@@larsonfamilyhouse I agree about the head IF the mountain lion was healthy. This one as you can see from the rest of the body is emaciated. Without the fat the head also changes to look like this. The tail does look and has the markings of a mountain lion. The lack of hair is explainable as it appears to be hit by hair loss from an affliction. Perhaps that explains eating berries which a lion will resort to in this condition.
They gotta look at the geography of the location. Do they live by mountains? Forest? Then pull out every animal that lives there and boom you find the one. Not hard to do…..
Thinking the same thing or that weird dog with the huge head in the one el chupacabra video that police filmed running down the road. I fi remember right it was in texas also. Maybe a coy-dog with mainge?
In my experience, experts are rarely helpful. Or at least the ones they interview for corporate-style news. No discussion of the anatomy visible in the photos, no discussion of the tail, which looks nothing like a dogs.. there are a lot of issues with this news story, if you think about it
Has anyone noticed that it looks a lot like a thylacine without stripes? Perhaps some have survived and evolved, losing the stripes over generations. That would be an incredibly great discovery.
@@JoniMitchell-qi6hr now you may be on to something here! The elusive North American Tasmanian Devil Dog is so rare some question if it ever even existed! We both know better, perhaps they spotted one on camera finally!
I might know what this is. It looks like a real, known creature: an ancient species of North American hyena called a RUNNING HYENA (scientific name: Chasmaporthetes Ossifragus). They are usually thought of as extinct, except they really aren't, because people keep seeing them every once in a while. In the 1700s and 1800s, the nickname for these creatures was RINGDOCUS or SHUNKA WARAKIN. There is a taxidermied specimen of one of these at the Idaho Museum of Natural History in Pocatello.
@@doom6985 Chupacabras are different. They walk/hop upright and have hind feet like kangaroos, have smooth black leather skin, and have a head & spiked crest down the back of their neck like a lizard. This is mostly according to people in Puerto Rico and South America who see them occasionally and all report the same description. And the running hyena is just a normal but rare mortal creature, while the chupcabras have an element of spiritual evil to them. Occasionally when forest rangers have run into coyotes with mange or wild feral Mexican Xoloitzcuintle dogs, they accidentally reported them as chupacabras, and then this skewed the public's perception of what a chupacabra really was.
Absolutely a coyote/dog cross. I call them "curs". I had one once and she was the best and most protective dog I had. She was so good, she broke a chain and caught a burglar before the police could get him. One of the officers adopted her on the spot. Only because my mom didn't like her. The Cur I had looked just like this one.
@@mweatherby2968 They are very sweet dogs, my sister had one she named Isis after the Egyptian Goddess. She caught her wild outside our town because the town wanted her put down (since she was basically a wild coyote) so she saved her and kept her. She became the sweetest and most loving companion to my sister and only ever bit someone ONCE out of fear and never again. She passed away about a year ago and my sister was and still is devastated. She lived a long and happy life; she was the only "dog" other than our pug who passed when I was 14 I ever really liked. Such amazing animals
It’s 100% canine. Have seen many different pictures over the years of mangy feral dogs that look exactly like this. Instead of jumping to crazy conclusions, let’s instead think of what is the most likely answer. It’s a canine of some sort, maybe hybridized, likely with mange, mystery solved.
Yes, it’s definitely a dog. It looks a lot like my dog. Same coloration and pointy ears. And he loves eating palm tree seeds and loquats that fall out it the tree.
I'm having a hard time deciding on being more amazed by the look of the creature or the fact that those pictures were not blurry at all...Take note,Sasquatch researchers!
lol yeah . there is one , or i think just one here in Arkansas roaming our little town. we have farms lands and natural springs so its been hanging around the secluded area of the Norwood farm fields and my property . it hasn't come after my goats yet but my livestock guardians may be keeping it at bey. It;s tail is short haired with a little bushy bunch at the end of it
Too bad she wasn't able to get video instead of just pictures, that might've made it more easily identifiable. I'm going to agree with those who think it's a coy-dog with mange. Definitely not a mountain lion, that's a canine snout. (Edit: and ears). Oh -- it's a saber-toothed wolf/bear/lion! 😊
Either a coyote with mange or this is the first confirmed sighting of a Tasmanian Tiger in over half a century after they’ve been reported to be extinct. Food for thought by the way - We’ve had research going on for decades now to “revive” extinct species and are currently in the process of bringing hybrid Wooly Mammoth’s back from fossil DNA. It is very easy to imagine how “new” versions of extinct animals could be reintroduced into the ecosystem without anyone knowing, this is all hypothetical.
I thought the same thing, but it lacks the tiger stripes on the hind end. The Tasmanian tiger is listed extinct, but many sightings have been documented down there, so your guess is as good as mine. However, how in the world would it make it to Texas if that was the case?
@@thebeeguy1044 Yeah I'm sure she's in love with the attention she's getting from this too. It makes her mundane life feel special. Now she's probably double her wine consumption and thinks she's Nancy Drew.
@@jamesbernsen3516 same colour as a lot of other animals. That's no mountain lion. Not even close. I happen to live in an area with a lot of them. Nice try though
A coydog, most likely. They can look totally different one side to the other, like the one in town that I thought was maybe a Lab before it turned to look at me and had a straight coyote face. Then we've had some out near me in the rural part of the county, that look more like feral mutts, often bigger than you'd think they'd be. I agree with the skin issues as well, mange can throw anyone off, just look at bears with it.
Animal artist here: that's a canine (either a coyote or a domesticated dog - it's difficult to tell which from the photos, but the ears make it appear to be a coyote) with mange. His (you can see testicles in one image) body shape and body/head ratio aren't right for a cougar.
I do agree with you but... Not a chance in hell that's a coyote with that snout. And are you sure that's testis? I also see nipples that are too big for a male. And when female canines breed A lot their "area" can change.
By the looks of it, I'd say It's very possible that a domesticated dog mated with a coyote... Crazier things have been known to happen in the wild lol, but whatever it is I Hope it's friendly and I hope that the next video about this furry mystery isn't because someone put it down. 🍀✌️
Pretty sure that's what happened coyote and dog mated.....theres a TH-cam video where a man had dog that had a coyote as a friend so it could be possible..
Cloning is illegal but possible, they can “make” animals out of thier DNA. Looks like a Tasmanian tiger. Explains the whole dogman phenomenon. Hybrids etc.
I was surprised when I first learned just how much a starving dingo with protruding ribs and extreme mange could look like a thylacine, especially from a distance. Mange creates so many of these supposed "monsters" and "chupacabras".
Its probably just a dog but don't rule out non-native animals. Americans like to import every wild animal into this country. So if anyone escaped we could see them on our streets. An example we have more tigers in this country than all the wild tigers in the world. As young kid I found a Chimpanzee here running around.
There were several Tasmania tigers that got loose after a ship wreck on the east coast. It’s believed that there might be a small population of them in the north east.
My maternal grandfather bought a coyote-dog hybrid, and had him for many years. The animal never barked, it just yipped and was super hilarious to be around. This animal, believe it or not, looks like a coyote-pit bull mix.
Same thought here. Whenever I think about a coy-dog my mind instantly goes to skinny and medium size This one’s thick It has to be one with a pitbull or something else that’s chonky
Could be. In fact that's actually very plausible and more so than some other weird or ridiculous theories all these other people or fools are coming up with in the comments section.
Coyotes and dogs can produce hybrids. And are getting common because of human settlement in close vicinity with coyote habitats. I have fostered a coydog hybrid, the result of a union between a female coyote and a male domestic dog in this case this one is a siberian husky. I am talking about my hybrid and not the one in the video, whatever that is.
Animal control is pathetic. I called them one time, because a group of 3 dogs surrounded me while walking and tried to attack me. I was able to get away and called. They would not send anyone unless I gave them all my information. I said the dogs are still there, please send someone so they don't attack a child or anyone for that matter. They wouldn't do it without my full name, address, and other information. They practically wanted an affidavit to protect the community. I said well if they attack someone, you're responsible and hung up.
