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Post by King Kodiak on May 23, 2020 0:28:35 GMT -5
DHOLES ARE SOME DANGEROUS ANIMALS
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Post by brobear on May 23, 2020 2:45:26 GMT -5
Wild Dogs from around the world:
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Post by OldGreenGrolar on May 23, 2020 18:30:29 GMT -5
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Post by King Kodiak on May 24, 2020 10:17:08 GMT -5
LONE MALE LION ATTACKS BABY BUFFALO BY AMBUSH
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Post by brobear on May 25, 2020 3:57:44 GMT -5
The athletic bobcat:
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Post by OldGreenGrolar on Jun 3, 2020 18:52:16 GMT -5
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Post by King Kodiak on Jun 4, 2020 4:45:06 GMT -5
Reply #25, that is a pretty nice video, shows how bold and tough single lions or lioness in this case can be. The lioness finally failed and ended up running away right? At least thats what i saw.
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Post by brobear on Jun 4, 2020 5:15:18 GMT -5
The elephant is a sub-adult; and barely that ( IMO ). A pride of lions would have killed it. The single lioness tried her best and failed.
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Post by OldGreenGrolar on Jun 4, 2020 6:06:19 GMT -5
The lioness did well but eventually she had to flee as the sun adult elephant is just too strong.
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Post by King Kodiak on Jun 4, 2020 10:14:45 GMT -5
The lioness did well but eventually she had to flee as the sun adult elephant is just too strong. Yeah, she did well. Very brave in attacking alone. There are no videos of tigers attacking elephants the same way.
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Post by tom on Jun 5, 2020 10:40:43 GMT -5
This is kind of long (20 minutes) but I could not stop watching it. Brutal fight between two male Tigers in a place in Africa of all places called "Tiger canyons" A private game reserve in south africa. Toward the end you see some rather bizarre behavior of of a Male Tiger who has obviously killed another male but continues to ravage the body.
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Post by brobear on Jun 5, 2020 12:41:33 GMT -5
At the risk of stirring-up a killer hornet's nest; it would be interesting to witness a male Asiatic lion wondering into a bold male Bengal tiger's domain in India. Meanwhile, I hope that African lions do not discover this place. Numbers being my reasoning.
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Post by tom on Jun 5, 2020 13:24:34 GMT -5
Yeah I I wondered about that myself. How would they keep Lions from entering?
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Post by tom on Jun 5, 2020 13:26:52 GMT -5
At the risk of stirring-up a killer hornet's nest; it would be interesting to witness a male Asiatic lion wondering into a bold male Bengal tiger's domain in India. Meanwhile, I hope that African lions do not discover this place. Numbers being my reasoning. So what did you make of the end where the Tiger keeps ravaging the dead body?
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Post by King Kodiak on Jun 5, 2020 14:20:27 GMT -5
Reply #30, what would i pay to see a fight like that between a bear and a tiger so well filmed and so close. What a dream.
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Post by tom on Jun 5, 2020 16:15:13 GMT -5
Kodiak what do you make of the ending of the video? I mean what bizarre behavior to keep ravaging the dead body of the Tiger you just killed?
To interject, the dead tiger attacked and killed the cubs of the this Male Tiger and had initially attacked the cubs mother. Revenge...? or is that giving too many human qualities. Not shown in the video but at one point Tiger boy (dead tiger) had the death grip on this male but he got loose and eventually spelled the end to Tiger boy.
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Post by King Kodiak on Jun 5, 2020 16:43:38 GMT -5
Well, those two tigers had a long history of rivalry for the territory, Tiger boy killed those 3 cubs belonging to the victorious tiger. Tigers are very territorial. Also, yes, the ravaging of the body was pure revenge as tigers are known to take revenge for whoever does wrong to them. A great example is John Vaillant's book where he tells the story of a Siberian tiger that was wounded by a poacher, then the tiger followed him to his hut, waited for him and killed him in revenge.
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Post by brobear on Jun 6, 2020 4:45:15 GMT -5
I agree with King Kodiak's assessment. Tigers seem to take things personally. I have known other animals to deliver revenge as well.
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Post by King Kodiak on Jun 8, 2020 9:57:21 GMT -5
PUMA AND BLACK BEAR SHARING A KILL
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Post by brobear on Jun 8, 2020 10:11:12 GMT -5
Here is another where I recognize the voice of the narrator; I believe for Disney nature films. ( 1950s and early 1960s ). Probably - not completely sure - but I would wager these two animals are the best of well-fed friends.
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