Nature documentaries NEVER show how 95% of big predators kill their prey
| Harsh doctorate | 11/22/25 | | Bistre cheese-eating garrison people who are hurt | 11/22/25 | | glittery black box office | 11/22/25 | | Harsh doctorate | 11/22/25 | | glittery black box office | 11/22/25 | | Vivacious fuchsia internal respiration station | 11/22/25 | | odious library pocket flask | 11/22/25 | | Harsh doctorate | 11/22/25 | | Concupiscible olive senate | 11/22/25 | | Harsh doctorate | 11/22/25 | | Concupiscible olive senate | 11/22/25 | | Floppy theater | 11/22/25 | | Harsh doctorate | 11/22/25 | | Godawful marvelous stage | 11/22/25 | | Bateful turquoise center pozpig | 11/22/25 | | Iridescent mad cow disease tanning salon | 11/22/25 | | Harsh doctorate | 11/22/25 |
Poast new message in this thread
Date: November 22nd, 2025 7:33 PM Author: Harsh doctorate
They mislead you by showing you footage of leopards. They want you to think most big game gets choked out and just falls asleep. "I can't breathe," if you will.
In reality, most buffalo or antelope that get taken down are disemboweled. If hyenas or wolves or wild dogs killed them, they did it by running them down and biting their intestines open. You'd see a trail of guts hanging from a staggered wildebeest still trying to defend itself. Lions do it all the time too. You think a tiny ass African painted dog is choking out a wildebeest?
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5801201&forum_id=2Ã#49452723) |
Date: November 22nd, 2025 7:59 PM Author: Concupiscible olive senate
They break their necks sometimes but only when they have to
I mean if it's already immobile and you can start eating it why bother expending extra energy to "kill it for real"
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5801201&forum_id=2Ã#49452771) |
|
|