@@oljimeagle It’s clearly not a member of Ursidae. The body profile is completely wrong, not to mention the tail & ears are a dead giveaway this is not a bear. This is a member of the Canidae family, & it does indeed have mange or a similar issue going on 👍
I’m in Arkansas and saw one of these mythical creatures too . I was riding my electric skateboard and it came out of the bushes chasing a baby deer . I asked the leprechaun riding on his back what the heck is that ? He told me “you better mind your own business if you know what’s good for you “ That’s exactly what I’m what I’m going to do .
Definitely a coyote mixed with a dog my dad had a pit bull and it breed with a wild female coyote and made some wild looking coy-dogs they would come a little closer to people but they where still wild and wouldn’t let you touch them but they would come lay on our porch from time to time as long as you where not outside or near that area
@@tygerstripes3752 Excuse me? You can even buy mange medicine that’s sold in a form of treats for the wild animals. Murder is always the first option for you, isn’t it?
Maybe. Maybe it is a wild or feral animal that has an immune issue and is more susceptible to mange mites. It is very odd that you immediately want to blame a person when this could easily be an example of just a mangy mountain lion or something. No need to blame humanity, we do enough awful shit that we don't need to pad our stats.
Would a rich Texas oil man from the 19th century when the last ones were still in large enough numbers for him to think it was cool to go to Tasmania and bring home a bunch of Thylacines and a few escaped and they are still a struggling population?
I've seen a strange coyote/dog-like animal a couple of times while riding my bike on Addicks Dam which horseshoes a large wild area. They had the wild colorations you'd expect on a coyote but they seemed much shorter in length and taller than a coyote. Also, I saw them in the middle of the day from a distance of only 20 or 30 yards and they acted too tame to be wild, but looked too wild to be tame. One other interesting feature was the tail....it looked like a very hairy tail you'd expect to see on a coyote but in the bright sunlight you could see a slight indication of the tail having a ringed pattern.
I believe this animal is called a Dhole . A Dhole is a wild dog but is not typical fond in Texas. It was probably brought over as an exotic pet or escaped a zoo. The tail has alot of missing fur. But it has the typical black end to the tail that most dholes do have. The black end to the tail fallows up the tall some ways. Also the very lage rounded ears with alot of fur inside the ears that sticks out in a lighter color is another clue. Wild dholes can come in many different reddish browns and blackish shades. But they all seem to have the same fur patterns. I'm pretty positive this is your unknown mystery dog . Please look up pictures of a wild dhole. I do believe most people would agree with me . The big rounded ears with the black ended tail are the biggest clues . Good luck to all and I hope this brings answers for everyone wondering :) P.S. I WOULDN'T BE WRIGHTNG THIS IF I THOUGHT I WAS WRONG.
At first, I thought it was an herbivore, as it looked like it was grazing, before she explained about the fruit tree and dropped fruit….wild canines would be more interested in eating fruit, than a domesticated dog. If you should discover it’s identity, I hope you’ll come back with a part two, and share that info with us. Thanks for the head scratcher!
Smart take, but wrong hindquarters. Probably some stray mongrel or domestic dog-coyote mongrel, judging by its apparent familiarity with suburban environement.
I agree with the skin issue assessment. You would be shocked at the before and after photos of dogs that have severe skin problems, mange. However, coyotes can get mange as well.
Where does the skin look like it has mange? This is a very clear image, so I’m confused, and for those calling this creature a Cougar please know the difference, cause you can’t be that stupid. Cats have short snouts and mouths. This creature head is huge, square shaped and long. No where near no type of feline that exist today. Closes creature this thing resembles is definitely a Tasmanian Tiger.
I saw an animal that looks just like this in the hope Ranch area of Santa Barbara, CA in June 2023. It was so fascinating, looking that I pulled my car over, got out, and I tried to take a picture of it, but it ran off when it saw me. I still think about going back to where I saw it to see if I can find it again, but I probably won’t.
There was a breeding pair of thylazine that broke loose during a train wreck back in the olden days. So it is possible that it's one of those descendants. I'm only saying this because they look eerily similar whenever you put pictures of them side by side it's anyone's guess though
I'm also wondering if somebody had a quote on quote pet hyena that got loose and didn't tell anybody about it cuz they don't want to get in trouble because it also looks a lot like a hyena
Wow it looks like the very elusive Mutt.....A dog that's mixed with a little bit of everything....Yeah I saw one in my living room yesterday..We named it Neo...
Yup. Give Neo mange (don't do that) and bingo. Chupacabra: coyote with mange. This thing is bigger and doesn't have mange as bad yet. It does not have sabre teeth. It had like a stick in its mouth. Edit: probably a coyote. I misjudged its size. Usually when they have mange, they get sickly and weigh like 20 lbs. This thing looks ~25-30 lbs. I'm glad my guess aligned with the zoo vets. Your dog, Neo, The One, sounds awesome BTW. He's a good boy and he probably knows it ( ihope). Give him some scritches from rando on internet (and remind him he's a good boy)
Also seen a strange looking four legged animal in East Texas crossing the highway at 3 in the morning. It was large as a Great Dane. It stopped once it crossed on my side of the highway. As I drove by it. Have no idea what it was
It’s a coyote with mange it is the most horrific way to go. They suffer a long, long time inflammation of the face ears joints lots of hair they get literally deformed.
I think it's a Carolina wild dog, also called an American dingo, based on its orange and white colouration, long ears, brushless tail, short fur, and location. However, it could just be a coydog.
@@nachomom-fk2bi That's a good guess. The body and ear structure looks about right for that. Poor thing needs help ASAP before it's too late, whatever breed it may be.
@@thebeeguy1044 we can chalk that up to evolution along with the shedding of the stripes. it has the same features as its early ancestors. prob needed to be a tad bigger this time around
This thing is very rare if you guys don't know what it is through the research I'm sure they've been saying they're extinct but not this. It's a blessing to see it out
@@TopHatNat Hahaha The camera on my latest phone is the worst I've ever seen. It actually looks like that filter that makes a photo look "cartoonized" - it's so pathetic. 🤣 🖼🤡 If I would've known, I never would have got this phone, but I'm definitely going to buy one with a better camera next time. 🙃 That said, it can still happen nowadays. Can't wait to see something spectacular & try to "document" it. 😂😂
I have seen exactly the same creature crossing a road in Ontario Canada, it surprised me and i was very puzzled by the fact that it didn't have any hair, it seemed to have a skin disease. Happy to see that other people saw it, because every time i was telling my story, people would say that it was probably just a dog or a coyote that i have misidentified...
Up to this day I’ve been wondering if my mind was playing game after a long day of work. But now that I see this, now that I see your comment… I realized that I’m not the only one who has encountered an animal like this ! I’m from Ontario too and I’m speechless.
No, it's a f'n lab experiment. What the hell dog with mange looks like a cross between a dog and a mountain lion? They're f'n with DNA again and are gonna unleash the hellhounds in due time. It's enough they've got the Greys' technology to work with.
It's always a picture when it's something strange and unexplainable, but never a video when virtually every phone in the world can shoot video. Interesting
I worked in a Wild Animal Park with exotics as well as native North American species and I have a biology degree and I have no clue, lol. Ears are way too big to be a mountain lion, it has a very strange face for a dog and most dogs will not eat plums? My guess is its a mixed breed dog maybe mastiff which explains the short face mixed with German Shepherd which explains the big ears and it has mange, just a tuft of black hair at the end of the tail. He is not starving by the look of his ribs but has some odd tastes for a dog thus the plums.
