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What Is It?!
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T O P I C
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Discussion Started: 07-27-2004, 5:51 PM
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Do you think you know what the mystery creature is that's lurking around the Baltimore area?
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View Messages: [newest first] | [oldest first]
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Chuckaone
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03-13-2008, 11:49 PM
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i just moved from calvert county to baltimore county a few months ago and i have seen alot of dead wild dingos on the sides of the roads in calvert county this past year.
this picture looks alot like the dingos i have seen in calvert county lately i have seen too many of them many many miles apart and on different roads. i don't think they are escaped pets from any private owners.
i think the department of natural resources is puting them in our countys.
charlie
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RainFox
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10-26-2006, 1:32 PM
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That's a thylacine.
~Foxy
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kdpatt
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08-31-2006, 8:51 PM
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We live on a farm near the Glyndon area. I have seen a fox that looks just like this animal. I have seen him up close. He was very thin and had little tail hair. He had little body hair except around his neck. It looked very weak, ill and traveled by himself.
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osirisgod
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06-06-2006, 7:49 PM
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Could it possibly be a chupacabra that has adapted to th environment???
"Let he who hath understanding, count the number of the beast; For it is the number of a man; And his number is six hundred, threescore, and six."
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lumpy45
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04-10-2006, 4:35 PM
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i think it may some ugly mutt like a hairless/native american dog or something but it could be a sick wild dog like the carolina wild dog but it probably is a screwed up fox with mange
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kongrules
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02-22-2006, 7:20 PM
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I think the maryland animal is some kind of mutant escaped from an experimental lab. Maybe it is a mutant hybrid of some kind, but there must be more then one of them so then they can reproduce. There must be more then one of them because they would not be able to survie unless it broke out of the lab fertile, meaning it is a female - pregnant. this animal look like a a combination of a few animals. The body looks like a hienna and the blond hair coming off the neck looks like the hair on a male lion. Its skin most likely is short like a chawa dog and it also has yellow hair like a lion with black spots like a hienna. Its tail is like a dingo tail. (A dingo is a wild dog in australia) It also is red and blue so maybe they tampered with the hair color so it looks those colors. The End!
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Horsegal98
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11-08-2005, 1:01 AM
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It's impossible for animals to crossbreed like that, they need to belong to the same family...eg a horse and a donkey can have a foal (who is infertile, and a mule or hinny) but a horse could not breed to a cow successfully. Just like a person couldnt have a child with a racoon!
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Tenshi
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11-06-2005, 2:43 PM
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I am not sure, but it looks like some type of strange canine.it could be a mixture of two different canines , or it could be an undiscovered animal. maybe, it's a prehistoric animal once thought to be extinc.also, it may be a new species, or a canine with strange mutations.
There is an answer to everything if you search hard enough.
-Angela
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L. Laser
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10-22-2005, 8:08 PM
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I saw this animal, I believe, about twenty years ago. It was dead in about two feet of water in Rock Creek in Mongomery County, Maryland. It was blue, possibly from being in the water, and had no hair, which I attributed to it being dead and under water. The most outstanding feature was that it had large round ears, much like the wild dogs in Africa. Being familiar with both most all indiginous animals, as well as those world wide,I was perplexed.These pictures look as best as I could describe the animal. It looked like some thing that belonged in Austrailia.It was not a Badger, Racoon, Squirrel, Opposum, or any other mamals I was familiar with, yet it definately looked like a mamal. It's been in the back of my mind all these years.
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cynthiagee
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10-12-2005, 11:15 PM
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Hi... I don't know what this thing is either, but I'd be willing to guess that it's a coati, a South American animal related to the raccoon, only larger, sometimes kept as a pet in Mexico and Central America. I saw these critters several times when I lived in Florida, late at night when I was coming home from work. They were in groups of 5-10 individuals of varying size (and, I assume, age), and were grazing near the edge of a fernery canopy.
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