That animal runs and looks alot like the thylacine the doyles got on film in the 70's. I think your on to something there, that area looks like a hot spot lots of prey .Good luck !
It's a formidable beast as the kangaroos clear out It's very flexible thru it's back and it's gait is very cat like I'd say it's either a panther or a Tassie tiger as the tail is so long and it moves very swiftly As I said in a earlier post I seen one up the top of putty Rd halfway between singleton and Wilberforce so personally I know for a fact that they are alive
Not overly sure to what this is, do you recon it takes flight intimidated by a deer heading over to it.... At 10x zoom and angle running positioning much similar to the sequence from the Doyle footage.... Nice work mate!
Can hear someone's cattle dog or kelpie off in the distance. Can always pick them by their bark. The one bounding diagonally up hill is not a dog or dingo, canids backs don't arch and bend as they run and not bound like that thing.
The first clip had that awkward looking gait, with alternate landing of the front paws, with the rear end kicking up in the air, making it look like it had an injured paw. I'd say that the second clip is a fox and the third clip a wombat rooting around. As is said below, I too immediately thought the first clip was similar to the Doyle clip albeit in your clip the alternate front paw landing gait stands out better.
The zoom in and slow down should include the second part of the 'run away', the tail seemd more specific to a tiger. We don't have the fox in tas, but aren't those tails fluffy?
Looks like a fox or possibly a dog. Note the flexibility in its tail as it runs. Now take a look at a video of the last Thylacine in captivity. Notice how the tail of a Thylacine is stiff like a broomstick and the gait is rather awkward unlike this creature. Furthermore, when it first walks into frame and stands still the ears look to be pointed. This is not a Thylacine. The second creature is an obvious wombat.
I didn’t get a strong feeling for the type of animal based on its running style. I did think that it’s using all its legs and I see no sign of injury. Neither the word *fox* nor the word *injured* jumped out at me.
Even though Thylacines have that awkward gait in the back legs where they bounce on the left leg and therefore roll the pelvis giving that injured and limping look I think sometimes they run more normally on both back legs.
A “big quoll”. Hahaha it is hilarious how people do not recognize things, just because of money projects and shit. It is hilarious! You have so many videos of thylacine. So many…
It's hard to tell. The rear legs appear to come together in the first few bounds which is not fox like but more marsupial. In the middle of the clip the rear legs become independent. It's from a distance even with this great camera therefore it's hard to tell. I'm 60/40 based on the rear legs coming together. The roos were well aware of the animal and the deer big enough to follow it.
Ok, mate we need to talk - look I love the thylacine and would love to see one and i do believe there could be small remote pockets of them ( new gunie mainly ) but this video come on its so far away it could literally be anything, a fox, a dog, dingo etc ( just zoomed into the first clip the tail is bushy so it’s probably a fox - thylacines had a straight no fluff tail ) like come on man - but do keep trying to find one hopefully it will turn up but this is not it - 2nd clip is literally a wombat round head flat eats, big bottom walking same way etc
@ if you zoom into the first video and zoom into the backside of it - you can see black around the tail and in the shape of a fluffy fox tail obviously it’s black because hair has no heat signature so it’s black
I'm not 100% sure but I think it was a Dingo by the way that deer was reacting I'd have to go there and check for prints...purely scientific purposes got nothing to do with all those deer hanging around!!😅
I can't say with any certainty mate... it's got a long tail. Keep amassing footage though, prints and scat too (we know what happened to the New Guinea ones in Adelaide!).. and best of luck. Have any of the other Thylacine blokes given you an opinion?
Firstly this place has a problem with kangaroos. Until someone comes up with a live tas tiger or a fresh dead one l believe they died out a long time ago.
It looks pretty small once again? It's not evidence of hunting either? It looks less than half the size of a sheep? Either another baby thylacine or a big qoull?
The calls in the background are dog(s), certainly not fox. The predator appears to be a dog. There is no movement shown that is not typical of a dog as any dog-owner should readily accept.
Well the first one is clearly a man 😂 Why are people guessing 3 animals? Aren’t there only 2? The last two videos it said same animal, different camera. That’s definitely a wombat. First one running…. Yeah you’ve got me. Definitely not a fox and doesn’t exactly move like a wild dog.
Chill Dave my friend. I've no idea what this animal was that's why I uploaded it. There are plenty of foxes around, so this animal could quite possibly be a fox, there is a few dogs barking in the distance so could be a dog. The animal does seem quite long on the body however. But Dave, I just love filming my local wildlife, on this night I filmed what was obviously a hunt going on, all the animals on this paddock were highly on edge and scattering all over the place as if they didn't know where the danger was coming from. If this animal was a fox, was it hunting with other foxes, if so that's highly interesting they are usually lone hunters. I found that super interesting and nothing delusional about it. Later on that same night in the far distance a group of 6 or so roos, dance / jump around 3 or four big trees for around 4 1/2hrs. I'm not sure what they were doing or this has been witnessed before, were they doing a mating ritual? Who, knows but again I found it super interesting. I'll tell you something Dave, there is far worse stuff on the internet than this delusional crap.