It legit does actually look like a Tasmanian Tiger. With no tail at least. I think sometimes stripes weren’t always a defining trait. That’s nuts bro… 😲🤯
I believe you. 15yrs ago in HarCo, near the Susky, something like this crossed the road in front of my mom and I on the way back from the doctors. Had the same lanky tail, narrow hips, back legs were longer than the front, large chest and low to the ground. I distinctly remember my mom and I trying to describe it and the only thing we could think of was dog like back and monkey like front. My dad and brother just laughed at us, but we were so amazed and excited about this sighting I know it was real. I mean it wasn’t a dog, I grew up with dogs, and not those rat dogs everyone carries around, like real dogs, so I KNEW it wasn’t a dog. Not a cougar or coyote either, this was something I had never seen before.
His body shape is similar to a heeler or some terriers. I’m almost certain it’s a dog with mange. Mange can get very crusty and leave their skin looking leathery like that.
The tail indicated it is a canine, literly one with mange. The head shape and stocky body are reminiscent of a bull terrier and the agouti fur pattern of a coyote or red wolf. Perhaps a mix of the two.
We had one in Petawawa, Ontario, Canada about a week ago. Possibly a coywolf. Coyote mated with a wolf. Big ears long tail. From a distance it looks like a small moose but with short legs.
I saw about 8 of them in moon light last night out in front of my house. Sort of looked like a sheep but had a dog like movement. Not a coyote, not a pig, bulky.... I live in the back country of Seligman AZ.. had large heads. To dark to get photos.
Sorry about that,- my pack got loose other day till after dark-im just kitty Korner to Drake forest mines due east of you. *And yes there are also wolves and "unexplained "- life all about Kaibab. I walk the woods, I know. ~only one direct neighbor in one linear mile and millions of acres behind my fence line....National forest.
Mastiif- GSD hybrids. Friendly as all can be but not much to yokes or other intact males- no collars usually to be safe in backwoods brush where we hike and run about.
Hyena. I've seen them up close in Africa. (A friend was raising one as a pet. Crazy.) Also "Copacabra", which has been identified as hyenas brought by the rich as exotic pets, and subsequently escaped.
@@importedposter4152 (1) "I only spell in two languages: English, and bad English." (2) While the chupacabra has not been "absolutely identified", saying that it "absolutely hasn't been identified" only publicizes a serious lack of familiarity with current research on the subject. (3) Having been, myself, close enough to a hyena to pet it, I know what a hyena looks like. A half-grown hyena looks like this.
@@KennethAGrimm i'm not sure if that quote was an attempt at comedy or some half-assed effort to show some vague form of intelligence, but it only made you seem pretentious. then you realize the quote isn't even right, and now you're pretentious and vapid. my claim that the chupacabra has not been identified does not "publicize a serious lack of familiarity with current research on the subject", you are magnifying this extremely minor issue to a hilariously stupid scale. it's a blatant fact. we will never be able to know what a "chupacabra" is, because it doesn't exist. we will never be able to break down every sighting--especially not the original ones--and say we know for sure what it is. we DO know that many sightings were either fabricated or were an unfortunate case of a mangey canid--NOT a hyena. the fact that you claim i'm not up-to-date with research yet didn't care to provide any to prove your point is purely idiotic and borderline hypocritical. lastly, i do not give a single fuck if you have seen a hyena in person. a lot of people have. zoos exist, and they're pretty common. i have seen hyenas in person--both striped and spotted. since the photo we see at 0:57 very clearly has no stripes nor spots, i assume you believe it to be a brown hyena? oh wait, brown hyenas still have stripes... and very long fur... hm. now i'm stumped, i really thought it was going to be a hyena! it's also unfortunate that it has a longer tail than most hyenas, shorter fur than both brown and striped hyenas, a completely different body shape, a different head shape... you know, i'm starting to think it might not be one! crazy how that works. you'd think that a village with less than 1,000 people would hear about an escaped hyena, anyway, huh? word usually gets around in small towns, dude, and i'm pretty sure an escaped dangerous animal is one of those things that people hear about.
This looks very much like the same creature that was spotted in a neighborhood in Berlin, Germany earlier this summer that caused quite a sensation. It was first reported as a lioness on the loose (no zoo reported an escaped lioness though), or possibly a wild boar. Apparently no one saw it again and people are still arguing about it might have been... 🤔
The animal that they are trying to figure out looks like a Jackal. The only reason I think it’s that is because look at its body and small narrow face and big ear that is what a Jackal has. And they are related to dogs, coyotes, foxes, wolves.
@@Kay.dub24 That fits from the appearance. Strange though that one of those would be lurking around in the Berlin area... But I didn't buy the wild boar theory that the authorities were trying to push on the people. They look way different.
@@Xianne027that is weird. But jackal are really shy toward humans I also have seen them before but in my backyard near the gooses. Which kind of scared me because I was like what will it do to them I'm already scare because I have a pitbull and like what if my dog eats a goose now we have this jackal. But this is not the worst animal we have we have foxes and deers and a moose. And domestic Wolf that is mixed with a German Shepard and husky that can jump over a 8 foot gate.
@@Xianne027 I know they aren’t bad. But how are we going to keep our animals safe if we have other animals jumping over 8 foot gates. But I’m more worried about this moose killing my 10month old pitbull puppy.
Catdog? Lol Looks similar to the tail of a mountain lion but that is a doglike head and definitely NOT A MOUNTAIN LION. It’s not unheard of for something from Mexico to travel up here. I learned about this wild cat from Mexico- a jaguarundi that comes to Texas sometimes and no one knows what it is when they see it. Even ocelots can be found there. Still not sure what this is though. Those wolf-coyote hybrids can be really weird looking but it’s probably not exactly the right color for that either. Super weird. Probably something exotic someone raised and let free or something like that. I’d have liked to hear the zoo people talk rather than random people on the street.
Looks like Thylacin . Originally from Australia . supposedly went extinct in the very early 1900s however they said the same thing about the Coelacanth being extinct but it's not .
Looks like a dingo, I found a dingo puppy several years ago here in SC. They sell these as Carolina dogs here. They are usually mixed, the one I had looked just like a Australian dingo but with a little bit bigger head. Very smart, and natural hunters, would rather eat a entire squirrel than dog food.
America had Hyena's that went extinct 😮regular Hyena's don't look like that but the American hyena looks exactly like that 😮they have been reported since the 1700 and someone even killed one and had it mounted in a store and was later given to a museum in Idaho😮it's so many elusive species in our woods and some are even humanoid
It looks like a looks to be a very sad coyote with demodex folliculorum, mange. One of two types of mange that can be passed from animals to people or vice versa. It most certainly is not a large cat (cougar) or bob cat, it has none of the features of a cat of any kind.
Exactly, it’s a dog with skin issues. One of my dogs had a problem like that. More than likely it has scratched off most of its fur from fleas. Hopefully they’re able to rescue it.
It’s either more than likely a coyote, a stray dog , or a fox with mange. I just spoke to my local TWRA already and they just picked up a fox with mange and there’s an outbreak going on right now and they’re doing a lot of research.
Not a mountain lion for sure. It's very possible that it's a cross of a dog and a coyote or wolf. I've seen packs of domesticated dogs and coyotes in the high desert but I understand that wolves would kill a domestic dog. Apparently, they don't like other canines, so my guess is yote/dog.
It looks like a cross between a dog and a mountain lion or a dog and a hyena. It has really big unusual ears. . . like a hyena. They kept mentioning the skin issues/mange, but all I could see was those crazy ears. It is holding its ears back which maybe is making them look more rounded so maybe that is just partly an illusion. The tail is kinda long too, with a black tip like a mountain lion. I would guess it is a weird mutt of a domestic dog mix. You do get some really weird looking mutt dogs sometimes. One word: game camera!
No way a dog/coyote can get that big, look at how stocky those legs are. Never seen a wild canine with those muscles, see how thick the neck is, and how those jaws look huge. This ain't a normal coyote, this is a damn beast
Let’s ask random people with no zoological background to sensationalize this story…
KKKKK !!!
