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Reply #30 posted 11/11/10 7:16am

PurpleRighteou
s1

avatar

Cerebus said:

"Nice food. Lovely nice food. You treated me well, nice food, so I shall not eat you today. I shall save you for a day when I am old and lazy, and then I shall swallow your head whole, lovely nice food."

:gigglefit: lol

I graduated bitches!!! 12-19-09 woot! dancing jig
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Reply #31 posted 11/11/10 8:46am

luv4u

Moderator

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moderator

No matter what. You cannot take the wild out of a lion.

It's so cool the lion remembered that woman who saved its life cool

canada

Ohh purple joy oh purple bliss oh purple rapture!
REAL MUSIC by REAL MUSICIANS - Prince
"I kind of wish there was a reason for Prince to make the site crash more" ~~ Ben
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Reply #32 posted 11/11/10 11:51am

retina

I'm going to Tanzania in two weeks and hope to see some wild lions. I'll definitely make sure not to get too close though. Other than poisonous critters, I can't think of a worse land enemy to face than a lion. They're enormously powerful, fast as lightning, don't have any obvious weaknesses and will kill you in an instant.

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Reply #33 posted 11/11/10 12:18pm

bboy87

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johnart said:

LolaBitch said:

nod OUTRAGE! mad

Thank you, Cerebus. touched

GO TO BED!

falloff oh my damn! spit

"We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world."
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Reply #34 posted 11/11/10 1:56pm

Graycap23

Not very bright.

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Reply #35 posted 11/11/10 2:06pm

PANDURITO

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Graycap23 said:

Not very bright.

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Reply #36 posted 11/11/10 2:13pm

PANDURITO

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Have you noticed female orgers going all mushy whereas male orgers' thoughts are more confused or plain nuts ?

Just saying

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Reply #37 posted 11/11/10 2:27pm

uPtoWnNY

paintedlady said:

Awwww! mushy Its just a big Ol' kitty with 500 lbs of muscle and claws that can shred your liver with one swipe... how cute!

Siegfried and Roy - that's all I have to say. smile

[Edited 11/11/10 6:31am]

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Reply #38 posted 11/11/10 2:54pm

Tokyo89

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Why the fuck would you hug a lion??? nutty

She Don't Speak..But She Remembers
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Reply #39 posted 11/11/10 3:11pm

johnart

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uPtoWnNY said:

paintedlady said:

Awwww! mushy Its just a big Ol' kitty with 500 lbs of muscle and claws that can shred your liver with one swipe... how cute!

Siegfried and Roy - that's all I have to say. smile

[Edited 11/11/10 6:31am]

Yeah, look at him. I'd accept him as my own too. jerkoff

I wonder if he and Grizzly Man ever hang out. ...oh wait.

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Reply #40 posted 11/12/10 3:09am

Lammastide

avatar

retina said:

I'm going to Tanzania in two weeks and hope to see some wild lions. I'll definitely make sure not to get too close though. Other than poisonous critters, I can't think of a worse land enemy to face than a lion. They're enormously powerful, fast as lightning, don't have any obvious weaknesses and will kill you in an instant.

I wouldn't mess with a lion, but I REALLY wouldn't mess with a tiger. shake They're bigger, stealthier, they kill more humans than any other big cats, and they're amazingly calculating: I recently heard a radio documentary about tigers where scientists mentioned the animals in the wild have been observed to hold long-term vendettas against specific hunters or researchers nearby.

[Edited 11/11/10 19:18pm]

Ὅσον ζῇς φαίνου
μηδὲν ὅλως σὺ λυποῦ
πρὸς ὀλίγον ἐστὶ τὸ ζῆν
τὸ τέλος ὁ χρόνος ἀπαιτεῖ.”
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Reply #41 posted 11/12/10 3:33am

Cerebus

avatar

Lammastide said:

retina said:

I'm going to Tanzania in two weeks and hope to see some wild lions. I'll definitely make sure not to get too close though. Other than poisonous critters, I can't think of a worse land enemy to face than a lion. They're enormously powerful, fast as lightning, don't have any obvious weaknesses and will kill you in an instant.

