Ever seen a chupacabra?

Quote:
I'm not sure that's accurate, just watch any of the "Animal Cops" rescue shows, look at some of the photos on here of coyotes, foxes and so on folks have trapped or shot or scroll down and look at the dog here: (WARNING, it's pretty graphic)

http://animalpetdoctor.homestead.com/mange.html

I always kinda go with Occam's razor"pluralitas non est ponenda sine necessitate" ("plurality should not be posited without necessity") or, simply, "the simplest explanation is usually the correct one".
big_smile.png


Without a bit of input from the government or the media, it still looks like a coyote with mange to me!
wink.png
 
Quote:
I'm not sure that's accurate, just watch any of the "Animal Cops" rescue shows, look at some of the photos on here of coyotes, foxes and so on folks have trapped or shot or scroll down and look at the dog here: (WARNING, it's pretty graphic)

http://animalpetdoctor.homestead.com/mange.html

I always kinda go with Occam's razor"pluralitas non est ponenda sine necessitate" ("plurality should not be posited without necessity") or, simply, "the simplest explanation is usually the correct one".
big_smile.png


Without a bit of input from the government or the media, it still looks like a coyote with mange to me!
wink.png


each dog in your link still has some hair of sorts and the Somewhat hairless dog has red mange which leaves scabbing due to parasites. These so called chupacaruba animals Have No hair Without the scabs or scars the White blotches of skin are actualy the Short hair of the dog Please Post me a picture of a Completely Bald Dog without the scarring A smooth texture of dry skin Unaffected by fly bites and the infestation of Parasitic mites. As we have seen in the so called chupacaruba. The joy of life is that were all intitled to our very own opinions. As a Dog breeder and rescuer of the APBT I have seen even the worst cases of mange. Pitbulls have very thin hair coyotes have very long and corse hair. In the wild a dog affected by mange usually dies from infection When they reach there worse stages.
I am not disputing that its not ethnically possible for these to be mange infected animals. I am disputing that there are No apparent signs of the scabbing and scarring of mange in these animals.
chupa.jpg
chup.jpg
these are a few pics of the So called chupacaruba. and this is a close up pic of a racoon Notice the partched skin and almost human like fingers.
coon.jpg
In the image posted by Noodle Notice the more paw like Feet on the "hairless racoon". It resembles nothing at all like the 5 fingered coon that can so easly and nimbly Open locks and cunning devices Its more of a broad paw of sorts. the fun thing about these topics are we can let our minds wander and we can use our own thought processes to decifer What is and what isnt Unknown to us as individuals. Its definatly not a topic worth debating over.
As for my personal beliefs There is so much out in that big huge world that we know nothing of and So many things have migrated to the us from distant and far away places. that to me life is definatly Full of suprises. and in a world as we know it anything is truly possible. (if we let our imaginations carry us. On a quick note take a peek at this government coverup. and then you be the judge. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roswell_UFO_Incident
 
Quote:
Hey, believe whatever you want, I'm not going to split hairs
smile.png
with you nor am I going to debate how many hairs can be left on a poor pooch with mange before it’s not “hairless”.

BUT if you look at the photo in the original video, linked in the first post in this thread there is no way you can tell if the critter is haired, hairless or much of anything else about it. Looks to me like a dog or a coyote. If the people who saw it say it was hairless the most likely way a dog or coyote gets hairless---or fur challenged or whatever---is mange. Although, come to think, I do know a boxer mix who had some major patching issues after spending time with a four year old and some electric clippers but that's a different story....
wink.png
I still go with Occam's razor before government cover up but you are certainly entitled to believe whatever you believe.

You CAN however tell, as someone else already pointed out that those are raccoon tracks that do not look to me to have been made at the spot the photo was taken.

But I'm done here. I'm off to the thread where the guy in Loch Ness is using his broody silkie to incubate the giant egg he found down by the lake…..
wink.png
 
Quote:
Hey, believe whatever you want, I'm not going to split hairs
smile.png
with you nor am I going to debate how many hairs can be left on a poor pooch with mange before it’s not “hairless”.

BUT if you look at the photo in the original video, linked in the first post in this thread there is no way you can tell if the critter is haired, hairless or much of anything else about it. Looks to me like a dog or a coyote. If the people who saw it say it was hairless the most likely way a dog or coyote gets hairless---or fur challenged or whatever---is mange. Although, come to think, I do know a boxer mix who had some major patching issues after spending time with a four year old and some electric clippers but that's a different story....
wink.png
I still go with Occam's razor before government cover up but you are certainly entitled to believe whatever you believe.

You CAN however tell, as someone else already pointed out that those are raccoon tracks that do not look to me to have been made at the spot the photo was taken.

