"A thylacene, give me the camera!" "The good one?" "No the one I shot Bigfoot with."
@spencer54383 ай бұрын
How good would ur photo skills be if u randomly stumbled into something like that. U wouldn’t know what to even do in the moment
@paulpetersen65393 ай бұрын
Hopping like'a Fox, Hopping like a Fox.
@ToddDolce3 ай бұрын
@@spencer5438 That particular one wasn't random. It was a camera (albeit a cheap one) that was set up for capture and due to the poor quality,...also set up for failure.
@spencer54383 ай бұрын
@@ToddDolce yes cause when u leave a trail cam u can control where its looking and zoom in on where it sees? Use ur brain.
@micktaylorwolfcreekmechanical3 ай бұрын
I have tried to catch the local crackheads fighting and stealing with my phone, I would say these vids are similar quality to the bigfoot ufo and tassie tiger vids. not good enough to see there faces and not the best quality.
@robinhazell6019Ай бұрын
I've seen interviews with lots of Thylacine fans in both Tasmania and Australia. The important point was that they kept the exact locations secret so that they are left alone. Western Australia which is a huge state and low human population density was mentioned more than any other state.
@IndebtedPleb3 ай бұрын
Forrest ! Why didn't you include the new thylacine sighting, its up on KZbin. One of the most convincing videos of a supposed Thylacine yet. Only a few days old, Surprised you didn't include it. It has gone viral already. Edit: on ambigious worlds channel
@redbumblebee49513 ай бұрын
Would assume this video was filmed over a week ago
@lobsters121113 ай бұрын
Probably had already recorded this
@paulprince30143 ай бұрын
Wer can I find it?
@SunsetHoney6153 ай бұрын
The flir footage makes it difficult to know what you are seeing, but pretty sure it’s a small fox.
@EinfachLuap3 ай бұрын
@@SunsetHoney615I don't know much about thylacines but what I know is that that wasn't a fox, even in that footage the tail looked vastly different.
@NYCShaolin7183 ай бұрын
I was in a thylacine fanatic when I was a child from a book in the library, but I’m 31 now and Forrest my guy got me scratching my neck again when he makes a video on one ❤😅
@jackjohnson6913 ай бұрын
Love your username. SUUUU 👐
@martinharris50173 ай бұрын
11:38 i think her saying this "Thylacine" was hanging out with foxes says that it's a fox with mange. So I agree on that one for sure.
@tz38413 ай бұрын
What's worst is that somebody might have trapped the poor thing just to shave it's tail to have a viral "Thylacine" video...
@rikhuravidanskerАй бұрын
Since she saw the fox was different from the creature, I would think it is a different species; It looks like a tree wallaby, but foxes eat them, so I think it is a Jack Russel terrier.
@RobbieK817Ай бұрын
Looks like a dingo to me
@rikhuravidanskerАй бұрын
@RobbieK817 Jack Russell terriers (I apologize for my typo above), look like thylacines and fill their ecological role.
@ruby26920Ай бұрын
@@rikhuravidanskerare you sure jack russel terrier is the correct dog you’re thinking of? from my understanding of dog breeds and at least where i’m from they’re a small domestic breed of dog only about 20cm tall and 5-6kg with much different features and builds from a tassie tiger. also extremely energetic/lively dogs that move much differently from that.
@EmanuelBarreto3 ай бұрын
Great videos as usual Forrest!, keep going with this great analisis of sightings!
@AviationFreekStudios3 ай бұрын
There is a video from 2020 of a Thylacine in a car park in Tasmania at (Night) and was some very convincing footage. BTW I am Australian living in Victoria and my favourite animal, yep you guessed it, a Thylacine :D
@hazelault23233 ай бұрын
What is the name of the video
@sinbadyrahman9993 ай бұрын
details of the video please or a link
@Shrekskild3 ай бұрын
I think the reason that the extinct animal videos usually look like they were shot on a dead mosquito with it's eyes plucked out is because is usually not the big wildlife researchers who have the "sightings" it's usually random people who don't have great cameras
@spaceghost89953 ай бұрын
EVERYBODY has great cameras nowadays. 😂
@RRKS_official3 ай бұрын
Brother forrest please do your own expedition its very interesting to see and also very fun!
@lffit3 ай бұрын
I am a Tasmanian and thought I saw one in the early seventies late one night on the side of the road going further South eating something, on top of the tree lined hill leading down to the town of Eagle Hawk Neck, where there were no home nearby, it looked at a beige dog with stripes on its back, I had no idea we had fox in the state, but it was a larger animal !
@davida.49333 ай бұрын
I interviewed a wildlife park owner who saw one near Eagle Hawk Neck, also in the seventies...and she should know her wildlife....