I wouldn't mess with a lion, but I REALLY wouldn't mess with a tiger. shake They're bigger, stealthier, they kill more humans than any other big cats, and they're amazingly calculating: I recently heard a radio documentary about tigers where scientists mentioned the animals in the wild have been observed to hold long-term vendettas against specific hunters or researchers nearby.


Yep. Tigers are definitely people eaters. Probably the reason you don't see many (if any) of them in the big cat shows. Unfortunately that's the reason why they're being hunted to extinction in places where humans are moving into their territory.

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Reply #42 posted 11/12/10 4:01am

babynoz

Cerebus said:

"Nice food. Lovely nice food. You treated me well, nice food, so I shall not eat you today. I shall save you for a day when I am old and lazy, and then I shall swallow your head whole, lovely nice food."

I hear ya...that wasn't kissing, that was tasting, lol

Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise.
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Reply #43 posted 11/12/10 4:04am

babynoz

Lammastide said:

retina said:

I'm going to Tanzania in two weeks and hope to see some wild lions. I'll definitely make sure not to get too close though. Other than poisonous critters, I can't think of a worse land enemy to face than a lion. They're enormously powerful, fast as lightning, don't have any obvious weaknesses and will kill you in an instant.

I wouldn't mess with a lion, but I REALLY wouldn't mess with a tiger. shake They're bigger, stealthier, they kill more humans than any other big cats, and they're amazingly calculating: I recently heard a radio documentary about tigers where scientists mentioned the animals in the wild have been observed to hold long-term vendettas against specific hunters or researchers nearby.

[Edited 11/11/10 19:18pm]

Really? You mean them mugs hold grudges like a mafia don? lol

Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise.
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Reply #44 posted 11/12/10 4:07am

FauxReal

babynoz said:

Lammastide said:

I wouldn't mess with a lion, but I REALLY wouldn't mess with a tiger. shake They're bigger, stealthier, they kill more humans than any other big cats, and they're amazingly calculating: I recently heard a radio documentary about tigers where scientists mentioned the animals in the wild have been observed to hold long-term vendettas against specific hunters or researchers nearby.

[Edited 11/11/10 19:18pm]

Really? You mean them mugs hold grudges like a mafia don? lol

Oh you didn't know??

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Reply #45 posted 11/12/10 4:17am

babynoz

FauxReal said:

babynoz said:

Really? You mean them mugs hold grudges like a mafia don? lol

Oh you didn't know??

He should be like Tigger...bounce, not pounce! biggrin

Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise.
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Reply #46 posted 11/12/10 4:24am

FauxReal

babynoz said:

FauxReal said:

Oh you didn't know??

He should be like Tigger...bounce, not pounce! biggrin

Tigger is obviously on something.

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Reply #47 posted 11/12/10 5:09am

Lammastide

avatar

babynoz said:

Lammastide said:

I wouldn't mess with a lion, but I REALLY wouldn't mess with a tiger. shake They're bigger, stealthier, they kill more humans than any other big cats, and they're amazingly calculating: I recently heard a radio documentary about tigers where scientists mentioned the animals in the wild have been observed to hold long-term vendettas against specific hunters or researchers nearby.

[Edited 11/11/10 19:18pm]

Really? You mean them mugs hold grudges like a mafia don? lol

Russian mafia to be precise...

A book by John Vaillant called The Tiger: A True Story of Vengeance and Survival tells of a researcher who tracked a man-eating Siberian tiger near the late 20th-century Russian/Chinese border. Apparently, some local poacher had pissed that cat off, and it decided to break him off a lil somethin'. The guy and his fellow hunters would leave their camp, for example, and come back to find the tiger had forced his way in, leaving everything virtually untouched... except the belongings of the one guy who was on his s*** list. lol The tiger apparently smelled the guy's scent on certain clothes, supplies, bedding, etc. and destoyed all of it.

After several such incidents, when the guy and his buddies realized the tiger was out to get him, they kept a look out to kill... and apparently they were always strapped. But despite knowing full well that tiger was trailing him -- and despite always being armed -- the guy was finally whacked by the animal when he arrived home one day. The blood patterns and snow tracks suggest the tiger didn't try to hide or anything. He not only just sat down right in dude's own yard to wait, but he actually took a mattress out of dude's shed so that he could be comfortable while he waited! lol And still the guy didn't notice him until it was too late. The tiger obliterated that guy, and the folk who found his body said what was left "could have fit in a shirt pocket." shake

Moral of the story: Don't mess with a Siberian tiger.

