The fact that they are allowed to be trapped and killed for fur today is sickening. We have plenty of synthetic materials now that are even more effective.
Just a little hypocrisy as I m imagining you also protest oil and gas production, and the damage wind turbines do to the bird population. It’s tough being for anything when it means you have to be against something else. Thank God for the every breath you breath, the beauty in the created world we live in, enjoy it, use what you have to and no more, don’t take your rescue dogs out for a walk and leave the little green bags for someone else to pack out to the garbage. I could go on but with a little common sense and thinking you should get the point.
This is a good and informative video of wild cats of Canada when I lived in fort McMurray Alberta in the 80s I used to have a family of lynx living in my barn it was quite the life and experience for sure...have not seen one since I've moved to ontario in 1990
Your mainlander pronunciation of 'Newfoundland' is forgiven. ;) I've been in love with HWW since I was a kid. I continually use the videos in my ESL classes here in South Korea.
For the authorities outhere pls protect this amazing cats. If i could only help them to protect ill give my remaining life to help them exist longer on my own little way.
Beautiful animals. :) It is a pity that they must be predators. Squirrels are beautiful too. And deer and bunnies. This is a strange world. P.S. Beautiful woman. :)
I thought trapping wild animals for their fur was illegal. It should be a crime to kill these beautiful cats. Humans, top of the food chain, but disgustingly low on empathy and morals.
This is intriguing. Part of me really wants to believe Canadians can deal with fluctuations in lynx populations and don't over trap them during population declines. In the US we have a bunch of coal miners who voted for Trump rather than go out and learn how to do something other than mine coal.
2:08 what? "may" starve to death? Sources, please. This is a God-created wild animal that I find hard to even think it could starve to death, because of low rabbit populations?? 40%? How did you come up with this number?
How things went downhill! In earlier times it was all about the animals. Here, 25 seconds in and all we've seen is a woman and a map. No lynx. Yet the producer, director, and the network executive involved all thought, evidently, that this was somehow superior to the spots from earlier decades. Rather like the whole society and culture, really.