@taleandclawrock26063 ай бұрын
Awesome! Thankyou for sharing!
@rikhuravidanskerАй бұрын
Fox can grow up to six feet (which could mean nearly six feet one inch), and I think you could have seen a Jack Russell terrier or a Maine Coon (Main Coons can grow up to six feet long, which again could mean nearly six feet one inch).
@rikhuravidanskerАй бұрын
@@davida.4933 She would not be experienced with Jack Russell terriers or Maine Coons.
@GrandpaVader-rk6zw3 ай бұрын
hi forest!!! i love you from australia
@bitumenroad46482 ай бұрын
The day a thylacine is declared not extinct is the day i will have a small celebration for Forrest I've been listening him yapping about it for years and he actually had my hopes up 😂😂
@AFloridaSon3 ай бұрын
If a fox can be mistaken for a thylacine, then it makes sense that a thylacine could be mistaken as a fox. At least under certain circumstances.
@yvettarosetta3 ай бұрын
no one has actually seen a thylacine, though
@AFloridaSon3 ай бұрын
@@yvettarosetta Prove it.
@yvettarosetta3 ай бұрын
@@AFloridaSon did you not watch the video?
@AFloridaSon3 ай бұрын
@@yvettarosetta I did, and it did not prove that no one has seen a thylacine.
@yvettarosetta3 ай бұрын
@@AFloridaSon it also didn't prove that anyone has seen one
@motorhead20033 ай бұрын
The right front leg is injured on this animal. Thanks Forrest for pointing this out. I had posted and then he verified it.
@JamesG-zh4ri3 ай бұрын
I absolutely love Forrest Thylacine videos! That last one was so cool.
@williambuchanan773 ай бұрын
The problem is the most common types of cameras used when out&about aren't designed for the distances needed for such sightings, it@ the exact same with UFO sightings. You'd need to carry round a really expensive camera just in case. Mobile cameras are improving but currently are only good at medium range at best.
@alzar113 ай бұрын
I live a suburb over from Belair in SA. It would be a ridiculous idea to think there are thylacine here. 1. Tons of foxes, 2. Lots of people... I think there would be a lot more evidence caught on camera if thylacine were living there.
@rikhuravidanskerАй бұрын
I would think there are also plenty of Jack Russell terriers and large tabby cats.
@HellYesLetsDoItNow3 ай бұрын
They are in the Tarkine in Northwest Tassie, the most remote place in Tasmania. They can easily elude humans there because there are very few people there. I drove for six hours there on the only road which is dirt and saw three other cars.
@recoup_Ай бұрын
I’m glad Jeff white is here to reveal the truth to the scientists
@rikhuravidanskerАй бұрын
The Tarkine?
@MickAllen-n5wАй бұрын
Hmm the smell of bovine faeces is strong...
@libertariansasquatch3 ай бұрын
Idk, the first time I ever saw a mountain lion, it was drinking out of my pool, and I live in a neighborhood, there are woods near by, but not some remote area.
@PaymentsBC3 ай бұрын
Cougar was in my buddies yard one morning right above the school just before school started around 8 am school starts at 845 they had to call the school notify them aswell as conservation officers they cancelled school they were already kids showing up and playing 😅
@AKbaby893 ай бұрын
We get cougars all the time in my neighborhood. Theres currently a momma and her new cub that my neighbor 2 doors down always sees. So I'm SUPER vigilant about my dog being with me while outside.
@MartinRodriguez-gu3nj3 ай бұрын
Wear do you live what state @@AKbaby89
@MartinRodriguez-gu3nj3 ай бұрын
@@AKbaby89I'm guessing the north they live in Texas to
@AllyGray3 ай бұрын
@@PaymentsBCyikes! What part of the country was this?
@Burnoir6 күн бұрын
Bringing it back. Just need the T-shirt!
@edwardfletcher77903 ай бұрын
The sound the Woman makes is a "CooEee", a common distance call used by Farmers and people in Rural Australia....
@Paleo_Curious3 ай бұрын
It's also used in South India tho
@edwardfletcher77903 ай бұрын
@@Paleo_Curious Interesting, I didn't know that.,..
@TheHeartThief3 ай бұрын
I used to live on five acres and my neighbour on ten and that is how we used to communicate to each other.
@N3gativeR3FLUX3 ай бұрын
For the curious, it can have many different meanings depending on context but generally means either "here I am", "hello" or "come here" and is used as it's easily heard over long distances. To do it properly try cupping your hands around your mouth to help project it further and say Coo-ee (the ee is a short, sharp, high pitched sound.)
@davidv.31353 ай бұрын
I hope there are some still out there.