I've heard Brad Pitt has actually bought the rights to the story and is planning to produce a movie about it.

[Edited 11/12/10 6:36am]

Ὅσον ζῇς φαίνου
μηδὲν ὅλως σὺ λυποῦ
πρὸς ὀλίγον ἐστὶ τὸ ζῆν
τὸ τέλος ὁ χρόνος ἀπαιτεῖ.”
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Reply #48 posted 11/13/10 3:28pm

babynoz

Lammastide said:

babynoz said:

Really? You mean them mugs hold grudges like a mafia don? lol

Russian mafia to be precise...

A book by John Vaillant called The Tiger: A True Story of Vengeance and Survival tells of a researcher who tracked a man-eating Siberian tiger near the late 20th-century Russian/Chinese border. Apparently, some local poacher had pissed that cat off, and it decided to break him off a lil somethin'. The guy and his fellow hunters would leave their camp, for example, and come back to find the tiger had forced his way in, leaving everything virtually untouched... except the belongings of the one guy who was on his s*** list. lol The tiger apparently smelled the guy's scent on certain clothes, supplies, bedding, etc. and destoyed all of it.

After several such incidents, when the guy and his buddies realized the tiger was out to get him, they kept a look out to kill... and apparently they were always strapped. But despite knowing full well that tiger was trailing him -- and despite always being armed -- the guy was finally whacked by the animal when he arrived home one day. The blood patterns and snow tracks suggest the tiger didn't try to hide or anything. He not only just sat down right in dude's own yard to wait, but he actually took a mattress out of dude's shed so that he could be comfortable while he waited! lol And still the guy didn't notice him until it was too late. The tiger obliterated that guy, and the folk who found his body said what was left "could have fit in a shirt pocket." shake

Moral of the story: Don't mess with a Siberian tiger.

I've heard Brad Pitt has actually bought the rights to the story and is planning to produce a movie about it.

[Edited 11/12/10 6:36am]

eek

That tiger sounds like dude's ex, reincarnated or something. lol

Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise.
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Reply #49 posted 11/13/10 5:22pm

XxAxX

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humans are not the only animals on this planet that are capable of higher reasoning.

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Reply #50 posted 11/14/10 4:17pm

PunkMistress

avatar

Lammastide said:

babynoz said:

Really? You mean them mugs hold grudges like a mafia don? lol

Russian mafia to be precise...

A book by John Vaillant called The Tiger: A True Story of Vengeance and Survival tells of a researcher who tracked a man-eating Siberian tiger near the late 20th-century Russian/Chinese border. Apparently, some local poacher had pissed that cat off, and it decided to break him off a lil somethin'. The guy and his fellow hunters would leave their camp, for example, and come back to find the tiger had forced his way in, leaving everything virtually untouched... except the belongings of the one guy who was on his s*** list. lol The tiger apparently smelled the guy's scent on certain clothes, supplies, bedding, etc. and destoyed all of it.

After several such incidents, when the guy and his buddies realized the tiger was out to get him, they kept a look out to kill... and apparently they were always strapped. But despite knowing full well that tiger was trailing him -- and despite always being armed -- the guy was finally whacked by the animal when he arrived home one day. The blood patterns and snow tracks suggest the tiger didn't try to hide or anything. He not only just sat down right in dude's own yard to wait, but he actually took a mattress out of dude's shed so that he could be comfortable while he waited! lol And still the guy didn't notice him until it was too late. The tiger obliterated that guy, and the folk who found his body said what was left "could have fit in a shirt pocket." shake

Moral of the story: Don't mess with a Siberian tiger.

I've heard Brad Pitt has actually bought the rights to the story and is planning to produce a movie about it.

[Edited 11/12/10 6:36am]

eek

Holy shit.

It's what you make it.
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Reply #51 posted 11/14/10 5:24pm

SUPRMAN

avatar

retina said:

I'm going to Tanzania in two weeks and hope to see some wild lions. I'll definitely make sure not to get too close though. Other than poisonous critters, I can't think of a worse land enemy to face than a lion. They're enormously powerful, fast as lightning, don't have any obvious weaknesses and will kill you in an instant.

It's not the lions you have to worry about.

