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Post by King Kodiak on Feb 29, 2020 8:30:03 GMT -5
How did grrraaahhh find it I am asking the link to the absolute original account Is it a book newspaper or eyewitness account I want a link to that We had the link, but somehow its been lost. I just searched and the website is not there. It was just like a journal or a magazine. It was a Russian eyewitness. But its very hard to believe, a very hard bear swipe can maybe break a spine or a skull, but just 1 swipe wont decapitate a moose, that is very far fetched.
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Post by brobear on Feb 29, 2020 8:46:27 GMT -5
Yeah, i dont consider Bold a fanboy as he favours larger bears over lions. It took him years to admit that. Also, for years, his idea of the average grizzly was from the barren ground grizzly population. So, for the Bold one, lions were bigger than grizzlies. He argued that a grizzly would be devastated by a similar-sized lion. However, the tiger fan-boys were much worse.
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Post by King Kodiak on Feb 29, 2020 8:56:54 GMT -5
Yeah, i dont consider Bold a fanboy as he favours larger bears over lions. It took him years to admit that. Also, for years, his idea of the average grizzly was from the barren ground grizzly population. So, for the Bold one, lions were bigger than grizzlies. He argued that a grizzly would be devastated by a similar-sized lion. However, the tiger fan-boys were much worse. Yeah, he has never given me problems at WAW. he acknowledges that bears have more robust bones than felines also.
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Post by brobear on Feb 29, 2020 13:05:05 GMT -5
Yeah, i dont consider Bold a fanboy as he favours larger bears over lions. It took him years to admit that. Also, for years, his idea of the average grizzly was from the barren ground grizzly population. So, for the Bold one, lions were bigger than grizzlies. He argued that a grizzly would be devastated by a similar-sized lion. However, the tiger fan-boys were much worse. Yeah, he has never given me problems at WAW. he acknowledges that bears have more robust bones than felines also.Yeah, Bold has learned over the years. Me too. You would be amazed at what little I knew ( and how much I thought I knew ) when I first started posting in the now extinct wildanimalfightclub ( either in 1999 or 2000 ).
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Post by King Kodiak on Feb 29, 2020 19:10:13 GMT -5
Yeah, he has never given me problems at WAW. he acknowledges that bears have more robust bones than felines also. Yeah, Bold has learned over the years. Me too. You would be amazed at what little I knew ( and how much I thought I knew ) when I first started posting in the now extinct wildanimalfightclub ( either in 1999 or 2000 ). Yeah, obviously we all have gone through the same thing, we started knowing very little and as we researched and read more we learned alot more.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 1, 2020 15:17:09 GMT -5
A new great paw swipe account W Bieszczadach niedźwiedź zabił żubra In the Bieszczady, the bear killed a bison Martwą kilkuletnią żubrzycę, już częściowo zjedzoną, znalazł leśniczy Jan Duell. Wraz z synem wybrał się na spacer i przypadkiem natrafił na zabite zwierzę. Leśnik od razu przypuszczał, że to sprawka niedźwiedzia. Żeby mieć pewność zamontował na drzewie kamerę na fotokomórkę. Już pierwszej nocy podejrzenia Jana Duella się potwierdziły. - Do padliny przyszła dorosła niedźwiedzica z dwoma rocznymi młodymi - mówi leśniczy Marcin Scelina. - Zwierzęta ucztowały, a kamera robiła im zdjęcia. Specjaliści przeprowadzili sekcję zwłok żubra. - Wszystkie ślady, w tym rozległy wylew wewnętrzny w okolicach kręgosłupa, wskazują jako sprawcę niedźwiedzia. - Jednym potężnym uderzeniem łapy zabił żubrzycę - mówi Scelina. - To spory niedźwiedź. O jego sile świadczy fakt, że przeciągał ofiarę na odległość kilkunastu metrów. Wyżerkę na padlinie mają też kruki, myszołowy, jastrzębie i inne drobne ptaki leśne. A forester, several years old, already partially eaten, was found by Jan Duell, forester. Together with his son he went for a walk and accidentally came across a killed animal. The forester immediately thought it was the bear's doing . To be sure, he mounted a photocell camera on the tree. On the first night Jan Duella's suspicions were confirmed. - An adult bear with two year old cubs came to the carcass - says forester Marcin Scelina. - The animals were feasting, and the camera was taking pictures of them. Specialists performed a bison autopsy . - All traces, including extensive internal hemorrhage around the spine, indicate as the perpetrator of the bear. "He killed the European bison with one powerful blow of his paw," says Scelina. - It's a big bear. His strength is evidenced by the fact that he dragged the victim over a distance of several meters.
