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Wild animals fear humans more than lions- BBC

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06 October 2023, 20:51
delloro
Wild animals fear humans more than lions- BBC
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-67023033

Interesting.
07 October 2023, 14:11
Bivoj
And rightly so
We are the top predator


Nothing like standing over your own kill
08 October 2023, 23:16
fairgame
Lions do not give a shit about us especially during the dark hours or on bait


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09 October 2023, 07:12
DTala
Lion scare the chitt out of me.


Birmingham, Al
12 October 2023, 06:51
Indy
Lions "snarling and growling" means the lions are not hunting.


Indy

Life is short. Hunt hard.
12 October 2023, 08:34
lavaca
Andrew, you have far more experience with them than I do, but I agree. I've never had a lion treat me with anything other than total disdain.
12 October 2023, 09:32
fulvio
quote:
Originally posted by Indy:
Lions "snarling and growling" means the lions are not hunting.


True, they are silent as the night when hunting but try approaching one of those "snarling and growling" on foot and see the reaction. Wink
13 October 2023, 06:40
lavaca
Fulvio,

True that. We were tracking a lion (not wounded) and it's amazing how they can hide. We came up at one point and everyone thought if they were a lion they'd be there. We glassed for 10 minutes and convinced ourselves he wasn't there. He was there. Anyway, we bumped him a couple of times and he voiced his displeasure with increasing emphasis each time.
13 October 2023, 06:44
lavaca
He finally walked into a sea of grass and it would have been futile, most likely, or suicide if you actually found him, in there.
13 October 2023, 09:56
crbutler
This is in Kruger, so its not hunting.

Its that its something they are not used to in that setting.

My experience is that animals are pretty tuned in, and get very nervous if there is something "different" regardless of what it is.

Note that in Tanzania, if you dress up as Masai, you can walk into rifle range of most of the plains animals (at least in some places)... They are habituated to them, and don't react.

Lions? In an active hunting area they do act a bit differently. I've always thought that they have some innate sense as when I have had a license they tend to be MUCH more flighty than if you don't. Not sure why. But when I have been hunting other things, they can be very blase about you.

Lions are one of those animals that I can't trust. I've seen them hide and move, and I have to respect them.