@rikhuravidanskerАй бұрын
The International Conservation Society of Australia says it is "possibly extinct:" since the IUCN says an animal is extinct after 60 years, this indicates the ICSA thinks it is extinct after 99 years. Since straggler thylacines are believed to have survived for several years after 1937, and I would think the maximum likely lifespan in the wild would be before a thylacine's 31st birthday, I would think the ICSA will declare it extinct in 2066.
@BackroomsBoi23 күн бұрын
@@rikhuravidansker A lot of people think and say there evidence of them serving well into the 80's.
@rikhuravidansker23 күн бұрын
@@BackroomsBoi I would think those are Jack Russell terriers.
@DragonbornT4E22 күн бұрын
@@rikhuravidanskerprove it
@BigRedsCrib3 ай бұрын
I saw a presentation at the National Museum of Australia that stated some Dingo bones have been dated back 3,000 years. Although they actually believe the Dingo arrived 10,000 to 12,000 years ago during the last ice age.
@kidslovesatan343 ай бұрын
There's no archaeological evidence for 10 to 12000 years ago. We can only confirm with physical evidence and that's why 3000 years ago is the figure that is supported.
@rikhuravidanskerАй бұрын
It is disputed when they arrived, which I think indicates it took thousands of years for them to diverge from New Guinean singing dogs: thus the divergence started in 10,000 BCE and ended in 2000 BCE, with dogs going feral all those thousands of years.
@MickAllen-n5wАй бұрын
No they know when dingo arrived...
@Demonic_Reacts2 ай бұрын
That last one is convincing AF!!!! Hope there is some out there even if that footage is very old!
@Mistytheangel3 ай бұрын
The thylacine was killed b/c humans thought that they will kill their livestock They added foxes to Australia: 3:36
@Reuben-ey5di3 ай бұрын
Your in these comments questioning human intelligence 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😭
@Reuben-ey5di3 ай бұрын
Foxes are too Small too kill livestock and people are stupid
@iggytull6243 ай бұрын
@@Reuben-ey5di Well white men consider themselves the smartest people to walk the Earth.
@paulconnelly6402 ай бұрын
TBF Foxes were not introduced to Tasmania.
@phillip94682 ай бұрын
There were 10 different types of Thylacine, 1 in Tasmania & 9 on the mainland. As he said only a small number remained in South Australia & were last seen in 1850. Whether they like it or not the Aboriginal people were responsible for the almost total disappearance of the Thylacine on the mainland before Europeans arrived.
@incineroar99333 ай бұрын
It could also just be a brindle dog? You don't have to paint a dog to get a striped dog, the brindle pattern can give some dogs that coat pattern. My dog is a pit mix and he used to be golden-orangey-brown with heavy black stripes before he got old and gray.
@rikhuravidanskerАй бұрын
Thank you: I would think it is a Jack Russell terrier.
@mattymul293 ай бұрын
Looking at the bin in the 2nd video. That is the Mitcham Council logo. Belair national park is within the council limits so there is every chance while this video is “Adelaide” that it was closer to the national park and scrub areas which are common in the mitcham area
@KickinDBL3 ай бұрын
Hey forest, my teacher said he was good friends with you. His name is Isaac Russel and he’s a science teacher.
@MeanBeanComedy3 ай бұрын
That's so cool! 😁👍🏻
@beandipnchips45023 ай бұрын
Good friends = asked to borrow a pen.
@rikhuravidanskerАй бұрын
Isaac Russel?
@KickinDBLАй бұрын
@@rikhuravidansker yeah
@rikhuravidanskerАй бұрын
@@KickinDBL I don't get the reference.
@Villy-dv5yn3 ай бұрын
colossal biosciences is basically Sir Benjamin Lockwood and John Hammond and jurassic parks scientist undercover lol
@Jujbbyigs87663 ай бұрын
We live in Tasmania Claude road towards cradle mountain. We have a farm stay/b&b called River stone Lodge. If you ever need a base to camp on here, you are very welcome here.
@iletyouwin5613 ай бұрын
Forrest, you really need to watch the video that came out 4 days ago. 100% a thylacine on flir video. I have no doubt, the way it runs and the tail shows clearly what it is. If you REALLY care about the thylacine youll watch the video
@ryan1H3Lion3 ай бұрын
AND THE FOOTAGE QUALITY IS TOP Tier
@Dondernemer3 ай бұрын
You mean this one right? great footage indeed kzbin.info/www/bejne/bHfdqYZ4msuIbNk
@huntershirley28593 ай бұрын
Definitely need his reaction! best quality without a doubt!
@cjvastro.3 ай бұрын
Is it by ambiguous world?
