Lol you're full of shit. Keep seeing what you wanna see.
@gregherd6936Сағат бұрын
I saw Bigfoot eating one and then an alien took my camera and blurred the image...honest truth
@harrysoothsayer50862 сағат бұрын
This is a tassie tiger
@Wombokson3 сағат бұрын
Thylacine are not pack animals
@azboomstickco40783 сағат бұрын
As an optimistic skeptic I gotta say this is impressive footage. I have also noticed that there are a lot of sightings that look like 'foxes with an injury'. It the fox that susceptible to this exact type of injury that causes this exact type of gate.
@CarltonCasey4 сағат бұрын
Looks like a Tiger Quoll with elongated legs. It's either very small, or them Roo,'s are as big as Shaq!
@davekirby82285 сағат бұрын
It could be a large Quoll . They have long tails and move around like a thylacine and are the same breed thats why the Kangaroos aren’t sweating it.
@manolodlospavos5 сағат бұрын
just another kranky fox video . wanna see real thylacines?¿ clone em. end of story
@Revelationscreation6 сағат бұрын
The structure of the hind leg on its own proves that’s this creature is a fox… you have deliberately ignored potential errors you have made such as the fact that Thermal imaging cameras can produce errors especially on creatures with bushy features. You have also used biased interpretations to try and justify your thoughts… you believe the animal is touching the ground with its injured foot when imo I do not believe you could say either way with such low quality footage. Why are we making the thylacine the new big foot… I don’t understand a persons need to try and deny the facts. All Thylacine bones found in mainland Australia date back to before western settlers ever got to Australia… they date back almost as far back as when the aboriginals first introduced the feral dogs that would eventually be called dingos. 🤦
@lisasutherland-fraser44796 сағат бұрын
Foxes seem lighter on their feet. Thylacines with more muscle are heavier to me. This is either a mangy fox or a dog. The ears are obviously non fox. It’s a question for sure. The head does look different. Love your lack of bias.
@lisasutherland-fraser44796 сағат бұрын
Foxes everywhere. Just love your videos thank you.
@Trey4Liberty6 сағат бұрын
The TRUTH was on your side! Good Job and my hat is off to you!
@secotioid7 сағат бұрын
They should do some environmental DNA testing in the area.
@MseeBMe7 сағат бұрын
Yeah, that’s a fox for me.
@ambiguousworld6 сағат бұрын
@MseeBMe Absolutely a fox (not a mangy one) with a nice big brush of a tail. Even with the Inifray T2 256x192 resolution you can pick out the brushy tail. Stupid fox chasing roos, hopefully the screams at the end was mum kicking it's arse.
@MseeBMe6 сағат бұрын
@@ambiguousworld lol I was thinking the same, I live over in East Warburton and I’ve lost count of how many chickens and ducks I’ve lost to foxes over the years.
@Poordumbbassturd7 сағат бұрын
Favoring a hurt hins leg, looks like
@emilflognoid15329 сағат бұрын
Live cage! Capture it alive!
@dorsetbigcats62929 сағат бұрын
Clearly yet another mangey fox video.
@glenn_foley9 сағат бұрын
Saw a dude native to the bush comment that he's never seen kangaroos react to a fox like that. I was noticing the same thing, only reason they would react like that is if they sensed a real threat ..... the parents of the juvenile which were probably somewhere very local. We should never underestimate nature, these animals could sense things we might never be able to understand. In the short time we have lived thinking they were gone, they could have developed new instinctual habits to help keep them undetected. For example, they could maybe have some sort of sensors in their brain/head area that picks up radiation coming from anything running off of electricity.
@thominaduncanson75969 сағат бұрын
Have never understood why people take the pronouncements of scientists who do not step foot outside of university labs as valid. The scientists proclaimed that the coelacanth fish had been extinct for millions of years...but the coelacanth did not get the memo, apparently. December 23, 1938 a local fisherman discovered the coelacanth fish anong the netted catch of his boat, just off the east coast of South Africa where the Chalumna River is located. (The name of the fisherman who caught the Latimeria chalumnae coelacanth is unimportant in scientific circles.) Another coelacanth species, Latimeria menadoensis, was caught by a local fisherman off the coast of Menado in North Sulawesi, Indonesia in July 1998...scientists do not note his name, either. You would think that with the amount of eggs on scientists faces after the coelacanth debacle, that making proclamations about ANY species being extinct would be anathema to them--but they never learn. 🙄
@زنكي9 сағат бұрын
إن شاء الله أنه ليس منقرضا.