Hippos kill more people than any other animal in Africa.

No one's is going to believe that though . . . .

Fascinating facts about the hippo

The hippo’s yawn is not a sign of sleepiness or boredom but is actually a threat gesture, displaying long, thick, razor-sharp canine teeth, or tusks, with which it is capable of biting a small boat in half. Being fearlessly protective of their turf and young, hippos have killed hundreds of people in Africa – more than any other wild animal.

Hippopotamus amphibius means “river horse.” The hippo, weighing 1 800 kg (4,000 pounds) and more, lives in Africa, south of the Sahara and along the length of the Nile river, although its range once included Asia and large parts of Europe. Hippos prefer rivers with deep water and nearby reed beds and grasslands, but are also found in salt-water areas near river mouths, and in lakes in Central Africa. They are hoofed vegetarians, feeding on grass, fallen fruit, and occasionally on cultivated crops such as sugar cane or corn during the night. They spend most of the day in the water.

Although not part of the Big Five, the hippo is the third biggest land animal, slightly smaller but heavier than a white rhino (the elephant is the biggest). In spite of its huge size – 3 metres (12 feet) in length, 1,5 metres (five feet) tall, with a mouth measuring a half metre (two feet) across – the hippopotamus can outrun a human. The bellowing of a bull hippo measures an ear-splitting 115 decibels, sounding like the roar of a lion. (The blue whale is the loudest animal, calling out at up to 188 decibels.)

Nearly all of the famous African explorers and hunters – Livingstone, Stanley, Burton, Selous, Speke, DuChaillu – had boating mishaps with hippos. All considered the hippo to be a wantonly malicious beast. Spencer Tyron, a hunter, was killed while hunting near the shores of Lake Rukwa, Tanzania. A bull hippo turned over the dugout canoe from which Tyron was shooting, and bit off his head and shoulders.

Recent DNA evidence suggests that the hippopotamus is more closely related to cetaceans (whales and dolphins) than it is to any other artiodactyl (even-toed hoofed mammal).

Hippopotumus
A hippopotamus and a pygmy hippopotamus

The hippo's yawn is a threat gesture
The tusk-like incisors and canines grow continuously. They are ivory, valued even more highly than an elephant’s because they do not turn yellow with age. George Washington’s false teeth were not made of wood, as is commonly believed, but were carved from the tusks of a hippopotamus.

The ears close automatically when under water
The ears and nostrils – located at the top of the head – close automatically when the animal is under water. It has practically no hair, and its smooth skin is quite delicate. The hippo’s skin exudes a red, oily liquid that keeps the skin moist and protected when it is out of water. The liquid has lead to a myth that the hippo sweats blood.

Hippo and young
One young is born at a time, after a gestation of around 230 days. Births usually occur in months of heavy rainfall, but can occur year-round. Young hippos will also bask on their mother’s back. A group of hippos is called a “bloat.”



See: Fascinating facts about the hippo

http://didyouknow.org/animals/hippo/

I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think.
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Reply #52 posted 11/14/10 5:27pm

SUPRMAN

avatar

Lammastide said:

retina said:

I'm going to Tanzania in two weeks and hope to see some wild lions. I'll definitely make sure not to get too close though. Other than poisonous critters, I can't think of a worse land enemy to face than a lion. They're enormously powerful, fast as lightning, don't have any obvious weaknesses and will kill you in an instant.

I wouldn't mess with a lion, but I REALLY wouldn't mess with a tiger. shake They're bigger, stealthier, they kill more humans than any other big cats, and they're amazingly calculating: I recently heard a radio documentary about tigers where scientists mentioned the animals in the wild have been observed to hold long-term vendettas against specific hunters or researchers nearby.

[Edited 11/11/10 19:18pm]

Elephants do.

They have killed specific individuals in India.

I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think.
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Reply #53 posted 11/14/10 5:29pm

SUPRMAN

avatar

Cerebus said:

Lammastide said:

I wouldn't mess with a lion, but I REALLY wouldn't mess with a tiger. shake They're bigger, stealthier, they kill more humans than any other big cats, and they're amazingly calculating: I recently heard a radio documentary about tigers where scientists mentioned the animals in the wild have been observed to hold long-term vendettas against specific hunters or researchers nearby.