@huntershirley28593 ай бұрын
@cjvastro. yeah that's the one
@ConnorwithanO2 ай бұрын
Unlike the animals in all the other sightings, the animal in the Doyle footage appears to have the correct limb proportions for a thylacine. Roughly equal length, stocky legs with relatively short back feet. All of the others seem to have the limb proportions of a typical feral dog or fox. Slender, unequal length legs, with longer back legs and longer feet. It's also the only footage that depicts the animal clearly running unhampered on all four limbs. What's interesting is that its spine appears to remain straight as it runs rather than undulating, resulting in its body rocking back and forth. Thus, it's using its stiff tail as a pendulum to compensate.
@rikhuravidanskerАй бұрын
It was a large tabby cat.
@shanewoolsey9403 ай бұрын
Do they raise pigs in Tasmania? I live in live stock country in Alberta Canada. 20:41 with the two red arrows. To me, though it's blurry looks like a young boar. Crusted in mud up to its chin. possible round snout and signs of first tusks on either side. Big rump and small legs for its body mass. When distracted moved extremely fast and jumped up an incline, unlike a fox. A fox is focused and would not pay any attention to a sound that it doesn't recognize as a threat. There is a pig farm in Tasmania missing a young breeder.
@jackjohnson6913 ай бұрын
Yeah they raise pigs in Tassie. I don't think they have many feral pigs compared to other parts of Australia
@sugarnads3 ай бұрын
We have wild pigs.
@moatguy4471Ай бұрын
13:55 Too right mate! Even I knew that from the beginning! 😀
@krisrathbone41423 ай бұрын
Been waiting fpr this hopefully it has the thermal shots I've seen going around
@MD.orion13 ай бұрын
This guys ego will not let him do anything else but ridicule everyone's footage.
@arthurdent68283 ай бұрын
Fox footage
@GandhiIsgae3 ай бұрын
@@MD.orion1that's literally not the case tho he's just proving why those footages are of not thylacines or what u want him to just blindly say that it's a thylacine without checking out the details and give false hope to people?
@Elementk-u9u21 күн бұрын
We have some incredibly dense bush in Tasmania and it is possible there are thylacines wandering around, out of sight, in the areas people rarely venture.
@mccarthy863 ай бұрын
Did you see the video from the Gondwana Rainforest? It's a thermal camera that has a possible thylacine running past some kangaroos. Posted 6 days ago
Man, that last one from 1973, the 'Doyle footage '(O'Doyle Rules!!😆) I think is a Thylacine.
@MakuluRihihi3 ай бұрын
I go to Belair national park a lot I could see it having a thylacine roaming around the forest
@rohantherockwiththerocketh78713 ай бұрын
I am very interested in showing you the various locations that thylacine are supposed to be in within Tasmania!
@easydoesit833 ай бұрын
Forrest there is a new video filmed by a guy with a channel called ambiguous world on utube it’s at night time but well worth a look. Also cool tshirt 👍🏻
@devonmartinbasson3 ай бұрын
just came to say this.
@neonice3 ай бұрын
The animal in his video is a spotted-tailed quoll (Dasyurus maculatus), also known as the Tiger quoll. They are the largest quoll species and do adapt this stiff gait when running across open field. If you look up some videos you can see them do it.
@arthurdent68283 ай бұрын
@@neoniceLooks nothing like a quoll. What are you smoking?
@leesenger30943 ай бұрын
“ambiguous world” has a new(11days ago) incredible sighting video up! Pretty insightful
@xander17563 ай бұрын
Interesting to see you so excited about Tassie Tigers. Moved here just over a decade ago, and it's reasonably common knowledge in rural areas that they exist...still rarely seen compared to other wildlife, but seen often enough, thus no excessive hand and arm movements when discussing them. I theorise the information about how deadly humans are, has been genetically passed on to each generation, thus they keep well away from human locations...most wildlife in tassie, of those I've experienced on my various nature excursions in the NE region, are very wary of humans.
@arthurdent68283 ай бұрын
Yeah but they believe all sorts of garbage. I can tell you right now if they exist its in a few areas of vic that maybe half a dozen people have visited in the past 50 years. They are not in any inhabited areas.
@Dasman56243 ай бұрын
What a load of bullshit mate!
@xander17563 ай бұрын
@@Dasman5624 Freedom of personal individual expression still exists on earth, though it continues to be systematically attacked by the 1% parasites.
@xander17563 ай бұрын
@@Dasman5624 What, even that I moved here over a decade ago?
@Dasman56243 ай бұрын
@@xander1756 lol that bit i believe.