Just another of the now dozens of tiresomely blurry and totally inconclusive "thylacine videos" that keep annoyingly cropping up that do ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to prove anything.... sigh.... so, again, as usual, nothing to see here... Carry on... Next...
That animal runs and looks alot like the thylacine the doyles got on film in the 70's. I think your on to something there, that area looks like a hot spot lots of prey .Good luck !
No it doesn't. The Doyle footage is much more Kangaroo like. This animal is not. It could be anything.
This reminds me of the 'Doyle' footage, same gait and build/shape of animal.
That last animal is definitely a wombat.
Gee, are you sure?? 🙃
Yes, it is❤
@@johntinsley7563 Well, it was either that or a penguin.
Another Excellent video Mr Ambiguous
Thermal scope is a decent bit of kit, good luck with your project, even though I’m a doubter.
It's a formidable beast as the kangaroos clear out
It's very flexible thru it's back and it's gait is very cat like
I'd say it's either a panther or a Tassie tiger as the tail is so long and it moves very swiftly
As I said in a earlier post I seen one up the top of putty Rd halfway between singleton and Wilberforce so personally I know for a fact that they are alive
So when you putting trail cameras in the area for real video to see more clearer?
Not overly sure to what this is, do you recon it takes flight intimidated by a deer heading over to it.... At 10x zoom and angle running positioning much similar to the sequence from the Doyle footage....
Nice work mate!
I might be wrong but at 1:33, I’m sure I saw Frank from Donnie Darko.
Can hear someone's cattle dog or kelpie off in the distance. Can always pick them by their bark. The one bounding diagonally up hill is not a dog or dingo, canids backs don't arch and bend as they run and not bound like that thing.
The first clip had that awkward looking gait, with alternate landing of the front paws, with the rear end kicking up in the air, making it look like it had an injured paw. I'd say that the second clip is a fox and the third clip a wombat rooting around.
As is said below, I too immediately thought the first clip was similar to the Doyle clip albeit in your clip the alternate front paw landing gait stands out better.
The zoom in and slow down should include the second part of the 'run away', the tail seemd more specific to a tiger.
We don't have the fox in tas, but aren't those tails fluffy?
Thanks, another good video.
Well, that looked clearly like a fox with the fluffy tail....
Looks like a fox or possibly a dog. Note the flexibility in its tail as it runs. Now take a look at a video of the last Thylacine in captivity. Notice how the tail of a Thylacine is stiff like a broomstick and the gait is rather awkward unlike this creature. Furthermore, when it first walks into frame and stands still the ears look to be pointed. This is not a Thylacine. The second creature is an obvious wombat.
it's there, our friend!
First one maybe, second one a fox, third one a wombat.
Very interesting, it looks like a canine at the first glance but if you inspect closer the tail appears to be stiff.
foxes can have stiff tails too, theres a few videos of foxes running while their tails look stiff
its not a thylacine its actually a fox because the ankles are high up whereas thylacine's ankles are really low to the ground
As soon as I zoomed in..I saw bushy tail.Instant disappointment.I truly was hoping
Since we can't be sure of what it is, then it is most likely a Thylacine. That's just how these things work, ya know.
The last animal in the video, is it a wombat? 6:40
I can't tell what the first one is. Dog? But then it's tail seems too long for a dog? And the second one is a speed bump 😂
Nailed it again. Well done mate.
Valeu, saudações desde Brasil.
If you look carefully, you can see Mad Max poking his head around a tree trunk.
I didn’t get a strong feeling for the type of animal based on its running style. I did think that it’s using all its legs and I see no sign of injury. Neither the word *fox* nor the word *injured* jumped out at me.
1st one is maybe a dog, 2nd definitely a wombat
Even though Thylacines have that awkward gait in the back legs where they bounce on the left leg and therefore roll the pelvis giving that injured and limping look I think sometimes they run more normally on both back legs.
To me it scanters along very much like that footage in the 70s through the caravan park.. the tail is definitely not fox like..
The animal digging in the ground at the end was a wombat by the looks of it.
A “big quoll”. Hahaha it is hilarious how people do not recognize things, just because of money projects and shit. It is hilarious! You have so many videos of thylacine. So many…
it looks like it could have been a thylacine to me. the last creature is a wombat. no issues with that one.
