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Every Thing Else Board
Tragedy at Sea World
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<blockquote data-quote="SRBeef" data-source="post: 741634" data-attributes="member: 7509"><p>This reminds me of the incident at Las Vegas a few years ago where a tiger turned on his long time trainer in a show during a famous act. Sorry I don't remember the name.</p><p></p><p>Something just snapped in the tiger and he reverted to primal behavior rather than the "pet" behavior the trainer had counted on over the years. I think it is just instincts, not "premeditation".</p><p></p><p>As has been said here many times, it is often the trusted, "good disposition" bulls that will get you mostly because of us letting our guard down. The ornery ones we know to keep an eye on or escape route. Even a playful heifer can hurt you when she wants to butt you like her buddies or wants you to scratch her.</p><p></p><p>We always need to remind each other to not turn our backs and leave and escape route.</p><p></p><p>Jim</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SRBeef, post: 741634, member: 7509"] This reminds me of the incident at Las Vegas a few years ago where a tiger turned on his long time trainer in a show during a famous act. Sorry I don't remember the name. Something just snapped in the tiger and he reverted to primal behavior rather than the "pet" behavior the trainer had counted on over the years. I think it is just instincts, not "premeditation". As has been said here many times, it is often the trusted, "good disposition" bulls that will get you mostly because of us letting our guard down. The ornery ones we know to keep an eye on or escape route. Even a playful heifer can hurt you when she wants to butt you like her buddies or wants you to scratch her. We always need to remind each other to not turn our backs and leave and escape route. Jim [/QUOTE]
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Tragedy at Sea World
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