This is the same bison The Killer From shaggygod shaggygod.proboards.com/thread/365/grizzly-bear-bison-relationsThe link to the real account nowiny24.pl/w-bieszczadach-niedzwiedz-zabil-zubra/ar/6104709
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Post by brobear on Mar 2, 2020 0:57:15 GMT -5
Reply #163 ... grizzly kills an adult bison with a paw strike. What a great way to start off my morning. Thanks Grizzly Adams.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 2, 2020 4:17:59 GMT -5
Welcome
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Post by brobear on Mar 9, 2020 6:31:54 GMT -5
All big cat fan-boys and most big cat enthusiasts claim that the devastating paw-strike of a bear is basically science fiction / mythology. Even some of our local bear enthusiasts refuse to accept the words of a large number of bear experts including American pioneers, hunters, animal trainers, park rangers, and biologists. You can begin with the first post on page #1 of this topic. Throughout this entire Domain can be discovered examples. When you watch bear vs bear videos, watch for the paw-stikes. You will see them in most - not all. Here are some facts: 1- a big boar grizzly can swat a truck and leave a dent. ( want to try that with your fist )? 2- the grizzly's paw is designed to absorb the impact leaving the bear unharmed. 3- the grizzly's upper-body including neck and skull are designed to withstand a powerful blow. 4- the grizzly has herculean upper-body strength. He can excavate a hole in near-concrete-hard earth, riddled with rocks and tough roots, big enough/deep enough to bury a cow in a matter of minutes. 5- those same arms and paws backed by immense upper-body strength can deliver a powerful paw-strike. *I have mentioned several times, I have doubts that a bear ever intentionally kills with a paw-strike. Why do I think this? Because a paw-strike would rarely if ever kill another grizzly. But, I believe that the bear does indeed sometimes kill his prey or adversary with the swipe of a powerful arm. It's like if you are in a fight and you hit your opponent and knock him out and you're thinking to yourself... "how did that happen?" *Edit and add: a paw-strike that will put a dent in a truck will break some bones.
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Post by King Kodiak on May 17, 2020 23:46:05 GMT -5
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Post by brobear on May 18, 2020 3:23:04 GMT -5
Interesting. I have seen two videos over the years of eagles chasing a grizzly. Once by a bald eagle and once by a golden eagle. Nice to see that the bear / eagle relationship isn't all one-way. This is good evidence of the bear's paw-swipe ability.
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Post by OldGreenGrolar on May 18, 2020 3:54:11 GMT -5
The juvenile bald eagle was the one that ventured too close. It once again shows that juvenile animals are more reckless than mature adults.
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Post by brobear on May 20, 2020 6:52:47 GMT -5
I don't suppose that the paw-strike of a brown bear has ever been calculated by scientists. But it should be.
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Post by King Kodiak on Oct 11, 2020 17:13:37 GMT -5
"It would be fitting, i think, if among the last manmade tracks on earth could be found the huge footprints of the great brown bear" (Earl Fleming, 1958)
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Post by brobear on Oct 27, 2020 15:50:53 GMT -5
Big Paws with Big Claws.
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Post by brobear on Oct 27, 2020 15:54:04 GMT -5
The Little Sun Bear.
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Post by brobear on Oct 27, 2020 15:55:53 GMT -5
Dead Bear?
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Post by brobear on Oct 27, 2020 16:05:47 GMT -5
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Post by brobear on Oct 27, 2020 16:08:16 GMT -5
and one more:
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Post by OldGreenGrolar on Oct 27, 2020 18:33:10 GMT -5
Reply 64. The sun bear is actually holding on to the man’s hand to support itself.
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