Yep! I guess she did not realize we have mountain lions here LOL
@@lumindina699 it’s not a mountain lion. Tail is from one though lol but the head definitely is a dog-like head!
@@larsonfamilyhouse I agree about the head IF the mountain lion was healthy. This one as you can see from the rest of the body is emaciated. Without the fat the head also changes to look like this. The tail does look and has the markings of a mountain lion. The lack of hair is explainable as it appears to be hit by hair loss from an affliction. Perhaps that explains eating berries which a lion will resort to in this condition.
@@lumindina699It’s a K9 it doesn’t even remotely look like a cat
"The photos are even stumping experts." Cuts to a guy at a gas station.💀
😂
lol. epico.
lmao
😂😂😂😂
Hey he did have a Phillips college shirt on with a picture of a lion on it 🤷♂️ 😆
Why in the hell wouldn’t she take a video of it!? These things never happen to the correct people.
😂
If I saw something like this, I probably wouldnt have even brought it up to anyone else, much less tried to record it js
😂
Lmfao
Thats a T shirt wow go make ya $
The ever elusive Wolfdogyoti. It has only ever been seen during a leap year. They eat blueberries and salamanders. Great catch!
Lion-Squatch
😂😂😂
Huh
donkey-headed wolf.
"Pretty much my favorite animal."
It's a cross between a deer and a bear it's called a Beer. They are always sighted after having had too many.
X100 XP
Funny lol
😂
I’ll drink to that!😂
😂
She’s honestly lucky. Photographers sometimes lose their lives, but cameramen never die. Should have pressed record.
😂😂😂😂😂
They gotta look at the geography of the location. Do they live by mountains? Forest? Then pull out every animal that lives there and boom you find the one. Not hard to do…..
People still making cameraman jokes in late 2023? Dang. It amazes me how many NPCs will go this far just to get internet clout
Shes inside her house 🙄
“honestly” is quickly becoming the most overused word these days.
Looks like a Tasmanian tiger without the stripes
I thought that too!!
I did see some feint striping on its shoulder in one photo... How interesting!
Yes!
Similar conformation.
Thinking the same thing or that weird dog with the huge head in the one el chupacabra video that police filmed running down the road. I fi remember right it was in texas also. Maybe a coy-dog with mainge?
I agree❤
“Beautiful yard” now that’s a real friend
Even stumps “Experts🥸” as they ask normal people 😂
Right - and then end the video by quoting experts who all agree it’s probably a dog 🤦♂️
In my experience, experts are rarely helpful.
Or at least the ones they interview for corporate-style news.
No discussion of the anatomy visible in the photos, no discussion of the tail, which looks nothing like a dogs.. there are a lot of issues with this news story, if you think about it
Define expert
So what is it then
Experts, kind of like the ones here.
Has anyone noticed that it looks a lot like a thylacine without stripes?
Perhaps some have survived and evolved, losing the stripes over generations. That would be an incredibly great discovery.
My thoughts as well
Did it swim here lol and without the stripes it’s not a thylacine. They’d need enough to breed as well.
As a Zoologist I can confirm beyond a shadow of a doubt, that looks nothing even remotely similar to a Thylacine. Silly fun theory though 👍
Tazmanian devil dog?😮❤
@@JoniMitchell-qi6hr now you may be on to something here! The elusive North American Tasmanian Devil Dog is so rare some question if it ever even existed! We both know better, perhaps they spotted one on camera finally!
I might know what this is. It looks like a real, known creature: an ancient species of North American hyena called a RUNNING HYENA (scientific name: Chasmaporthetes Ossifragus). They are usually thought of as extinct, except they really aren't, because people keep seeing them every once in a while. In the 1700s and 1800s, the nickname for these creatures was RINGDOCUS or SHUNKA WARAKIN. There is a taxidermied specimen of one of these at the Idaho Museum of Natural History in Pocatello.
Oh wow that's for sure it!
Interdasting. Here I was thinking a mountain lion banged a deer, who then banged a coyote, who produced this monster.
I was thinking hyena because the arms in the front are longer
This creature has also been mistaken for the chupa cabraba ... Or It can be it.
@@doom6985 Chupacabras are different. They walk/hop upright and have hind feet like kangaroos, have smooth black leather skin, and have a head & spiked crest down the back of their neck like a lizard. This is mostly according to people in Puerto Rico and South America who see them occasionally and all report the same description. And the running hyena is just a normal but rare mortal creature, while the chupcabras have an element of spiritual evil to them. Occasionally when forest rangers have run into coyotes with mange or wild feral Mexican Xoloitzcuintle dogs, they accidentally reported them as chupacabras, and then this skewed the public's perception of what a chupacabra really was.
Definitely canine, probably a mangy dog or a dog coyote cross. (Coy-dog)
Absolutely a coyote/dog cross. I call them "curs". I had one once and she was the best and most protective dog I had. She was so good, she broke a chain and caught a burglar before the police could get him. One of the officers adopted her on the spot. Only because my mom didn't like her. The Cur I had looked just like this one.
@@mweatherby2968 They are very sweet dogs, my sister had one she named Isis after the Egyptian Goddess. She caught her wild outside our town because the town wanted her put down (since she was basically a wild coyote) so she saved her and kept her. She became the sweetest and most loving companion to my sister and only ever bit someone ONCE out of fear and never again. She passed away about a year ago and my sister was and still is devastated. She lived a long and happy life; she was the only "dog" other than our pug who passed when I was 14 I ever really liked. Such amazing animals
Exactly.
What I was thinking.
Coymutt
It’s 100% canine. Have seen many different pictures over the years of mangy feral dogs that look exactly like this. Instead of jumping to crazy conclusions, let’s instead think of what is the most likely answer. It’s a canine of some sort, maybe hybridized, likely with mange, mystery solved.
Chupacabra
It's El Chupacabra
That lady who said it was a bobcat blew my mind..has she been living under a rock? 😂
Mange 100. I've seen it before and it deforms the animal until they die.
Yes, it’s definitely a dog. It looks a lot like my dog. Same coloration and pointy ears. And he loves eating palm tree seeds and loquats that fall out it the tree.
I'm having a hard time deciding on being more amazed by the look of the creature or the fact that those pictures were not blurry at all...Take note,Sasquatch researchers!
🤣👍
"Sasquatch researchers" is an Aberration in the first place.
@@juliusperseus8612 No;I am one.But maybe if u don't believe in something enough,it will cease to exist? lol
@@brotherlittlefoot2216 🤔
Hahaha that was great!
0:25 - 0:40
Oh boy they really reached out to the top wild animal experts in the country.
😂
lol yeah . there is one , or i think just one here in Arkansas roaming our little town. we have farms lands and natural springs so its been hanging around the secluded area of the Norwood farm fields and my property . it hasn't come after my goats yet but my livestock guardians may be keeping it at bey. It;s tail is short haired with a little bushy bunch at the end of it
Well, one had a T-shirt with an animal on it. So....
gorl, they don’t have the budget for that! 😂
😅
You never know if someone’s exotic “pet” got loose.
I legit wonder if that is a hyena.
@@MultiKm1that’s exactly what I thought
Too bad she wasn't able to get video instead of just pictures, that might've made it more easily identifiable. I'm going to agree with those who think it's a coy-dog with mange. Definitely not a mountain lion, that's a canine snout. (Edit: and ears).
Oh -- it's a saber-toothed wolf/bear/lion! 😊
You spellded "toof" rong
@@jessemartinez3652 😉
You spelled “wrong” wrong 😑
@@lovelythomas8837you spelled wong
Wong
No cat would eat fruit. A canine would.
Either a coyote with mange or this is the first confirmed sighting of a Tasmanian Tiger in over half a century after they’ve been reported to be extinct.
