Trail Animals

Binhill1

🍊 Tango Man 🍊
Mar 7, 2019
3,430
5,321
Scotland
Found these old traditionally dressed Haggis hunters a while back on the trail down at Ecclefechan. Luckily they kept hold of them till I got past they can be pretty viscous when hungry.

IMG-20231003-WA0001.jpg
 

Mabman

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Feb 28, 2018
1,126
1,856
Oregon USA
I don't have a picture but there is a gal on Igram that posts pics of her dog that she has trained to find Chanterelle mushrooms....they grow here and we use our bikes to get into areas that people normally can't get to on foot but I know that we ride by patches all the time and that dog would be a great trail companion!
 

Rod B.

Well-known member
Aug 18, 2021
532
926
USA, Orange County Ca.
The most dangerous animal of all is the Southern California Trail Cougar. Rarely will you hear them approaching. One moment you'll be happily shredding the gnar. Without warning, , the Trail Cougar will appear out of nowhere, fixing her gaze upon you, and the next thing you know you'll find yourself upside down in the air with your bike headed straight for you.

View attachment 126402
Reminds me of two puppies fighting under a blanket...
 

Nicho

Captain Caption
Subscriber
Jan 4, 2020
1,052
1,947
Furness, South Cumbria.
Technically speaking this is a terrible photo as I had to use digital zoom on my phone (🤮) but considering I'm in the UK and this was t

Found these old traditionally dressed Haggis hunters a while back on the trail down at Ecclefechan. Luckily they kept hold of them till I got past they can be pretty viscous when hungry.

View attachment 126477
They are not real haggises. Real ones have shorter legs on one side so they can run around steep Scottish mountains without falling over.
 

steve_sordy

Wedding Crasher
Nov 5, 2018
9,097
9,585
Lincolnshire, UK
This is the most aggressive thing I've seen for a while.
Pines Tadpoles.jpg

Two weeks later they nearly had me off the bike!
They were migrating from the pond into the woods as half-inch long frogs, all black against the dark earth trail. There were millions, if not hundreds of millions of them. Not even a flock of starlings and blackbirds could made a dent in their numbers.
 

steve_sordy

Wedding Crasher
Nov 5, 2018
9,097
9,585
Lincolnshire, UK
I was travelling with a bunch of locals in Sweden almost 40 years ago. It was May and I'd been told that morning that they had had a meter of snow in the town centre (Norkopping) the previous week. We were out in the sticks, travelling to the Baltic coast, and I asked if they had bears or wolves in the forest. They told me that they only come over from Russia when the winter is a bad one, but that they get lots of Moose. There are many active hunters looking and about 100,000 Moose are killed each year. Just as they were telling me this the convoy of estate cars (Volvo, naturally) pulled to a halt and there was a Moose and two calves grazing by the roadside. That night we had Moose on the menu, in honor of the occasion. :)(y)
 

irie

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Subscriber
May 2, 2022
2,751
2,827
Chichester, W.Sussex, UK
We live in Chichester, West Sussex, UK. Two days ago noticed a very large bird in one of the large Oak trees in front of our house making a cry I had never heard before. Just as I grabbed my phone to get a picture it flew away but I got a fuzzy shot of it. A "bird bloke" I know photo enhanced my pic and confirmed what I thought- it was a White Tailed Eagle which have been seen in the South of the UK but to my knowledge never before nearby! Think they were reintroduced to the Isle of Wight in 2019.
 

Binhill1

🍊 Tango Man 🍊
Mar 7, 2019
3,430
5,321
Scotland
We live in Chichester, West Sussex, UK. Two days ago noticed a very large bird in one of the large Oak trees in front of our house making a cry I had never heard before. Just as I grabbed my phone to get a picture it flew away but I got a fuzzy shot of it. A "bird bloke" I know photo enhanced my pic and confirmed what I thought- it was a White Tailed Eagle which have been seen in the South of the UK but to my knowledge never before nearby! Think they were reintroduced to the Isle of Wight in 2019.
Yes that's like the Basking shark we caught on a trawler 1970 no mobile phones them days . I could have got a few free drams if I had that on my phone. 😄
 

Jackware

Fat-tyred Freakazoid
Subscriber
Oct 30, 2018
2,106
2,323
Lancashire
We live in Chichester, West Sussex, UK. Two days ago noticed a very large bird in one of the large Oak trees in front of our house making a cry I had never heard before. Just as I grabbed my phone to get a picture it flew away but I got a fuzzy shot of it. A "bird bloke" I know photo enhanced my pic and confirmed what I thought- it was a White Tailed Eagle which have been seen in the South of the UK but to my knowledge never before nearby! Think they were reintroduced to the Isle of Wight in 2019.
If you can hear it next time this works well?

Screenshot_20240320-163752.png
 

Planemo

E*POWAH Elite
Mar 12, 2021
605
706
Essex UK
I'm just gobsmacked that as a relatively educated 51 year old I had no idea that a Haggis was a real animal. And a damn weird looking one at that. Crucially, I feel cheated that Attenborough hasn't covered them. Some biologist he is, won't be bothering with him anymore.
 

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