@bushcast7993 ай бұрын
Cool vid! FYI the video of the animal behind the bins, Sighting 2, was shot in a suburb in the Adelaide foothills that is very bushy and the location is next to a creek and barely half a mile from a large national park. I just don't know any dog breeds with a tail that long?? John
@Reuben-ey5di3 ай бұрын
Where are the dead Tassie tigers. Can't have live ones without dead ones. No matter how much you want it
@katttttttpaigeАй бұрын
@@Reuben-ey5didecomposed
@KingTabss3 ай бұрын
I swear, besides Steve Irwin and his son, Forrest is the only one I see that lights up about animals. I feel the genuineness of his love with animals. Props! 🔥❤️
@stevoky3 ай бұрын
I believe the one in the backyard is the most compelling. Animal's change habits around humans, and the most unlikely place to get a video may be in a residential area,but it is the most likely place to get a quality video.
@davida.49333 ай бұрын
Good grief, it's a dog wearing a sort of jacket with fakey stripes.
@Reuben-ey5di3 ай бұрын
Nah if they were in back yards they bevspottedbdogs would've killed them. You can't hide in front of Cameras
@aaronwebb70903 ай бұрын
@@davida.4933 Nah they are talking about the one with the bins, not the clearly fake one.
@rikhuravidanskerАй бұрын
@@davida.4933 I think it is a large tabby cat.
@rikhuravidanskerАй бұрын
@@Reuben-ey5di The big dogs would have, not the medium-sized ones: however, pit bulls, bulldogs, and similar breeds would kill a thylacine, since they were bred to kill bulls despite their small size.
@h4ll4m1s3 ай бұрын
You have to see the Ambiguous World one and review that mate. Would be great to get our opinion on it.
@TigerWolfOz2 ай бұрын
100% Thylacine
@BradGryphonn3 ай бұрын
10:05 That's a fox with a lame front foot, using its tail to help counterbalance its body. Dogs do similar when favouring a sore paw/leg.
@Pearl.Is.Autistic.SU.9003 ай бұрын
That is correct, except dogs move differently than foxes.
@rikhuravidanskerАй бұрын
Since the woman had a fox for comparison, I think it is a Jack Russell terrier.
@dmitrybahrt92272 ай бұрын
I was on a volunteer trip in Costa Rica and I had the pleasure of seeing a ocelot walk across our campground while we’re eating dinner, we camped above the river we had white water raftdown the day before .
@TedSallisakaManThing3 ай бұрын
I don’t know how this is top 6 when first 4 are debunked… yes I wrote this after 4th video
@juanlui2843 ай бұрын
😂
@UnderworldWizard2 ай бұрын
Have you seen the mainland Thylacine posted by Ambiguous World? It appears to be an IR camera that filmed a Thylacine walking through a big group of roos.
@TigerWolfOz2 ай бұрын
Has stripes when you download the footage and use filters and it's meat and 2 veg are hanging out the back. 👍
@rikhuravidanskerАй бұрын
@@TigerWolfOz It was a Jack Russell terrier.
@MickAllen-n5wАй бұрын
Mangy fox...
@andrewstone43503 ай бұрын
DID ya see the latest one in amongst the roos?on night cam. Looks pretty legit. Myself , i'm all about those drop bears.
@argosz80463 ай бұрын
I've been educating visitors to Australia AND fellow Australians of the peculiarities and dangers of drop bears for years. Like virtually all Australian mammals, they are never casually seen, and are extremely adept at avoiding detection. As for proof thylacine are still a living species - I would be more inclined to believe a positive DNA result from a potential thylacine scat.
@arthurdent68283 ай бұрын
Not legit at all. Another fox video.
@DustinLaBombard3 ай бұрын
I remember seeing this very show on TV. The thylacine sightings let alone myth was the first episode the show concluded the thylacine was still in existence. I remember the episode very clearly.
@comeatmebro32293 ай бұрын
the second one looks more like a small Kangaroo on all fours, the way the back legs move together look very much how a kangaroo moves and the way the front of the body is lower then the rear of the body makes it look like a Roo aswell
@rikhuravidanskerАй бұрын
I was thinking it was a tree wallaby, but foxes eat tree wallabies. Therefore I think it was a Jack Russell terrier.
@jamesvalentine4597Ай бұрын
Nicks an ABSOLUTE legend ✌️👍
@BubbbaZ3 ай бұрын
yeah the west coast of tassie is the spot if you were to look for them, the bush is sooo thick there you cant see 10 feet in front of you
@ncb61583 ай бұрын
Yes, which makes it precisely the wrong habitat......
@troycassidy61773 ай бұрын
Southwest Tasmania, Gippsland Victoria and the Esk region of Northern New South Wales would be the best spots
@ncb61583 ай бұрын
@@troycassidy6177 A museum would be an even better spot.....