Food for thought by the way - We’ve had research going on for decades now to “revive” extinct species and are currently in the process of bringing hybrid Wooly Mammoth’s back from fossil DNA. It is very easy to imagine how “new” versions of extinct animals could be reintroduced into the ecosystem without anyone knowing, this is all hypothetical.
😂😂😂 Tasmanian Tiger - call Forrest Galante! Does it have a passport?!?! That's why they can't find them in Tasmania anymore - they emigrated!!!
I thought the same thing, but it lacks the tiger stripes on the hind end. The Tasmanian tiger is listed extinct, but many sightings have been documented down there, so your guess is as good as mine. However, how in the world would it make it to Texas if that was the case?
Thats what I thought built like a Tasmanian tiger.
Colour and body shape are completely wrong....
It's 100% not a Thylacine 😂
Did anyone look for paw prints ? That would be a big clue as to what type of animal it is.
🤣🤣🤣@@thebeeguy1044
@@thebeeguy1044
Yeah I'm sure she's in love with the attention she's getting from this too.
It makes her mundane life feel special.
Now she's probably double her wine consumption and thinks she's Nancy Drew.
There would be no paw prints being that the chupacabra has hooves
@@R_A_3000 it looks like a hyena without spots….
@@thebeeguy1044and screaming at white supremacy patriarchy climate change reeecism trump . Then crying when a criminal gets what they deserve. 😂😂😂😂
That woman has clearly never seen what a bobcat or mountain lion look like.
Yeah that is absolutely not a feline. That would be the biggest non bobbed bobcat ever discovered!😂😂😂
Neither have you, clearly. Color is right for a mountain lion, but head's all wrong.
@@jamesbernsen3516 same colour as a lot of other animals. That's no mountain lion. Not even close. I happen to live in an area with a lot of them. Nice try though
@@jamesbernsen3516mountain lions don't eat fruit
@@jamesbernsen3516 Whole body is all wrong. That's clearly a canine of some kind. Stray dog or Coy-Dog.
A coydog, most likely. They can look totally different one side to the other, like the one in town that I thought was maybe a Lab before it turned to look at me and had a straight coyote face. Then we've had some out near me in the rural part of the county, that look more like feral mutts, often bigger than you'd think they'd be. I agree with the skin issues as well, mange can throw anyone off, just look at bears with it.
🤣🤣🤣
Chupacabra
@@thomasfahey8314
I’ve seen dogs and coyotes breed on the reservation. They look like this beast and are very hard to catch.
@@snowboarder3n1 I understand they are like mules, they can't reproduce on their own. That's why you see them rarely.
Animal artist here: that's a canine (either a coyote or a domesticated dog - it's difficult to tell which from the photos, but the ears make it appear to be a coyote) with mange. His (you can see testicles in one image) body shape and body/head ratio aren't right for a cougar.
Yeah that’s a doglike head. The tail looks like a mountain lion tail a bit but it’s DEFINITELY not a mountain lion.
What about the tusk looking thing? It’s clearly visible.
I googled images and this looks more like a coy wolf then a coy dog.
I do agree with you but... Not a chance in hell that's a coyote with that snout. And are you sure that's testis? I also see nipples that are too big for a male. And when female canines breed A lot their "area" can change.
Instilsay it’s a hyena …. Without the spots …
By the looks of it, I'd say It's very possible that a domesticated dog mated with a coyote... Crazier things have been known to happen in the wild lol, but whatever it is I Hope it's friendly and I hope that the next video about this furry mystery isn't because someone put it down. 🍀✌️
I mean.....I'd shoot Big Foot.
Coydogs are not that uncommon actually and a much better guess than some of the other idiotic things I've seen in the comments.
Chupacabra
Pretty sure that's what happened coyote and dog mated.....theres a TH-cam video where a man had dog that had a coyote as a friend so it could be possible..
Dogs and coyotes go into heat in different seasons. It’s not common.
Cloning is illegal but possible, they can “make” animals out of thier DNA. Looks like a Tasmanian tiger. Explains the whole dogman phenomenon. Hybrids etc.
It’s like Man-Bear. But it’s not. It’s Cougar-Deer! 😂
Its manbearpig
Spawn of Covid. Mrna monster dog.
Cougeer
@@HeyImDateMike Half man, half bear, half pig
I know he’s not, but he kinda looks like a Tasmanian Tiger
Mo that's a Chupacabra
@@bv657 Literally said that at the beginning.
I was surprised when I first learned just how much a starving dingo with protruding ribs and extreme mange could look like a thylacine, especially from a distance.
Mange creates so many of these supposed "monsters" and "chupacabras".
It really does, just without the stripes. The body structure looks almost exactly like that..like a cross a wild cat and a canine animal.
yes, that's exactly what I thought right away, just without strips 🎉
Google Lens identified it as either a Dingo or a Hyena but both aren't found in Texas nor the United States. Methinks it's just a mange dog.
It's Texas, full of weirdos that collect illegal animals.
Not only that. People are dumping dogs all over. They’re hungry & thirsty. This looks like a dog.
Its probably just a dog but don't rule out non-native animals. Americans like to import every wild animal into this country. So if anyone escaped we could see them on our streets. An example we have more tigers in this country than all the wild tigers in the world. As young kid I found a Chimpanzee here running around.
Maybe the dingo ate your baby!
That's the 1st thing I thought the elusive American dingo
There were several Tasmania tigers that got loose after a ship wreck on the east coast. It’s believed that there might be a small population of them in the north east.
I believe it was in Florida. So yes, there is some chance that thylacines are in the US. They are certainly still in Oz in small populations.
My maternal grandfather bought a coyote-dog hybrid, and had him for many years. The animal never barked, it just yipped and was super hilarious to be around. This animal, believe it or not, looks like a coyote-pit bull mix.
That’s what I was thinking. A coyote bred with a domestic dog.
Same thought here. Whenever I think about a coy-dog my mind instantly goes to skinny and medium size
This one’s thick
It has to be one with a pitbull or something else that’s chonky
No, look at the tail. Why does it look lion like? This is no canine
Could be. In fact that's actually very plausible and more so than some other weird or ridiculous theories all these other people or fools are coming up with in the comments section.
Coyotes and dogs can produce hybrids. And are getting common because of human settlement in close vicinity with coyote habitats. I have fostered a coydog hybrid, the result of a union between a female coyote and a male domestic dog in this case this one is a siberian husky. I am talking about my hybrid and not the one in the video, whatever that is.
Every time they see a canine suffering from demodicosis, they pronounce it a mystery.
Animal control is pathetic. I called them one time, because a group of 3 dogs surrounded me while walking and tried to attack me. I was able to get away and called. They would not send anyone unless I gave them all my information. I said the dogs are still there, please send someone so they don't attack a child or anyone for that matter. They wouldn't do it without my full name, address, and other information. They practically wanted an affidavit to protect the community. I said well if they attack someone, you're responsible and hung up.
@@keep-your-hope yes! They won’t remove the coyotes here without “proof” LOL the proof was dinner!
So much truth to your statement, and not just with Canidae either!
Except it's a bear with mange.
@@oljimeagle It’s clearly not a member of Ursidae. The body profile is completely wrong, not to mention the tail & ears are a dead giveaway this is not a bear. This is a member of the Canidae family, & it does indeed have mange or a similar issue going on 👍
I’m in Arkansas and saw one of these mythical creatures too . I was riding my electric skateboard and it came out of the bushes chasing a baby deer . I asked the leprechaun riding on his back what the heck is that ? He told me “you better mind your own business if you know what’s good for you “ That’s exactly what I’m what I’m going to do .
😂
😂😂😂😂
@@seasea12😂🤣😂🤣😂
🤣🤣🤣🤣
😂😂😂😂
I have never seen ears that big on a big cat or a canine. Those are some weird looking ears.
Definitely a coyote mixed with a dog my dad had a pit bull and it breed with a wild female coyote and made some wild looking coy-dogs they would come a little closer to people but they where still wild and wouldn’t let you touch them but they would come lay on our porch from time to time as long as you where not outside or near that area
English mother fkr. Speak it?
