@@davidowens1132 Years ago there was a feral that took up residence under a shed in my backyard. Wanting to acquire it, one day when it was about 10ft from me and staring intently, I gave it the slow blink. It jumped straight up about 1-1/5ft, spun in the air, looked at me in shock, and ran. I did manage over time to coax her into my house. Had her for 18yrs.
One of defining things about big cats is that they do not purr. That is by the way. a thing only smaller cats do, they are defined in two groups specifically by ability to do that instead of roar - among other things.
Try to give my cat a bath and she could join the violent killer team. I swear, Honey Badgers put posters up to swoon over the perfection of the application of spite and petty behavior.
I'd be happy with a Lynx, but the State won't allow it. They live in my neighborhood, just like deer, raccoons, bears, elk, and a few others. Have fun ---.. ---..
@@adiamondforever7890 in my area we have mountain lions and bears, with one black panther that was released years ago (by someone that wasn't supposed to have it). And the panther is the only one that hasn't killed any of my animals. I also find half eaten deer, about 1 every 6 months. The mountain lions start eating them from the rear. Even though they kill at the throat. And the state doesn't want people to protect their livestock, and I often wonder if they feel the same about the owners lives.
Tigers can't purr but they can chuff
I saw a video where a woman chuffed at her tiger and it chuffed back. So sweet. You could tell it loved her.
If they roar, they can't purr.
If they purr, they can't roar.
Came here to say this.
Tigers and cats use the slow eyeblink to show affection. The next when your cat blinks lazily at you, do it back.
@@davidowens1132 Years ago there was a feral that took up residence under a shed in my backyard. Wanting to acquire it, one day when it was about 10ft from me and staring intently, I gave it the slow blink.
It jumped straight up about 1-1/5ft, spun in the air, looked at me in shock, and ran.
I did manage over time to coax her into my house. Had her for 18yrs.
One of defining things about big cats is that they do not purr. That is by the way. a thing only smaller cats do, they are defined in two groups specifically by ability to do that instead of roar - among other things.
Another defining characteristic is the shape of the pupil. All Felis species have slitted pupils, all Panthera species have round pupils.
Ok give the author a little poetic license.
The cheetah and the puma are the largest purring cats.
Correct and those aren't Pantera species.
A honey badger, and its psychotic cousin the wolverine would scare everyone.
Try to give my cat a bath and she could join the violent killer team. I swear, Honey Badgers put posters up to swoon over the perfection of the application of spite and petty behavior.
Tigers on my favorite big cats that was an interesting story 88
I want a pet tiger!!!
Me too and a dragon. But I have to buy a bigger bed.
I too would love such a pet... but the cost of its diet would bankrupt me. Lol
I'd be happy with a Lynx, but the State won't allow it. They live in my neighborhood, just like deer, raccoons, bears, elk, and a few others. Have fun ---.. ---..
@@adiamondforever7890 cool.
@@adiamondforever7890 in my area we have mountain lions and bears, with one black panther that was released years ago (by someone that wasn't supposed to have it). And the panther is the only one that hasn't killed any of my animals. I also find half eaten deer, about 1 every 6 months. The mountain lions start eating them from the rear. Even though they kill at the throat.
And the state doesn't want people to protect their livestock, and I often wonder if they feel the same about the owners lives.
I don´t know about tigers buta cat does not wag its tail out off joy.