Yep. Tigers are definitely people eaters. Probably the reason you don't see many (if any) of them in the big cat shows. Unfortunately that's the reason why they're being hunted to extinction in places where humans are moving into their territory.

Tigers are not "people eaters" in the sense that people are their preferred target. Stupid people tend to show up on the menu. But tigers who have eaten people are killed so they don't become their preferred prey. They are hunted for their pelts, not because of the potential threat they pose to people.

[Edited 11/14/10 10:03am]

I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think.
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Reply #54 posted 11/14/10 5:30pm

SUPRMAN

avatar

XxAxX said:

humans are not the only animals on this planet that are capable of higher reasoning.

Thank you

I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think.
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Reply #55 posted 11/14/10 5:52pm

PunkMistress

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SUPRMAN said:

But people who have eaten people are killed so they don't become their preferred prey.

Uh what

lol

It's what you make it.
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Reply #56 posted 11/14/10 6:04pm

SUPRMAN

avatar

PunkMistress said:

SUPRMAN said:

But people who have eaten people are killed so they don't become their preferred prey.

Uh what

lol

Typing without brain engaged . . .

I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think.
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Reply #57 posted 11/14/10 6:07pm

PunkMistress

avatar

SUPRMAN said:

PunkMistress said:

Uh what

lol

Typing without brain engaged . . .

Oh!

I read your edit. lol

It's what you make it.
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Reply #58 posted 11/15/10 6:09am

FauxReal

SUPRMAN said:

retina said:

I'm going to Tanzania in two weeks and hope to see some wild lions. I'll definitely make sure not to get too close though. Other than poisonous critters, I can't think of a worse land enemy to face than a lion. They're enormously powerful, fast as lightning, don't have any obvious weaknesses and will kill you in an instant.

It's not the lions you have to worry about.

Hippos kill more people than any other animal in Africa.

No one's is going to believe that though . . . .

Fascinating facts about the hippo

The hippo’s yawn is not a sign of sleepiness or boredom but is actually a threat gesture, displaying long, thick, razor-sharp canine teeth, or tusks, with which it is capable of biting a small boat in half. Being fearlessly protective of their turf and young, hippos have killed hundreds of people in Africa – more than any other wild animal.

Hippopotamus amphibius means “river horse.” The hippo, weighing 1 800 kg (4,000 pounds) and more, lives in Africa, south of the Sahara and along the length of the Nile river, although its range once included Asia and large parts of Europe. Hippos prefer rivers with deep water and nearby reed beds and grasslands, but are also found in salt-water areas near river mouths, and in lakes in Central Africa. They are hoofed vegetarians, feeding on grass, fallen fruit, and occasionally on cultivated crops such as sugar cane or corn during the night. They spend most of the day in the water.

Although not part of the Big Five, the hippo is the third biggest land animal, slightly smaller but heavier than a white rhino (the elephant is the biggest). In spite of its huge size – 3 metres (12 feet) in length, 1,5 metres (five feet) tall, with a mouth measuring a half metre (two feet) across – the hippopotamus can outrun a human. The bellowing of a bull hippo measures an ear-splitting 115 decibels, sounding like the roar of a lion. (The blue whale is the loudest animal, calling out at up to 188 decibels.)

Nearly all of the famous African explorers and hunters – Livingstone, Stanley, Burton, Selous, Speke, DuChaillu – had boating mishaps with hippos. All considered the hippo to be a wantonly malicious beast. Spencer Tyron, a hunter, was killed while hunting near the shores of Lake Rukwa, Tanzania. A bull hippo turned over the dugout canoe from which Tyron was shooting, and bit off his head and shoulders.

Recent DNA evidence suggests that the hippopotamus is more closely related to cetaceans (whales and dolphins) than it is to any other artiodactyl (even-toed hoofed mammal).

Hippopotumus
A hippopotamus and a pygmy hippopotamus

The hippo's yawn is a threat gesture
The tusk-like incisors and canines grow continuously. They are ivory, valued even more highly than an elephant’s because they do not turn yellow with age. George Washington’s false teeth were not made of wood, as is commonly believed, but were carved from the tusks of a hippopotamus.