@arthurdent68283 ай бұрын
@@ncb6158Well the experts at Taronga think theres a few unchartered valleys around East Gippy that are the best candidate. Its a similar area. The forest changes at altitude. It wouldnt be so dense.
@ncb61583 ай бұрын
@@arthurdent6828 Probably would've been prime habitat then.....before dingos arrived and outcompeted them.
@BohemianButterfly113 ай бұрын
I have heard from podcasts and interviews with people looking for the Thylacine (my fave animal, too!) that when they put a bounty on them and essentially made them extinct, there were people who saved some and relocated them to the mainland, throughout Victoria and SA. So I personally would trust a mainland sighting more. I am pretty sure it was an episode on Believe podcast. I hope they are still out there.. they are so beautiful, and an important part of Australian fauna, let alone culture.. ❤
@arthurdent68283 ай бұрын
I spoke to a zoologist from Taronga zoo and was told that the concensus amongst experts is most likely if they exist there could be a small population that have evaded detection in a few unchartered valleys in East Gippy or south NSW. I'd have to agree. Its highly unlikely though.
@Mossbergg3 ай бұрын
Forrest have to react and dissect to the thylacine footage on Ambigious Worlds channel. Its very convincing but could be fake
@johnmead84373 ай бұрын
Not even good fakes. The disciples are demonstrating their own delusions & mob mentality
@andrewchalmers74223 ай бұрын
Not FAKE
@MD.orion13 ай бұрын
Forrest will ridicule every bit of evidence unless it comes from him.
@arthurdent68283 ай бұрын
@@andrewchalmers7422No, its definitely not fake. 100% real footage of an injured fox.
@Reuben-ey5di3 ай бұрын
It's fake there are no living tassie tigers. How do we now. No bones no dead tigers no live tigers
@themmamoshpit44842 ай бұрын
7:37 never seen a dog with a tail that long in my life. lol
@garethcrothersmx3 ай бұрын
Ambiguous world channel has more convincing sightings
@deathwolfgaming85173 ай бұрын
His show watch trust ambiguous world
@ncb61583 ай бұрын
No not really, just more foxes.....
@arthurdent68283 ай бұрын
@@ncb6158Yep, lots and lots of foxes.
@MickAllen-n5wАй бұрын
Has zero...
@stuartprescott79153 ай бұрын
Bro you have to reveiw the latest footage the one that came out last week 😊
@arthurdent68283 ай бұрын
Theres no point. Its a lame fox.
@gilvillamor50663 ай бұрын
Hey Forrest. there was just a new video that they manage to take a video on a thylacine in mainland
@haydenmossop57583 ай бұрын
@@gilvillamor5066 links
@arthurdent68283 ай бұрын
Thats 100% fox. Ambiguousworld is a tad lost.. He thinks everything could possibly be a thylacine..
@rikhuravidanskerАй бұрын
@@arthurdent6828 That is the case with all paranormal, cryptoscience, and UFO, videos uploaded.
@stevenmattson31642 ай бұрын
Is it possible the 4th video footage is actually a "Live" photo like on an iPhone? It's about the same length of video. And I'm glad you noted the 3rd guy was limping...
@HellYesLetsDoItNow3 ай бұрын
Thylacines exist - and hopefully humans won't ever catch one - like Mulder, I want to believe
@garymaidman6253 ай бұрын
Sure, thylacines existed. If they do currently exist, they are in New Guinea, they are not in Tasmania. They are also not on the mainland.
@rikhuravidanskerАй бұрын
Those are Jack Russell terriers, foxes, and large tabby cats.
@darrencorrigan85053 ай бұрын
Thanks, Forest.
@godmodeforever3 ай бұрын
I instantly reject blurry footage.
@lemfarba48273 ай бұрын
I rejected your mother. She still hasn't recovered.
@JEREMIAH_MUICHIRO3 ай бұрын
@@lemfarba4827 bro what are you talking .
@chrisgullett43323 ай бұрын
I instantly reject the idea of them still existing. Here is why. How do they save endangered animals? They classify them as protected, and ban people from hunting them. Well if this animal still exist, it has basically been protected, because nobody is hunting it. So the fact that nobody has shot one of them, means by now the population would be huge. It does not take long for a population to grow once an animal is no longer being hunted. Just look at the grey wolf. It was on the brink of extinction a couple decades ago, and now they are starting to allow people to hunt it again. Even crazier look at the bison, it was almost hunted to extinction, and look where it is at now.. No doubt about i, if it still existed, they'd be everywhere.
@Random_person-f23 ай бұрын
I don’t reject blurry footage because it means it’s real because when something is fast the footage would be blurry
@sugarnads3 ай бұрын
@@lemfarba4827theres always one wanker.
@darrencorrigan85053 ай бұрын
Thanks, Forrest.