Strangely enough the first thing that came to mind was some kind of pitbull coyote mix. It just looks so strange lol
It's a canine species creature with mange. I've seen one in my neck of the woods recently and they look very creepy.
chupacabra!
Not creepy but sad. Put out mange medicine for the poor thing ffs
@@thebeeguy1044 Chupacabra?
@@ES11777 There is no 'mange medicine'. The animal has to be dipped.
@@tygerstripes3752 Excuse me? You can even buy mange medicine that’s sold in a form of treats for the wild animals. Murder is always the first option for you, isn’t it?
It’s a poor precious animal with mange that someone just threw away …😕
That could be too.
That can be treated if they found him.
I totally agree with you 😢
Maybe. Maybe it is a wild or feral animal that has an immune issue and is more susceptible to mange mites. It is very odd that you immediately want to blame a person when this could easily be an example of just a mangy mountain lion or something. No need to blame humanity, we do enough awful shit that we don't need to pad our stats.
what a low iq take. You don't take into consideration the large ears, black tip tail, stocky muscular "straight" shaped body.
Would a rich Texas oil man from the 19th century when the last ones were still in large enough numbers for him to think it was cool to go to Tasmania and bring home a bunch of Thylacines and a few escaped and they are still a struggling population?
I've seen a strange coyote/dog-like animal a couple of times while riding my bike on Addicks Dam which horseshoes a large wild area. They had the wild colorations you'd expect on a coyote but they seemed much shorter in length and taller than a coyote. Also, I saw them in the middle of the day from a distance of only 20 or 30 yards and they acted too tame to be wild, but looked too wild to be tame. One other interesting feature was the tail....it looked like a very hairy tail you'd expect to see on a coyote but in the bright sunlight you could see a slight indication of the tail having a ringed pattern.
Why not video
Tasmanian Tiger. Look it up
It reminds me of one of those thingamybobs.
@@secondchance6603 And he had a "doohickey" hanging between his legs
I have heard that dogs and coyotes mate.
I believe this animal is called a Dhole . A Dhole is a wild dog but is not typical fond in Texas. It was probably brought over as an exotic pet or escaped a zoo.
The tail has alot of missing fur. But it has the typical black end to the tail that most dholes do have. The black end to the tail fallows up the tall some ways. Also the very lage rounded ears with alot of fur inside the ears that sticks out in a lighter color is another clue. Wild dholes can come in many different reddish browns and blackish shades. But they all seem to have the same fur patterns. I'm pretty positive this is your unknown mystery dog . Please look up pictures of a wild dhole. I do believe most people would agree with me . The big rounded ears with the black ended tail are the biggest clues . Good luck to all and I hope this brings answers for everyone wondering :)
P.S. I WOULDN'T BE WRIGHTNG THIS IF I THOUGHT I WAS WRONG.
I am googling that for sure! Thank you!!!
👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
It doesnt really look like a dhole
Wow never seen It before thank u very much
@@SatumainenOlentodon’t do it 😂
At first, I thought it was an herbivore, as it looked like it was grazing, before she explained about the fruit tree and dropped fruit….wild canines would be more interested in eating fruit, than a domesticated dog. If you should discover it’s identity, I hope you’ll come back with a part two, and share that info with us. Thanks for the head scratcher!
It almost looks like a Tasmanian tiger without the stripes which are extinct
It looks like a Tasmanian tiger without the stripes on the back. Maybe it's some subspecies of this mammal that survived to this time. 😀
Would be cool
Smart take, but wrong hindquarters. Probably some stray mongrel or domestic dog-coyote mongrel, judging by its apparent familiarity with suburban environement.
i was thinking a taz angle too. that head and neck.
Ong my first thought
Tasmanian tigers were marsupials, not mammals. It's a stray mongrel dog.
I agree with the skin issue assessment. You would be shocked at the before and after photos of dogs that have severe skin problems, mange. However, coyotes can get mange as well.
Like those who think they've seen a chupacabra and it turns out to be a coyote with mange.
That’s an old Puma Mountain Lion probably very skinny resembling a large dog
Yes...that's my assessment as well. We have plenty of mountain lions where I live. This is definitely an 'old' mountain lion
cats too
Where does the skin look like it has mange? This is a very clear image, so I’m confused, and for those calling this creature a Cougar please know the difference, cause you can’t be that stupid. Cats have short snouts and mouths. This creature head is huge, square shaped and long. No where near no type of feline that exist today. Closes creature this thing resembles is definitely a Tasmanian Tiger.
I saw an animal that looks just like this in the hope Ranch area of Santa Barbara, CA in June 2023. It was so fascinating, looking that I pulled my car over, got out, and I tried to take a picture of it, but it ran off when it saw me. I still think about going back to where I saw it to see if I can find it again, but I probably won’t.
Did it have fangs that jutted out??
so you just abandoned the poor guy? jeez
There was a breeding pair of thylazine that broke loose during a train wreck back in the olden days. So it is possible that it's one of those descendants. I'm only saying this because they look eerily similar whenever you put pictures of them side by side it's anyone's guess though
I'm also wondering if somebody had a quote on quote pet hyena that got loose and didn't tell anybody about it cuz they don't want to get in trouble because it also looks a lot like a hyena
Gosh! I love cryptid sightings!
Wow it looks like the very elusive Mutt.....A dog that's mixed with a little bit of everything....Yeah I saw one in my living room yesterday..We named it Neo...
Yup. Give Neo mange (don't do that) and bingo. Chupacabra: coyote with mange. This thing is bigger and doesn't have mange as bad yet. It does not have sabre teeth. It had like a stick in its mouth.
Edit: probably a coyote. I misjudged its size. Usually when they have mange, they get sickly and weigh like 20 lbs. This thing looks ~25-30 lbs. I'm glad my guess aligned with the zoo vets.
Your dog, Neo, The One, sounds awesome BTW. He's a good boy and he probably knows it ( ihope). Give him some scritches from rando on internet (and remind him he's a good boy)
🤣👍
Neo..that’s dope!! I named my daughter after a specific character lol
Also seen a strange looking four legged animal in East Texas crossing the highway at 3 in the morning. It was large as a Great Dane. It stopped once it crossed on my side of the highway. As I drove by it. Have no idea what it was
It's some kind of muttdog.
It was your mom
Dogmen are real sightings go back as far as the early 1800s by French explorers and talked about even further by native Americans
Honestly it kind of looks like a Tasmanian Tiger minus the stripes. Guess a hybrid clone got loose again! 😂
It looks like a Mountain lion and a dog, a very interesting breed indeed!
It kinda reminds of the movie Second Hand Lions. Great movie BTW.
IMPOSSIBLE !!
It looks like a cross between a deer and a dog.
Yeah catdog okay
It’s a coyote with mange it is the most horrific way to go. They suffer a long, long time inflammation of the face ears joints lots of hair they get literally deformed.
I think it's a Carolina wild dog, also called an American dingo, based on its orange and white colouration, long ears, brushless tail, short fur, and location. However, it could just be a coydog.
No, definitely not. I had a female Carolina Dog, she was the smartest animal I've ever known but this isn't one
Looks like a Tasmanian Tiger, but I think it’s more likely a dog or coyote needing medical/skin treatment.
German Shepherd with mange is my guess.
@@nachomom-fk2bi That's a good guess. The body and ear structure looks about right for that. Poor thing needs help ASAP before it's too late, whatever breed it may be.
At a glance that was my first thought thylacine .....😂.
omg, yes a tasmania tiger for sure! great minds think alike🎉
@@thebeeguy1044 we can chalk that up to evolution along with the shedding of the stripes. it has the same features as its early ancestors. prob needed to be a tad bigger this time around
It looks like a deformed mountain lion. Because the tail is too small. The ears are too big. And the snout is too big for it to be a mountain lion.
