Animals are Great! Animals are Great!

ArkRescue

Adopt me please !
when the fox started chasing her chickens she wasn't dressed but went outside anyway to save her chickens.

 

Kyle

ULTRA-F###ING-MAGA!
PREMO Member
IMG_3628.jpeg
 

Kyle

ULTRA-F###ING-MAGA!
PREMO Member
Wolves at Yellowstone National Park seen carrying 'toys' for their pups


Adult wolves were spotted bringing toys back to the den for their pups at Yellowstone National Park. The park said that in the absence of food, adult wolves will bring "toys" for their annual litter of four or five pups. Check this out!




 

stgislander

Well-Known Member
PREMO Member
Wolves at Yellowstone National Park seen carrying 'toys' for their pups


Adult wolves were spotted bringing toys back to the den for their pups at Yellowstone National Park. The park said that in the absence of food, adult wolves will bring "toys" for their annual litter of four or five pups. Check this out!




Damn. Here I was thinking it was stuffed animals and squeeky toys.
 

Kyle

ULTRA-F###ING-MAGA!
PREMO Member
Banff grizzly bear attack: Uncle reveals chilling final message he received from Canadian couple before deaths


Doug Inglis and Jenny Gusse identified as couple killed in Banff National Park

The uncle of a Canadian man who was mauled to death by a grizzly last week alongside his partner in Alberta’s popular Banff National Park has revealed that he received a final message from the couple.

Colin Inglis told the Calgary Herald he received the SOS call from Doug Inglis and Jenny Gusse’s Garmin GPS device around 8:15 p.m. last Friday after hearing hours earlier that they were delayed in reaching a camping location in the Panther Valley area of the park.

"Bear attack bad." was the message Inglis recalled getting in a call from the couple's Garmin inReach device. "The alarm bells were going off, ‘this is not good’ -- that means there’d been some engagement. You’re completely helpless to know what’s going on."

Inglis also said he was told by Parks Canada officials that the tent the couple was using "was crushed and their e-readers were open" at the scene of the attack, where their 7-year-old border collie Tris died as well.

"One can of bear spray had been fully discharged, but this bear was not to be deterred," he reportedly added.






What they needed was a can of 30:06 Bear Spray.
 

Merlin99

Visualize whirled peas
PREMO Member
Banff grizzly bear attack: Uncle reveals chilling final message he received from Canadian couple before deaths


Doug Inglis and Jenny Gusse identified as couple killed in Banff National Park

The uncle of a Canadian man who was mauled to death by a grizzly last week alongside his partner in Alberta’s popular Banff National Park has revealed that he received a final message from the couple.

Colin Inglis told the Calgary Herald he received the SOS call from Doug Inglis and Jenny Gusse’s Garmin GPS device around 8:15 p.m. last Friday after hearing hours earlier that they were delayed in reaching a camping location in the Panther Valley area of the park.

"Bear attack bad." was the message Inglis recalled getting in a call from the couple's Garmin inReach device. "The alarm bells were going off, ‘this is not good’ -- that means there’d been some engagement. You’re completely helpless to know what’s going on."

Inglis also said he was told by Parks Canada officials that the tent the couple was using "was crushed and their e-readers were open" at the scene of the attack, where their 7-year-old border collie Tris died as well.

"One can of bear spray had been fully discharged, but this bear was not to be deterred," he reportedly added.






What they needed was a can of 30:06 Bear Spray.
.44 in a chest holster
 

Merlin99

Visualize whirled peas
PREMO Member
.44 will just piss a bear off....unless the shot is well placed which I doubt will happen when being ripped to pieces...
Every guide in Alaska has this rig because bears pop up in places that rifles don’t work. The chest rig is called a Kenai rig. Now as to a .44 pissing off a bear the ballistics don’t lie, 750 ft lbs just about anywhere in a bear is going to incapacitate it.
 
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