Post by somerandomuser on Mar 2, 2021 3:07:32 GMT
MattSquatch has a couple of interesting videos of really interesting deer kills on a property where a dogman was sighted.
The first one as far as I know jaguars are the only predator that will go for the skull and puncture said skull very common with tapirs being taken down by jaguars. Jaguars have probably the most dense jaw muscles and quite robust teeth compared to say a leopard. Usually jaguars go for the base of the skull.
Just some measurements for a deer's skull probably 11 inches length, 4.8 inches in width and about 4 inches in thickness (not all bone of course). Big brown bear has their canine teeth ~2- 2.5 inches apart, big cats (adult tiger/lion/leopard/jaguar) we might see 2.5 - 3 (maybe just under 3.5 inches iirc north American lions which were 25% larger than African lions had 3.5 inches measurements at base of the tooth/gums).
The second deer had a wound to the hind quarter leg area yet no skull penetrating wound although it was incapacitated and was put down, almost at the hips that makes me wonder the main wound while it didn't look horrible but if there was some other perhaps internal injuries or something similar. Like when lions fight they will often bite the spine of an opponent, of course something with a hand and strong might break the hips to slow down a fast prey item in an ambush.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=hCUov9lcNfg (First Video)
www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ErJAhJ88vc (Second Video)
Interesting thing is that vultures can smell carrion up to one mile away but won't touch these kills. I notice the deer is very much "clean" with neck and some meat in the back no gut pile, that was interesting to me. I will say why now, because there was a picture taken in Texas of a dogman with a deer and the gut pile was literally off on the side and it appeared as though less of an animal just feeding and more of field dressing or methodical.
The first one as far as I know jaguars are the only predator that will go for the skull and puncture said skull very common with tapirs being taken down by jaguars. Jaguars have probably the most dense jaw muscles and quite robust teeth compared to say a leopard. Usually jaguars go for the base of the skull.
Just some measurements for a deer's skull probably 11 inches length, 4.8 inches in width and about 4 inches in thickness (not all bone of course). Big brown bear has their canine teeth ~2- 2.5 inches apart, big cats (adult tiger/lion/leopard/jaguar) we might see 2.5 - 3 (maybe just under 3.5 inches iirc north American lions which were 25% larger than African lions had 3.5 inches measurements at base of the tooth/gums).
The second deer had a wound to the hind quarter leg area yet no skull penetrating wound although it was incapacitated and was put down, almost at the hips that makes me wonder the main wound while it didn't look horrible but if there was some other perhaps internal injuries or something similar. Like when lions fight they will often bite the spine of an opponent, of course something with a hand and strong might break the hips to slow down a fast prey item in an ambush.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=hCUov9lcNfg (First Video)
www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ErJAhJ88vc (Second Video)
Interesting thing is that vultures can smell carrion up to one mile away but won't touch these kills. I notice the deer is very much "clean" with neck and some meat in the back no gut pile, that was interesting to me. I will say why now, because there was a picture taken in Texas of a dogman with a deer and the gut pile was literally off on the side and it appeared as though less of an animal just feeding and more of field dressing or methodical.