@Americansfinest213 ай бұрын
Forrest, ambiguous world filmed a convincing video last week. Check it out
the 3rd nne was the one that completely convinced me when i saw it in 2016! dont ruin it for me, Forresrt!
@obadiahvondeath80483 ай бұрын
you did! thanks, Mate!
@OrganicSouthAustralia3 ай бұрын
Bro adelaide doesn't have feral dogs running around our streets trust me I never seen a feral dog ever in south australia, and I know there are thylacines in south australia. I seen one with my misses and it literally jumped off its back legs like a kangaroo then started running like a dog
@shawnduddridge3 ай бұрын
Every single city in Australia has feral dogs and cats running around in the surrounding bush... Ive never seen one either, but they are there, all across Australia.. and ive seen their tracks and droppings a thousand times even in the most remote areas.
@jackjohnson6913 ай бұрын
It was reported that in 2018 wild dogs killed 20,000 sheep in South Australia. Since 2018, more than 780 wild dogs have been removed through trapping.
@jennmeckley2 ай бұрын
I could watch you all day
@kurtbaettig59183 ай бұрын
Tasmanien Tiger Is My Favorit Animal
@deathwolfgaming85173 ай бұрын
Love support🐯🐺❤
@scottbatey31303 ай бұрын
Hey forest great clip, let's see some more.
@mattnoquet30013 ай бұрын
That last one was very interesting, hopefully they‘re alive and thriving!
@AussieJones763 ай бұрын
There was one filmed apparently 6 days ago. I thought it was going to be on this episode. I tried to tag you in it but I don't think it worked
@Reuben-ey5di3 ай бұрын
How do the dead ones hide
@arthurdent68283 ай бұрын
Fox
@kerai863 ай бұрын
Love to see what you make of the Ambiguous world video
@arthurdent68283 ай бұрын
100% lame fox.
@BarryMac-rh2sqАй бұрын
As a bloke, that has lived and worked across Australia. I've seen regional variations of the fox. In southern Victoria, there fluffy and red. But in central Australia there is now one's that they call a dog fox. There quite large, tall and have a brown to greyish coat. There big enough to hunt goats. As I've seen in the far north of SA. Flinders Ranges area. There evolving. As much as I would like to find a tassie tiger. I've only had one sighting of a dog like animal. That I would consider, that could fit the bill. And that was to the south-western side of the Grampians in Victoria. At 3 am in the morning. When I was transporting a load of grain to a dairy farm.
@Kassas7683 ай бұрын
Its only a possible sighting when the videos are ambiguous. When the videos are clear it’s not a Tasman Tiger
@thecoolmalaka63273 ай бұрын
Hey forest, quick question: this may be a dumb question so my apologies if that's the case, but I know that patterns on animals are usually very specific to the animal, inwhch some can have more exadrated colors and others not so much. Do you think it's possible that even though the stips on thylacene are very specific and unique stripes can be more prominate on one particular thylacene, but could be either more water down or maybe even non-existent? Wonder what your thought are on this and love the content! Keep it up!
@duanefox80922 ай бұрын
People who love Forrest Galante❤❤❤❤❤
@Sam-fz3mx3 ай бұрын
20:17 now that's a good sighting! In all seriousness, I hope they're still out there and we can help preserve the specifies
@bobby.palacios2 ай бұрын
That 2nd video is NOT a dog. Idk any dog with a tail that long.
@_lifeofpramodАй бұрын
Kangaroo may be
@claytonstewart742529 күн бұрын
@@_lifeofpramodthat looks nothing like a kangaroo. Not at all.
@_lifeofpramod29 күн бұрын
@@claytonstewart7425 🙄
@claytonstewart742529 күн бұрын
@@_lifeofpramod I'm guessing your American?
@DinoTheGoat718428 күн бұрын
@@claytonstewart7425that’s kinda rude dude
@mydailyvlogs18763 ай бұрын
Hi forest, have you seen the news about new Nessie sonar images ? Talk tv in the uk have done the interview with the skipper who took the images. Would love to see you a video on it.
@arthurdent68283 ай бұрын
Its a good thing a group of local wizards has cast a spell to protect our underwater ally.
@sugarnads3 ай бұрын
Itsa school of fish fr chrissake. Obvious school of fish on a fish finder sonar is obvious.
@arthurdent68283 ай бұрын
@@sugarnads Nope, that's Nessie on sonar.
@arthurdent68283 ай бұрын
@@sugarnads I can't believe these Muppets put Bigfoot and Nessie in the same bag as the mangy fox videos.
@sugarnads3 ай бұрын
@@arthurdent6828 sure it is. Fools gonna fool.
