Moondog55 wrote:We should get out own back on the American wildlife by training kangaroos to disembowel American tourists more often
neilmny wrote:Moondog55 wrote:We should get out own back on the American wildlife by training kangaroos to disembowel American tourists more often
They don't need any training MD just for someone to get too close and annoying.
Moondog55 wrote:Resurrect the Drop Bears If we can do it for mammoths and T-Rexs we can do it for Thyloarctis plummetus)
Hallu wrote:I guess there's also the fact that in Yellowstone they've been living alongside people for more than a century. Yellowstone sees millions of people each year entering its borders. In Norway, the musk oxen have been taken from Greenland and are not used to people, with probably thousands of visitors a year instead of millions. If you go nearer than 100 m they stop, check you out, and if you get closer they charge. Their defense is charging. For bisons if I'm not mistaken it's protecting their young inside a circle so maybe they stay in the circle and don't charge outside of it. You were lucky to see yellowstone. You say you did only short hikes, was it because long day hikes are rare ? That's what I noticed during my 3 weeks in the South West : parks have short and medium hikes (4 hours max) but almost no great day walks (6-8 hours), even though there are backcountry walks (several days). They make things a bit TOO accessible at times. Would you say Yellowstone fall in that category as well ?
johnw wrote:at a safe distance of about 90 metres
north-north-west wrote:The really amazing thing is that someone dumb enough to get that close to a bison managed to reach the age of 62.
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