The ears close automatically when under water
The ears and nostrils – located at the top of the head – close automatically when the animal is under water. It has practically no hair, and its smooth skin is quite delicate. The hippo’s skin exudes a red, oily liquid that keeps the skin moist and protected when it is out of water. The liquid has lead to a myth that the hippo sweats blood.

Hippo and young
One young is born at a time, after a gestation of around 230 days. Births usually occur in months of heavy rainfall, but can occur year-round. Young hippos will also bask on their mother’s back. A group of hippos is called a “bloat.”



See: Fascinating facts about the hippo

http://didyouknow.org/animals/hippo/

I believe it. This isn't nearly the first time I've heard as much. I couldn't imagine death by hippo. That would suck.

Edit: A testament to their ruthlessness, a hippo here kills for a new pair of boots...

[Edited 11/14/10 22:19pm]

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Reply #59 posted 11/15/10 6:38pm

Zinzi

avatar

FauxReal said:

SUPRMAN said:

It's not the lions you have to worry about.

Hippos kill more people than any other animal in Africa.

No one's is going to believe that though . . . .

Fascinating facts about the hippo

The hippo’s yawn is not a sign of sleepiness or boredom but is actually a threat gesture, displaying long, thick, razor-sharp canine teeth, or tusks, with which it is capable of biting a small boat in half. Being fearlessly protective of their turf and young, hippos have killed hundreds of people in Africa – more than any other wild animal.

Hippopotamus amphibius means “river horse.” The hippo, weighing 1 800 kg (4,000 pounds) and more, lives in Africa, south of the Sahara and along the length of the Nile river, although its range once included Asia and large parts of Europe. Hippos prefer rivers with deep water and nearby reed beds and grasslands, but are also found in salt-water areas near river mouths, and in lakes in Central Africa. They are hoofed vegetarians, feeding on grass, fallen fruit, and occasionally on cultivated crops such as sugar cane or corn during the night. They spend most of the day in the water.

Although not part of the Big Five, the hippo is the third biggest land animal, slightly smaller but heavier than a white rhino (the elephant is the biggest). In spite of its huge size – 3 metres (12 feet) in length, 1,5 metres (five feet) tall, with a mouth measuring a half metre (two feet) across – the hippopotamus can outrun a human. The bellowing of a bull hippo measures an ear-splitting 115 decibels, sounding like the roar of a lion. (The blue whale is the loudest animal, calling out at up to 188 decibels.)

Nearly all of the famous African explorers and hunters – Livingstone, Stanley, Burton, Selous, Speke, DuChaillu – had boating mishaps with hippos. All considered the hippo to be a wantonly malicious beast. Spencer Tyron, a hunter, was killed while hunting near the shores of Lake Rukwa, Tanzania. A bull hippo turned over the dugout canoe from which Tyron was shooting, and bit off his head and shoulders.

Recent DNA evidence suggests that the hippopotamus is more closely related to cetaceans (whales and dolphins) than it is to any other artiodactyl (even-toed hoofed mammal).

Hippopotumus
A hippopotamus and a pygmy hippopotamus

The hippo's yawn is a threat gesture
The tusk-like incisors and canines grow continuously. They are ivory, valued even more highly than an elephant’s because they do not turn yellow with age. George Washington’s false teeth were not made of wood, as is commonly believed, but were carved from the tusks of a hippopotamus.

The ears close automatically when under water
The ears and nostrils – located at the top of the head – close automatically when the animal is under water. It has practically no hair, and its smooth skin is quite delicate. The hippo’s skin exudes a red, oily liquid that keeps the skin moist and protected when it is out of water. The liquid has lead to a myth that the hippo sweats blood.

Hippo and young
One young is born at a time, after a gestation of around 230 days. Births usually occur in months of heavy rainfall, but can occur year-round. Young hippos will also bask on their mother’s back. A group of hippos is called a “bloat.”



See: Fascinating facts about the hippo

http://didyouknow.org/animals/hippo/

I believe it. This isn't nearly the first time I've heard as much. I couldn't imagine death by hippo. That would suck.

Edit: A testament to their ruthlessness, a hippo here kills for a new pair of boots...

[Edited 11/14/10 22:19pm]

LOL it's like it's smoking a crocodile cigar XD XD XD

*roll sopranos music*

''now watch what you say or they'll be calling you a radical, a liberal, a fanatical criminal''
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