@bicyclingbum155110 сағат бұрын
I'm not even joking Ive seen one in the watagans mountains, in the northern end , it was just after sunset and I was riding my bicycle, quietly along the road, then the thylacine ran out in front of me along the road for about 10 metres , as I thought wtf is that and tried to pull out my phone to film in darted off the road into the scrub on the left.
@hypersonicmonkeybrains341810 сағат бұрын
i can see the stripes on it's tail.
@348Tobico10 сағат бұрын
It seems to be holding it's left rear leg off the ground, hopping 3 legged. DEFINETLY A STIFF LEG.As a non Australian I notice there is an overwhelming culture of criticism of people who see some wildlife that the loud majority have not seen. Rather like schoolyard or beer joint bullies threatening to pound the daylights out of anyone, male or female, who disagrees with the simplest most ignorant uninformed position on anything the bullies believe in. Why do you care what THYLACINE DENIERS THINK? There will be deniers until it is proven they exist in this area. Bigger question is why in the world is this "Gondwana forest" not a protected area by both the government and the U.N. AND IF THEY WILL NOT WHY NOT.
@Epanteriasamplexus10 сағат бұрын
That’s a rat halfwits 😂😂
@WelshAmethystGirl08710 сағат бұрын
@forestgalante
@GriffinNestVideos11 сағат бұрын
it is possible that this could just be a dingo :(
@wesleywatson795412 сағат бұрын
thank you for all your hard work, your appreciation is in Tucson AZ
@annkettlestring964112 сағат бұрын
Just leave the animal alone.
@manolodlospavos12 сағат бұрын
Fake nothing more.wanna see thylacine,clone em
@scottzema310313 сағат бұрын
Wow
@MseeBMe13 сағат бұрын
This is awesome! I LIVE in the Yarra Ranges!
@ambiguousworld10 сағат бұрын
you should watch my latest video!
@waterlover13 сағат бұрын
Those ain’t recent fotos , why fake shit people. Let’s be real we would love to see them still alive but mankind kills everything why do you believe they would still be alive !
@F2007KR14 сағат бұрын
I’ve never seen a dog run like that. Not even with an injury. It hops like a kangaroo but with the front legs keeping more contact to the ground.
@SensiProductionzBlindDogVideos14 сағат бұрын
I was thinking it looks like a fox with mange.
@davidhickman64714 сағат бұрын
You need to do a lot more research if you think they haven't been seen in 2000 years, 1936 is less than 100 years ago. Just a lying scam for clickbait.
@SimonSez-g15 сағат бұрын
PROTECT THEM!!!!
@vladimirputindreadlockrast772515 сағат бұрын
Hmmm. Does look like one. Does the thylacine have a raccoon-like band around its eyes? And I wonder why we can't make out stripes on its back, when we can see details of the kangaroo fur? It sure does look like one, though.
@michaeldriskell203815 сағат бұрын
It's good news. Hopefully the government there will do everything to protect them. It would be cool to see one, say in a zoo, but within a fitting enclosure like is done for lions etc.
@greghelton466815 сағат бұрын
Looks photoshopped.
@wadafuttshowprolem799815 сағат бұрын
It’s a “Hoth Possum” running between Taun Tauns examining their feces for undigested Chinooba Beans ! But seriously..... You filmed one They’re still here Hope there’s a lot more !
@stephenkennedy968715 сағат бұрын
WOW!!! GREAT footage!! You deserve some sort of recognition for this
@markmoreno729515 сағат бұрын
I should ask a question since I know nothing about this creature. If they are still about on the mainland, my inclination would be to make sure they grow in numbers enough so that a few breeding pairs could be translocated to Tazmania. However this would be a mistake if the Tazmanian version was different since we are not 100% sure it is actually gone. So are the two types different or the same?
@longlowdog16 сағат бұрын
Just remember folks it is not in the Aussie governments interests for the Thylacine to exist. Too much money tied up in forestry and mining leases and licences for them to stop work or enforce nature audits carried out by independent groups for them to accept they still live. Too much dependence on aerial poison baiting for ferals. It will take a concerted effort to make any government of any colour to do more than pay lip service to research into these animals.