This thing is very rare if you guys don't know what it is through the research I'm sure they've been saying they're extinct but not this. It's a blessing to see it out
I bet you call bigfoot pictures a blessing too
You're thinking some variety of North American hyena, aren't you?
In this "day and age" why does the photo have to be blurry? Same with big foot, Loch Ness monster etc, the photo is always blurry.
@@TopHatNat
Hahaha
The camera on my latest phone is the worst I've ever seen. It actually looks like that filter that makes a photo look "cartoonized" - it's so pathetic. 🤣 🖼🤡
If I would've known, I never would have got this phone, but I'm definitely going to buy one with a better camera next time. 🙃
That said, it can still happen nowadays. Can't wait to see something spectacular & try to "document" it. 😂😂
I have seen exactly the same creature crossing a road in Ontario Canada, it surprised me and i was very puzzled by the fact that it didn't have any hair, it seemed to have a skin disease. Happy to see that other people saw it, because every time i was telling my story, people would say that it was probably just a dog or a coyote that i have misidentified...
Up to this day I’ve been wondering if my mind was playing game after a long day of work.
But now that I see this, now that I see your comment… I realized that I’m not the only one who has encountered an animal like this ! I’m from Ontario too and I’m speechless.
The issue is that it doesn't look too dissimilar from a dog with mange.
Uh, that animal had hair...
I mean, the thing in these photos is probably a dog or a coyote.
It's a poor dog with mange! Just chill.
No, it's a f'n lab experiment. What the hell dog with mange looks like a cross between a dog and a mountain lion? They're f'n with DNA again and are gonna unleash the hellhounds in due time. It's enough they've got the Greys' technology to work with.
"Babe, wake up! A new cryptid just dropped"
From the 1st photo it appeared to be a " Cross Between " a Coyote and a mountain lion !
Your close try a wolf and coyote mix
It's most definitely a mixof something
no wolves in cali.@@hollyedwards4789
Finally, a Sasquatch picture that isn't blurry! I always knew they were real!
It's always a picture when it's something strange and unexplainable, but never a video when virtually every phone in the world can shoot video. Interesting
Coyote cross..coyotes are omnivorous and will eat just about anything. Cool animal.
I worked in a Wild Animal Park with exotics as well as native North American species and I have a biology degree and I have no clue, lol. Ears are way too big to be a mountain lion, it has a very strange face for a dog and most dogs will not eat plums? My guess is its a mixed breed dog maybe mastiff which explains the short face mixed with German Shepherd which explains the big ears and it has mange, just a tuft of black hair at the end of the tail. He is not starving by the look of his ribs but has some odd tastes for a dog thus the plums.
Dogs eat all kinds of things, they’re omnivores. I know dogs that eat broccoli and carrots and apples etc
well some dogs do/ can eat plums but this is 100% tasmania tiger for sure minus the stripes
@@sadareed7838since it’s in Texas who knows maybe someone raised it and it got away
@@platedlizard True
That looks like the tazmanian tiger. Without stripes. That probably could be an offspring
It legit does actually look like a Tasmanian Tiger. With no tail at least. I think sometimes stripes weren’t always a defining trait. That’s nuts bro… 😲🤯
Chupacabra
More like a Dingo to me.
a Texas Tiger.... a Texacine Australia's Tasmanian Tiger / Thylacineis extinct but no worries. There's a cousin in Texas.
Looks like a tasmanian tiger to me, too! Didn't they recently clone one? Maybe it got loose! Lol
I saw that type of creature in Maryland a year or 2 ago. No one believed me.
I believe you. 15yrs ago in HarCo, near the Susky, something like this crossed the road in front of my mom and I on the way back from the doctors. Had the same lanky tail, narrow hips, back legs were longer than the front, large chest and low to the ground. I distinctly remember my mom and I trying to describe it and the only thing we could think of was dog like back and monkey like front. My dad and brother just laughed at us, but we were so amazed and excited about this sighting I know it was real. I mean it wasn’t a dog, I grew up with dogs, and not those rat dogs everyone carries around, like real dogs, so I KNEW it wasn’t a dog. Not a cougar or coyote either, this was something I had never seen before.
@hollyholy641 Your description is absolutely correct
I’ve been trying to get those berries forever
His body shape is similar to a heeler or some terriers. I’m almost certain it’s a dog with mange. Mange can get very crusty and leave their skin looking leathery like that.
The tail indicated it is a canine, literly one with mange. The head shape and stocky body are reminiscent of a bull terrier and the agouti fur pattern of a coyote or red wolf. Perhaps a mix of the two.
Uh, guys? It has saber fangs. Either a time traveler accidentally let loose an ice age animal or it escaped a mad scientist's lab.
Does bear a resemblance to the North American hyena (shunka warakin), however the very low hocks give it a thylacine appearance.
It resembles a lion, more than anything. Maybe a mountain lion and a deer got too friendly in the woods. One of those animals with a deformity.
They didn't magnify the picture showing the stiff tail for a reason. That's a Tasmanian tiger.
Definitely not.
We had one in Petawawa, Ontario, Canada about a week ago. Possibly a coywolf. Coyote mated with a wolf. Big ears long tail. From a distance it looks like a small moose but with short legs.
They are here in FL as well!
Looks like a dingo to me.
Its a thylacine. From tasmania.
I know a lot of people think Chupacabra, but I really want to say that is a hyena.
Nah looks definitely k9, hyena don’t look like that
Yep. Dogman, of the hyena type.
Chupacabra, that's what I meant. But my money's on jaguarundi.
I saw about 8 of them in moon light last night out in front of my house. Sort of looked like a sheep but had a dog like movement. Not a coyote, not a pig, bulky.... I live in the back country of Seligman AZ.. had large heads. To dark to get photos.
Sorry about that,- my pack got loose other day till after dark-im just kitty Korner to Drake forest mines due east of you. *And yes there are also wolves and "unexplained "- life all about Kaibab. I walk the woods, I know.
~only one direct neighbor in one linear mile and millions of acres behind my fence line....National forest.
Mastiif- GSD hybrids. Friendly as all can be but not much to yokes or other intact males- no collars usually to be safe in backwoods brush where we hike and run about.
An imported exotic African or Oz prey animal that escaped a game preserve or private owner.
Looks like a Tasmania tiger without the stripes
Hyena. I've seen them up close in Africa. (A friend was raising one as a pet. Crazy.) Also "Copacabra", which has been identified as hyenas brought by the rich as exotic pets, and subsequently escaped.
copacabra? lmao. i believe you mean chupacabra? and the chupacabra absolutely hasn't been identified. lastly, this does not look like a hyena at all.
Chupacabra
@@importedposter4152 (1) "I only spell in two languages: English, and bad English." (2) While the chupacabra has not been "absolutely identified", saying that it "absolutely hasn't been identified" only publicizes a serious lack of familiarity with current research on the subject. (3) Having been, myself, close enough to a hyena to pet it, I know what a hyena looks like. A half-grown hyena looks like this.
@@lostbirdsproduction Thank you. My sister was the Spelling Bee champion, not me.