@savvaschristodoulou58423 ай бұрын
Do you just cycle through making the same 6 videos
@ESCO22 ай бұрын
"Potato Video" ... Yes, it's going to be because a $1500+ smartphone is not a $1500 video/camera 😂
@Paul-ou3kq3 ай бұрын
Ive veiwed ththylacine pair and tracked them the next day they are still here
@incognitoway85163 ай бұрын
@@Paul-ou3kq no you haven't
@sugarnads3 ай бұрын
Sure you did.
@Mancitydiehard3 ай бұрын
Bro I said mangy fox at literally the same time u did! so jinx u owe me a soda! Also I freakn loved extinct or alive especially when u found that tortoise! I have 2 red foot’s so that was by far my favorite episode! And I relisten to u on Joe Rogan quite often! Thanks for being my favorite biologist! 🤙
@ryan1H3Lion3 ай бұрын
FORREST! Please tell us you have seen the new video released 5 DAYS AGO?! It’s the clearest sighting I have seen of a thylacine and would love your input on it! kzbin.info/www/bejne/bHfdqYZ4msuIbNksi=mt7ou75-aB1XdZSh
@fishpants38773 ай бұрын
That's a fox. I watch tons of Australian varmint hunting videos. They use thermal imaging regularly. That's what foxes look like. The tail looks thin because the fluffy fur doesn't show up. They're often sickly and underfed. Mange is common leading to a balding tail and often the fox going lame.
@arthurdent68283 ай бұрын
@@fishpants3877Ambiguousworld thinks Thylacoleo is out there too. He's cooked. He claims half of his videos as thylacine. If he sees them so regularly why hasnt he got any definitive images?
@Mrdragonjack5 күн бұрын
I really appreciate the realistic approach, I want to believe as well but it´s not about believing everything
@ProtégéOfGod3 ай бұрын
There has been a new sighting! It looks really convincing, please check it out.
@arthurdent68283 ай бұрын
Yeah please look at another limping fox, please, please..
@TigerWolfOz2 ай бұрын
@arthurdent6828 with a marsupial tail, and it's bits hanging put the back. Yeah fox 😂
@arthurdent6828Ай бұрын
@@TigerWolfOz Okay. It's obvious by your profile name that you can't look at this objectively. The tail bends far too much for that of a thylacine and "it's bits"?.Lol. If he hadn't told you what you were looking at you wouldn't have given it a second thought, and he's wrong. I've been living in that area for over twenty years and not once have I heard of any sightings. I guarantee I know that area far better than him. It's rural suburbia. There is no way a viable, breeding number of thylacines are running around the Yarra valley undetected. It's as laughable as the earth being flat.
@TigerWolfOzАй бұрын
@arthurdent6828 It's pretty obvious from reading your comments, that your a Troll. Ambiguous World points out the Thylacine's Tackle because they are there. Never mind, the stripes that I was able to obtain after downloading the footage. Ambiguous didn't even know that. I actually thought it was a fox, and was trying to debunk it. It's certainly no fox, it's tail is far too long for a fox. If that's all you're going on.
@TigerWolfOzАй бұрын
@arthurdent6828 it's pretty obvious from your comments and your user name that you're a troll. I thought it was a fox at first, but after seeing it's bits (can't argue that they're a Canine now 🤣) I asked AW for the footage. Using some filters there are definitely stripes on this animals back. Doesn't matter how many posts you have saying, it's a fox, it doesnt make it a fox. It actually has a longer tail than a fox 🤣 I'm just waiting for you to come back and say, but I'm a zoologist, because you've lived in the exact location too. 🤣 As if AW would give the exact location, as he never has done before.
@singaboiz3 ай бұрын
I heard about Thylacine sightings since I was young when I lived in Singapore. Now more than 40 years, and living in California, I still hear about it. But one thing never change, it seems like those who sighted it don't have a good camera. The quality is as good as 40 years ago. That really puzzles me. Do most Australians have good phone camera?
As an Australian I have always been fascinated by the Thylacine. I believe they still exist in Tasmania and really hope they are discovered and breeding programs can be established to bring their numbers back up.
@Levelz313 ай бұрын
last one was real
@Huscarle092 ай бұрын
Hi, agree with you on the first video being a fox. A house I used to live in used to have lots of foxes around and there was one that regularly came in to to garden, looked awful, obviously sick, fur was patchy and had no bushy tail.
@dennyperkovitch3 ай бұрын
"in addition to the hock it's got a tuah!!!!"
@carolcollins48783 ай бұрын
I live in Victoria Australia, I haven't seen one, but I just know they are still here
@mugz8053 ай бұрын
Hit that like button
@woodrowmeeks50093 ай бұрын
Wow; you seem to kow your animals. I'm subscribed.