There is a world somewhere between reality and fiction. Although ignored by many, it is very real and so are those living in it. This forum is about the natural world. Here, wild animals will be heard and respected. The forum offers a glimpse into an unknown world as well as a room with a view on the present and the future. Anyone able to speak on behalf of those living in the emerald forest and the deep blue sea is invited to join.
Thank you, dear friend! I was deeply moved by the sizanani and skkoro YouTube of thanda impi, which was famous for lame. They showed a rare sight in the ordinary world of lions! The sight of knocking down a buffalo or giraffe alone and handing out meals to brothers who hurt their legs really made me cry.
I'm sure mapogos. majins etc...Many I study lions and like them, but I feel that the lives of sizanani and skkoro are a little different.
If you look at the video of them and dread rock hunting alone, it's amazing, but the average other lion is not that capable of hunting? The two lions, Thanda Impi, survived alone and reappeared, surprising them, reversing their expectations that they would always have died.
But these days, I'm reading several forums with a translator, and people are discussing that they're going to die soon after seeing lions falling alone or becoming nomadic. I'm confused...
Can you explain how difficult it is for a lion to be nomadic or survive alone?
And do lions feel sadness, loneliness, and compassion? Looking at sizanani and skko, which were a little different from ruthless mapogo, I thought there might be something like sympathy for lions.
I am known as the wildest breed of three dogs (not a human-improved breed of dog, but a natural breed that originated on Korean soil, and I am known to hunt myself and have a very smart breed or personality. be noted for one's lack of social skills It is the ancestor of the Japanese Shiba dog.) I raised a dog. He is the most dominant and strong dog, and the second dog to be raised is a weak and small dog that was raised by abandoned dogs.
I even saw the weak little dogs yielding the meat they were eating.
The strong dog always tried to protect the weaker dogs and even let the little dog take the meat from his mouth.
However, this strong dominant dog always tried to drag me there when he met a dog that was always bigger and at least twice as big as himself, and even if a regular-sized dog or small dog bothered him and bit him, he ran away or avoided his seat.
However, when I saw a big, fierce barking dog, he never obeyed and not tried to rush back.
The dog had no interest in fighting, but he always showed mercy for handing out food. It was an amazing life!
(Animal behavior expert said, "I've been teaching my dog for more than 25 years, but compared to this breed characteristic, I've never seen my dog's sociality and personality before," adding, "It's special."
Then is the case of sizanani and skkoro a little special like my dog? I think animals also feel emotions.
What do your friends think?
And one more thing I'm curious about...
I remember all the videos and pictures of mapogo before he died. Even when makhulu was over 13 years old, she fought and in the last photo she looked not very sick or skinny with pretty boy.
They were also pictured hunting and dining together.
At this point I start to feel confused.
I don't mean to compare but I happened to see Avoca Dark Mane's buffalo injury and I saw photos and videos before he died.
It was so sad, pitiful, and strange.
I thought he was a DM from Majingilane but I think he's a different lion with the same name! Because in the majingilane forum, the members all said they died in 2017-2018.
Their ages are abstract, but I think they are about 12 years old, so it's hard to understand why they look so skinny and aging.
The average lifespan of wild lions is 10 to 15 years old, and they already looked remarkably senile years before they died.
Why is there a big difference in aging even at the same age?
Even if it's not tuberculosis, somehow it's strange that the aging is too fast.
Mr T would have been over ten years old when he died, but at the time he looked neither senile nor skinny.
Is it a matter of genes?
I feel extremely sad and guilty every time these beautiful and precious lions return to part of nature... It may be bad for my mental health, but I can't get out of it because I fell in love with lions.
What about friends from other countries who like lions?
Does everyone just coolly accept death as nature?
I am ashamed that I am the only one who seems to fall into depression and tears, but I am not attached to any one group, but I suffer from the old, sick, skinny appearance of all lions, death by humans, and poaching.
Is it prohibited to express the sadness of lions here? I am not familiar with the rules of the forum.
I hope this long article is translated properly, and I thank everyone and write it from afar with love!!