@@KennethAGrimm i'm not sure if that quote was an attempt at comedy or some half-assed effort to show some vague form of intelligence, but it only made you seem pretentious. then you realize the quote isn't even right, and now you're pretentious and vapid.
my claim that the chupacabra has not been identified does not "publicize a serious lack of familiarity with current research on the subject", you are magnifying this extremely minor issue to a hilariously stupid scale. it's a blatant fact. we will never be able to know what a "chupacabra" is, because it doesn't exist. we will never be able to break down every sighting--especially not the original ones--and say we know for sure what it is. we DO know that many sightings were either fabricated or were an unfortunate case of a mangey canid--NOT a hyena. the fact that you claim i'm not up-to-date with research yet didn't care to provide any to prove your point is purely idiotic and borderline hypocritical.
lastly, i do not give a single fuck if you have seen a hyena in person. a lot of people have. zoos exist, and they're pretty common. i have seen hyenas in person--both striped and spotted. since the photo we see at 0:57 very clearly has no stripes nor spots, i assume you believe it to be a brown hyena? oh wait, brown hyenas still have stripes... and very long fur... hm. now i'm stumped, i really thought it was going to be a hyena! it's also unfortunate that it has a longer tail than most hyenas, shorter fur than both brown and striped hyenas, a completely different body shape, a different head shape... you know, i'm starting to think it might not be one! crazy how that works.
you'd think that a village with less than 1,000 people would hear about an escaped hyena, anyway, huh? word usually gets around in small towns, dude, and i'm pretty sure an escaped dangerous animal is one of those things that people hear about.
This looks very much like the same creature that was spotted in a neighborhood in Berlin, Germany earlier this summer that caused quite a sensation. It was first reported as a lioness on the loose (no zoo reported an escaped lioness though), or possibly a wild boar. Apparently no one saw it again and people are still arguing about it might have been... 🤔
The animal that they are trying to figure out looks like a Jackal. The only reason I think it’s that is because look at its body and small narrow face and big ear that is what a Jackal has. And they are related to dogs, coyotes, foxes, wolves.
@@Kay.dub24 That fits from the appearance. Strange though that one of those would be lurking around in the Berlin area...
But I didn't buy the wild boar theory that the authorities were trying to push on the people. They look way different.
@@Xianne027that is weird. But jackal are really shy toward humans I also have seen them before but in my backyard near the gooses. Which kind of scared me because I was like what will it do to them I'm already scare because I have a pitbull and like what if my dog eats a goose now we have this jackal. But this is not the worst animal we have we have foxes and deers and a moose. And domestic Wolf that is mixed with a German Shepard and husky that can jump over a 8 foot gate.
@@Kay.dub24 Wolves aren't so bad. I used to own a wolf and a wolf-hybrid. Fairytales and Hollywood movies gave them a bad rep.
@@Xianne027 I know they aren’t bad. But how are we going to keep our animals safe if we have other animals jumping over 8 foot gates. But I’m more worried about this moose killing my 10month old pitbull puppy.
Catdog? Lol Looks similar to the tail of a mountain lion but that is a doglike head and definitely NOT A MOUNTAIN LION. It’s not unheard of for something from Mexico to travel up here. I learned about this wild cat from Mexico- a jaguarundi that comes to Texas sometimes and no one knows what it is when they see it. Even ocelots can be found there. Still not sure what this is though. Those wolf-coyote hybrids can be really weird looking but it’s probably not exactly the right color for that either. Super weird. Probably something exotic someone raised and let free or something like that. I’d have liked to hear the zoo people talk rather than random people on the street.
Pilot drops dead, stewardess tells random person to land the plane
(safely)
Yes! The next most obvious thing after it being canine is it's hybrid.
Nonsense. A catdog has a cat head at one end and a dog head at the other.
🎵Alone in the world was little Catdog
I'm thinking mountain lion, wild canines have snouts that are pointy and bushier tails.
It's shaped like a thylacine.
Looks like Thylacin . Originally from Australia . supposedly went extinct in the very early 1900s however they said the same thing about the Coelacanth being extinct but it's not .
dingo
OMG! That is the ever-so elusive Chupacabra! Either that or a mutant Sasquatch...or maybe a hybrid of the two.
I’m an animal scientist, and the picture you see is not a dog or cat, it’s a giraffe 🦒
Under rated comment buddy
I knew it!
That's the tasmanian tiger if i ever seen one
Looks like a dingo, I found a dingo puppy several years ago here in SC. They sell these as Carolina dogs here. They are usually mixed, the one I had looked just like a Australian dingo but with a little bit bigger head. Very smart, and natural hunters, would rather eat a entire squirrel than dog food.
Yep, when I saw the picture I thought it was a dingo, too. Your theory is the most likely.
I second dingo, that’s immediately what I thought
@@thebeeguy1044 who said this thing was large….it’s a dingo or a dingo x most definitely
@@thebeeguy1044it's a coyote then.
Clearly, an escaped hyena, either form zoo or tiger king
America had Hyena's that went extinct 😮regular Hyena's don't look like that but the American hyena looks exactly like that 😮they have been reported since the 1700 and someone even killed one and had it mounted in a store and was later given to a museum in Idaho😮it's so many elusive species in our woods and some are even humanoid
It looks like a looks to be a very sad coyote with demodex folliculorum, mange. One of two types of mange that can be passed from animals to people or vice versa. It most certainly is not a large cat (cougar) or bob cat, it has none of the features of a cat of any kind.
Just a similar tail. Not the right color for a coyote, doesn’t look very mangey.
@@larsonfamilyhousecoyote colors can vary
kinda fat for a coyote.@@maxmanx1294
Looks like a tasmanian tiger with no stripes...
I agree that it is a dog with skin issues as most of these mysteries end up being a dog or an escapee from the mad scientists lab
@@ve9763 I hope then that the lady traps doggy and finds it a caring family to take it home
Or it could be a Carolina hound.
@@ve9763nope
Dogman!
It looks like a hyena to me, but my dad had a dog that looked like a hyena though. She was a very nice dog.
Exactly, it’s a dog with skin issues. One of my dogs had a problem like that. More than likely it has scratched off most of its fur from fleas. Hopefully they’re able to rescue it.
Looks almost like a Tasmanian Tiger
It’s either more than likely a coyote, a stray dog , or a fox with mange.
I just spoke to my local TWRA already and they just picked up a fox with mange and there’s an outbreak going on right now and they’re doing a lot of research.
They need to treat the animals with mange and get them strong
and healthy again. Then put them
back in their home where they came from.🙏🏻🐕
This animal doesn't have mange. The big head suggests that it's a cross between a pit bull and a coyote -- a coydog.
Vague.
@@annebalderston2520 A bad case of mange can never be cured. The animal has to be treated periodically for the rest of its life.
@@teastrainer3604it's a Xoloitzcuintle, just a Mexican hairless dog.
Not a mountain lion for sure. It's very possible that it's a cross of a dog and a coyote or wolf. I've seen packs of domesticated dogs and coyotes in the high desert but I understand that wolves would kill a domestic dog. Apparently, they don't like other canines, so my guess is yote/dog.
It's always great to see these types of incidents being filmed and photographed using the 'Kodak 2-Pixel Yeti Instamatic'.
Expect more. Things are gonna get weird now. Remember plum island.
Likely a coyote/wild dog hybrid with mange... not really uncommon, just primarily nocturnal and weary of humans.
It looks like a cross between a dog and a mountain lion or a dog and a hyena. It has really big unusual ears. . . like a hyena. They kept mentioning the skin issues/mange, but all I could see was those crazy ears. It is holding its ears back which maybe is making them look more rounded so maybe that is just partly an illusion. The tail is kinda long too, with a black tip like a mountain lion. I would guess it is a weird mutt of a domestic dog mix. You do get some really weird looking mutt dogs sometimes. One word: game camera!
Game camera is actually two words. I’m just sayin’.
Exactly my thoughts! A dog-like head with a tail similar to a mountain lion. So crazy! Catdog lol
Lions, dogs, and hyenas can not crossbreed. Caninae, Hyaenidae though feliform, & Felidae are not genetically compatible 🤣
Looks nothing like any form of feline, even to an untrained eye haha
Game camera is 2 words
No way a dog/coyote can get that big, look at how stocky those legs are. Never seen a wild canine with those muscles, see how thick the neck is, and how those jaws look huge. This ain't a normal coyote, this is a damn beast
Yes, and it’s in our hill country eating fruit! 🍒 I’m a little bit scared now:)
Looks very much like a thylacine. Check out images of the extinct Tasmanian tiger.
That’s what I thought, without the stripes