But I'm done here. I'm off to the thread where the guy in Loch Ness is using his broody silkie to incubate the giant egg he found down by the lake…..
wink.png


No No wait for me I wanna go to
sad.png
and My apoligies if i seemed to be attempting to split hairs After I saw the ligon, and zorse, and tigon and half killer whale and dolphin I knew the horizon was huge LOL
 
Quote:
Liggers and Tigons are HUGE. They prove that whole hybrid vigor thing. But I’m not sure, when a lion or tiger is plenty big enough eat you with no problem, you want to cross them to get something with bigger teeth and bigger claws and a bigger appetite that can eat you even easier!
roll.png


I kinda get the aesthetics of a zorse but again..... The whole hybrid vigor things says you are looking at basically a striped mule, probably, given it is half wild thing, with a lousy disposition.
 
Quote:
I'm not sure that's accurate, just watch any of the "Animal Cops" rescue shows, look at some of the photos on here of coyotes, foxes and so on folks have trapped or shot or scroll down and look at the dog here: (WARNING, it's pretty graphic)

http://animalpetdoctor.homestead.com/mange.html

I always kinda go with Occam's razor"pluralitas non est ponenda sine necessitate" ("plurality should not be posited without necessity") or, simply, "the simplest explanation is usually the correct one".
big_smile.png


Without a bit of input from the government or the media, it still looks like a coyote with mange to me!
wink.png


each dog in your link still has some hair of sorts and the Somewhat hairless dog has red mange which leaves scabbing due to parasites. These so called chupacaruba animals Have No hair Without the scabs or scars the White blotches of skin are actualy the Short hair of the dog Please Post me a picture of a Completely Bald Dog without the scarring A smooth texture of dry skin Unaffected by fly bites and the infestation of Parasitic mites. As we have seen in the so called chupacaruba. The joy of life is that were all intitled to our very own opinions. As a Dog breeder and rescuer of the APBT I have seen even the worst cases of mange. Pitbulls have very thin hair coyotes have very long and corse hair. In the wild a dog affected by mange usually dies from infection When they reach there worse stages.
I am not disputing that its not ethnically possible for these to be mange infected animals. I am disputing that there are No apparent signs of the scabbing and scarring of mange in these animals. http://i145.photobucket.com/albums/r212/somanytears_album/chupa.jpg http://i145.photobucket.com/albums/r212/somanytears_album/chup.jpg these are a few pics of the So called chupacaruba. and this is a close up pic of a racoon Notice the partched skin and almost human like fingers. http://i145.photobucket.com/albums/r212/somanytears_album/coon.jpg In the image posted by Noodle Notice the more paw like Feet on the "hairless racoon". It resembles nothing at all like the 5 fingered coon that can so easly and nimbly Open locks and cunning devices Its more of a broad paw of sorts. the fun thing about these topics are we can let our minds wander and we can use our own thought processes to decifer What is and what isnt Unknown to us as individuals. Its definatly not a topic worth debating over.
As for my personal beliefs There is so much out in that big huge world that we know nothing of and So many things have migrated to the us from distant and far away places. that to me life is definatly Full of suprises. and in a world as we know it anything is truly possible. (if we let our imaginations carry us. On a quick note take a peek at this government coverup. and then you be the judge. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roswell_UFO_Incident

The first looks like a hairless rat XD

And the second kinda looks like... actually, it looks a little like a hairless possum with fangs.

I'm kinda hoping chupacabras are real- that would be cool! Unless they were some evil mythical thing that also proves that ghosts and stuff are real... Half-hoping, I guess. News are just trying to scare people by saying "OMG THIS IS SO EVIL!" But really, it's like discovering a new bird of prey or livestock. If you were born with them being here and knowing, they wouldn't seem scary- kinda like tigers.
 
Hispanic culture names several mystical creatures, 3 of which are El Cucuy (pronounced koo koo E) that takes bad children away never to return them (or eats them), a Lechuza that has the body of an owl and the head of a human that if you are bad will come and get you, and the chupacabra that kills farm animals by sucking their blood. I can see the origination of the first 2; to keep restless children safely in bed so as not to have them wandering around in the night and such. But the chupacabra is different; it wasn't a mythical creature to scare children, it was a thing for YOU to look out for...

I don't know if there are so many strange things that don't fit into our normal coyote/coon predator catagories that no two chupacabras look alike or what, BUT, I don't pretend to know everything about what exists. I have never 'seen' the waves that make radios, micorwaves or cell phones work but I know that they exist and nobody knew that when my grandmother was born. Who knows what will be discovered that exists all around us when my granddaughter is my age. Keeps my wondering....
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom