunno. Also, I'm sure there is a big difference when living with one Kai Ken vs. living with 10+, so YMMV (or YM-will-V).

Sosuke's pretty attached. He follows me into whatever room I'm in. When he first came home and was being housetrained, we would only give him access to one room at a time, and he really hated it when I was running around the house doing chores and he was stuck in one room. Even if everyone else was in that room with him. He used to whine when left alone or crated, but he doesn't do that anymore. Sometimes I feel bad because he'll be sleeping, and then I'll leave the room and he'll spring up and follow me. Then he settles down and gets cozy, sighs, and closes his eyes in the new room, but maybe I was just in there grabbing something, so as soon as he gets comfy, I'm gone again, so it's the same thing over and over, especially when I'm busy. Oh well. No one's forcing him!


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Save.O.N.Wildlife Save Our Nature Wildlife: New Guinea Singing Dog


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yahya zalloum New Guinea Singing Dog is the rarest dog breed especially black and tan color only two sisters are known to exist


Toronto Pets Dog: Adopt a New Guinea Singing Dog in Toronto - dog/New+Guinea+Singing+Dog/


New Guinea Singing Dog - Bookshelf

New Guinea Singing Dog

New Guinea Singing Dog


Dogs, a new understanding of canine origin, behavior, and evolution

Dogs, a new understanding of canine origin, behavior, and evolution

This made the New Guinea singing dog Canis familiaris dingo hallstromi ... In our coauthored paper on the New Guinea singing dogs, Brisbin argues that the ...

Genes, language, and culture history in the Southwest Pacific

Genes, language, and culture history in the Southwest Pacific

(1997) included a sample of four dingoes and two New Guinea singing dogs in a ... Interestingly, one of the two New Guinea singing dog sequences was also in ...

Canids, foxes, wolves, jackals, and dogs

Canids, foxes, wolves, jackals, and dogs

The relatively extended isolation of a dingo-like dog population in Papua New Guinea - initially described as the New Guinea singing dog ( Canis hallstromi) ...

Australian mammalogy, journal of the Australian Mammal Society

Australian mammalogy, journal of the Australian Mammal Society

The New Guinea singing dog: its status and scientific importance. Australian Mammalogy 29: 47-56. Time is running out for the opportunity to study the New ...

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New Guinea Singing Dog - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The New Guinea Singing Dog, or Singer, is a rare dingo once found throughout New Guinea. ... When shown in competition, New Guinea Singing Dogs are presented in their completely ...

New Guinea Singing Dog Information and Pictures, New Guinea ...
All about the New Guinea Singing Dog, info, pictures, breeders, rescues, care, temperament, health, puppies and much more

New Guinea Singing Dog Conservation Society: The Official Website
New Guinea Singing Dog Conservation Society: The Official Website. new guinea singing dog information: description, history, scientific research,

Home - New Guinea Singing Dog International
Dedicated to the preservation of the New Guinea Singing Dog. Education on responsible ownership, rescue and transport.

United Kennel Club: New Guinea Singing Dog
The New Guinea Singing Dog (NGSD) has lived wild or partially domesticated in New Guinea since prehistoric ... The first pair of captured dogs left the island in 1957 and their ...