Love the content ! surely you can catch one already 🤣
No tail on the wombat this time 🤔
The last animal is definetly a Wombat
We all heard n saw the dogs , but @5:00 an interesting gate and those hips came up heaps high end of bound 🤷🏿♂️
First definitely a taz second one I don’t know do you have wombats down there? That’s what first entered my mind.
It's hard to tell.
The rear legs appear to come together in the first few bounds which is not fox like but more marsupial.
In the middle of the clip the rear legs become independent.
It's from a distance even with this great camera therefore it's hard to tell.
I'm 60/40 based on the rear legs coming together. The roos were well aware of the animal and the deer big enough to follow it.
A fox and a wombat.
I am 99.99% POSITIVE that this thermal HD video shows a Thylacine. The wide backend and tail match what the Thylacine would look like.
I would so love you to get a clear picture of a thylacine. If you ever did you’d have to keep it a secret.
Why keep it a secret???
Good captures old mate…
The bush is thick with life…
Ok, mate we need to talk - look I love the thylacine and would love to see one and i do believe there could be small remote pockets of them ( new gunie mainly ) but this video come on its so far away it could literally be anything, a fox, a dog, dingo etc ( just zoomed into the first clip the tail is bushy so it’s probably a fox - thylacines had a straight no fluff tail ) like come on man - but do keep trying to find one hopefully it will turn up but this is not it - 2nd clip is literally a wombat round head flat eats, big bottom walking same way etc
Where are you seeing something with a fluffy tail? lmao.
@ if you zoom into the first video and zoom into the backside of it - you can see black around the tail and in the shape of a fluffy fox tail obviously it’s black because hair has no heat signature so it’s black
Runs like a Greyhound
I'd love to think it's a thylacine, but looks like wild dogs perhaps Alsatian's or Dingo/Alsatian cross...but hard to tell
Yep that was definitely a thylacine running across the paddock.
I'm not 100% sure but I think it was a Dingo by the way that deer was reacting I'd have to go there and check for prints...purely scientific purposes got nothing to do with all those deer hanging around!!😅
❤
The first animal has dark stocking legs , a long tail , and stripes on its back looks like one to me
I can't say with any certainty mate... it's got a long tail.
Keep amassing footage though, prints and scat too (we know what happened to the New Guinea ones in Adelaide!).. and best of luck.
Have any of the other Thylacine blokes given you an opinion?
I'm that guy who would usually say 'fox,' but this time I can't... I can't even say 'wild dog.' This one has me wondering.
I dunno if it’s just me, but the first animal seems to have a big head.
Are there any roo's here today
Firstly this place has a problem with kangaroos. Until someone comes up with a live tas tiger or a fresh dead one l believe they died out a long time ago.
way more convincing than your previous one you posted. I think that's a mangy fox with a hurt leg. This.. the gait is very similar
very long tail
No Tiger there
Says it's only 720p!
goes up to 2160p
That last one is for sure a wombat. Why asking? Thats not even close to the other one 🤷
It looks pretty small once again? It's not evidence of hunting either? It looks less than half the size of a sheep? Either another baby thylacine or a big qoull?
FOX
wombat at the end video
The calls in the background are dog(s), certainly not fox.
The predator appears to be a dog. There is no movement shown that is not typical of a dog as any dog-owner should readily accept.
sup
I think it's a Thylacine running in the distance
Set a trap omg allready
Well the first one is clearly a man 😂 Why are people guessing 3 animals? Aren’t there only 2? The last two videos it said same animal, different camera. That’s definitely a wombat. First one running…. Yeah you’ve got me. Definitely not a fox and doesn’t exactly move like a wild dog.
For goodness sake, you are filming foxes, stop this delusional crap.
Chill Dave my friend. I've no idea what this animal was that's why I uploaded it. There are plenty of foxes around, so this animal could quite possibly be a fox, there is a few dogs barking in the distance so could be a dog. The animal does seem quite long on the body however.
But Dave, I just love filming my local wildlife, on this night I filmed what was obviously a hunt going on, all the animals on this paddock were highly on edge and scattering all over the place as if they didn't know where the danger was coming from. If this animal was a fox, was it hunting with other foxes, if so that's highly interesting they are usually lone hunters. I found that super interesting and nothing delusional about it.
Later on that same night in the far distance a group of 6 or so roos, dance / jump around 3 or four big trees for around 4 1/2hrs. I'm not sure what they were doing or this has been witnessed before, were they doing a mating ritual? Who, knows but again I found it super interesting.
I'll tell you something Dave, there is far worse stuff on the internet than this delusional crap.
Just another of the now dozens of tiresomely blurry and totally inconclusive
"thylacine videos" that keep annoyingly cropping up that do ABSOLUTELY NOTHING
to prove anything.... sigh.... so, again, as usual, nothing to see here...
Carry on... Next...