#180 yo soy más rapido
#175 Se puede saber por que lanzan a un pitbull contra un tigre?Por que al final del video hasta se sorprenden de que el tigre se lo cargue lol.
Pobre perro.
La putada de estos videos es que luego me empiezan a salir videos de leopardos o tigres matando perros en la India joder.
En estos casos lo mejor es ofrecer un cigarro y preguntarles si, como gitanos, son negros solo en verano o durante todo el año
#171 yo he estado al lado de avestruces y ñandúes e impresionan mucho al principio por el tamaño, pero realmente en un combate a muerte contra un ser humano, poco tienen que hacer (la avestruz por el tamaño igual sería más chungo). Solo tienes que agarrarle el cuello por donde sea y hasta luego, se lo puedes partir con mucha facilidad. En un parque natural del pueblo donde vivía los dejaban sueltos, se acercaban a ti cuando comías y a veces podías medio tocarlos. Realmente son pollos grandes xD
A mi me acojonaria mucho más un oso, corren mucho más que tú, pueden trepar y tienen muchísima fuerza. Como te cruces con uno ya puedes rezar para que no esté cabreado ni hambriento xD.
Digo oso por poner el ejemplo de algo que te puedes cruzar xD.
From Pantheras Puma Project:
Dramatic headlines like "Mountain Lion Stalks Man" and this person's own video title "Cougar Attack in Utah Mountain Lion Stalks Me For Six Minutes" can be very misleading. This was obviously an intense and scary encounter, and we would have been pretty terrified by such an interaction (to say the least).
However, context is important. If you watch the video, you can see at least two "cubs" or "kittens" before momma comes towards the runner. This is a case of a mother doing what most mothers do: defending her young. She was trying to get the man to leave the area.
Stalking behavior is very different; if the man were seen as prey, the lion would probably have stayed stealthily out of sight and directly attacked, likely leading to a much different outcome.
Dramatic headlines do nothing to help us coexist with our human neighbors. As our friend Beth Pratt, mountain lion advocate and Regional Executive Director at the @National Wildlife Federation in California says: "We should have a healthy respect for mountain lions, but not demonize them- they are not waiting in the woods ready to pounce on us at any moment. For the most part, they want to avoid us."
Anytime we enter habitat shared with large predators it's important to know what they mean by their actions. Overt, but more often subtle ways of communicating telegraph their intent and consequently, how we should reciprocate with our behavior. The very fact that we don't see the grizzly bear that is in our neighborhood right now, or never find the lion's kill near our normal walking routes until well after it's left, is by design.
These creatures and so many others are profoundly scared of US. WE are most threatening species on earth and every top carnivore shies from our company whether we are playing the role of the hunter or not.”