Which of these American animals have you seen in the wild? [Live view and not at a zoo, farm, fenced park, etc.]
Animals in the wild
Discussion in 'Polls Forum' started by Alcott, Jun 24, 2010.
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Alligator
11 vote(s)55.0% -
Bighorn sheep
6 vote(s)30.0% -
Black bear
12 vote(s)60.0% -
Cougar/panther
9 vote(s)45.0% -
Elk
7 vote(s)35.0% -
Grizzly bear
5 vote(s)25.0% -
Moose
7 vote(s)35.0% -
Pronghorn
3 vote(s)15.0% -
Rocky Mountain goat
4 vote(s)20.0% -
I have seen none of these in the wild
2 vote(s)10.0%
Multiple votes are allowed.
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Scarlett O. ModeratorModerator
The only one on your list that I have seen in the wild is an alligator.
I was fishing on the bayou once with my cousin-in-law. We were pretty remote. I saw an alligator swim by us and said, "I think we should turn around."
He said, "Don't worry. That one isn't big enough to gobble us up."
(I wasn't so much worried about being gobbled up as I was that first bite!!!)
Then he said, "That one is only big enough to turn the boat over." I think he was just yanking my chain, but it scared me anyway! -
I've seen black bears in the Smoky Mts, but I've seen a bobcat in my back yard.
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I saw several alligators in FL in the everglades. One was about 15 feet long! Just recently I saw a wildcat near the road while driving in a rural area. We see foxes from time to time, and lots of deer, too.
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None of the above.
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Someone brought up foxes, though not in the poll (there are more than 9 or 10 interesting wild animals in America). My sister-n-law has been posting pics of the foxes on their spread, and some are quite good:
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JohnDeereFan Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
I grew up in L.A., so gators were common. In fact, our family still has a beach house in Gulf Shores and right at the end of our street is a park that usually has an alligator in it.
We also had an abundance of bobcats.
Before my wife and I were married, I was the caretaker (please, no Shining jokes) at a large Christian retreat in the Poconos and black bears were common to the point that they were pests. They rarely bothered anybody but, good night! did they make a mess. The worst part is that many of the campers and guests would actually leave stuff out to attract them.
I understand black bears and wild boar are now moving into our area, which thrills me to no end, because I used to love to hunt boar. -
JohnDeereFan Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
She nursed him back to health and we took him to a local game preserve and let him go. Man, he was pretty.
I've got the photos around her somewhere. If I can find them, I'l scan them and send them to you to give to your sister in law. -
I saw a moose on the the Alcan Hwy on my way to Alaska. And I mean he was on the Alcan Hgy - I waited for about 10 minutes. He never moved, so I backed up and sped around him. I always thought about that when I would watch Northern Exposure.
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JohnDeereFan Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
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I have seen one moose, where Yellowstone and Grand Teton NP's run together. It was 2 days apart, but I think it was the same bull moose, who seemed to be the kind, per se, of a big pond by the road. He was too far away for my zoomed shots to show much detail, but he was darker than most of them seen in documentaries, and he looked big and heavy.
I have seen 3 grizzly bears in that same area, but have not seen a black bear in the wild. In fact, the ony ones I remember ever seeing were Baylor's mascots. -
Some intriguing stuff in the Southeast to see:
-alligator snapping turtles. yikes, what a scary, primitive mess. Saw one a few years back nearly the size of a garbage can lid. I took him to the ocean, sunk him a mile down, and he got so mad he bit an oil pipeline in half (not really...but he looked like he could).
-A few years back, while "crawdad hunting," I found an old swamp with (count 'em) three carniverous plants: Venus flytraps, pitcher plants (probably a hundred or more), and sundew ("sticky dew") plants. Pretty cool. Especially since it wasn't thought that Venus Flytraps grew in our neck of the woods. -
I saw the bear in the Sangre de Criste mountains.