I nearly hit this moose with my train and then he proceeds to challenge me. And because so many are wondering why there is such a weak horn, the other larger horn were frozen solid with snow and ice.
Maybe it didn’t charge but it did come towards it, don’t be an idiot and don’t add these dumb oh you were baited these videos are still videos no one cares that it is bait
@@MIMALECKIPL its a train conductor and also yes you are "user" of polish language Edit: i really dont care but ok i didnt know and stop spaming me saying the exact same thing.
Decades ago in northern Minnesota an elderly couple was driving down a rural road and stopped for a Moose. Somehow they got the Moose angry and it stepped up on the hood, then on the roof, collapsing it and walked away. The car was totaled.
yeah I know a truck driver was up there in Maine coming up a two-lane road moose was in the way he slowed down blew the horn the moose charged.. tow truck had to come antifreeze was everywhere he knocked out the air to air the radiator and a few other things LOL.
This reminds me of a cartoon I saw in childhood (Daffy Duck, maybe?). The character says to his antagonist: I dare you to cross that line. The antagonist crosses the line. The character draws another line, and again the antagonist crosses it. This happens a couple of times. I don't remember how it ends. I remember it because bullies were like that in school. Cross their line to call their bluff, and they just draw another line until either you punch their lights out, or they cry and run for the teacher. By the way, don't you just LOVE the waggle on the moose's butt??
That's some deep snow.....if your familiar with moose is that they are tall and long legs...for that moose to have snow up to its belly indicates very deep snow
@@e.c.listening326 infrastructure is alright, public transportation sucks. I sure hope you aren't from Canada where you only have a single highway that links the East and West which shuts down all travel in either direction when a bridge collapses
@@e.c.listening326 you don't need high speed railways to have good infrastructure, I don't think high speed trains are used for cargo and we have a good highway system for transporting people
Fungis Rock so you won’t get to see the “crazy moose charging an Amtrac at 300mph”. The size and space of continental USA would be ideal for high speed rail, ground based mass transport for people, an energy friendly alternative to planes and individual transport at ridiculously low speeds. Unfortunately history just did not pave the way for that, nowadays no money is left to build it. I am not from Canada, in Europe high speed rail is a fine way to connect cities even faster than planes can.
Medvejonok Olympic лося до голодной смерти довести?) Если в лесу есть полметра снега - это всё что ему нужно даже в самый сильный мороз, а жратва для него в лесу в принципе не может быть проблемой. В лесу лось - грозный зверь, у него нет естественных врагов в виде хищника, даже одинокому взрослому лосю не опасна стая волков, не слишком опасен крупный медведь, и уж тем более не опасен безоружный человек.
Тут всё просто...Лось часто использует при переходе жд пути..так как они от вибрации утрамбованы..и по ним он хуярит как по асфальту машина..а в лесу снега дохуя..там надо больше сил прикладывать для передвижения,а зимой силы нужно экономить чтобы копыта не отбросить..смотрите как он под конец охуевший по снегу пытается бежать..Вот наверное он только часы потерял..или у электричек график сдвинулся..Так то он в промежутках между составами успевал..а тут видно накладочка вышла..и настолько ему впадлу было сходить с пути..что он решил показать у кого яица железнее..ЖИВОТНОЕ хуле...😁
@@qwertysqwerty Протоптанная тропа его так же может привести к отбросу копыт. Да на ней время можно сэкономить, но если железнодорожные пути делают большую петлю, то лось просто заебётся по ней пиздовать до пункта назначения и тоже может сдохнуть от голода. А по лесу оно всегда напрямик. Вот только как лучше и выгоднее решать как раз этому лосяшу. Да, не позавидуешь ему.
It started with one video recommended to me. "Landing gear vs runway deer". After watching that, similar roadkill videos literally DOMINATED my yt algorithm. That's how I ended up here.
Haha Sweden where I live, almost knew it was as soon as i read the word moose, but when the driver said "HÖRRU, DIN DUMMA FAN" at 0.18 I knew it was Sweden.
The horn company spent a lot of time and effort analyzing the exact frequencies of female moose calling for a mate and the grunts and groans when they were mating. Then copied and enhanced it and applied it to horns. Beware of buying automotive and railway horns from the same company that makes moose calls for hunters.
Wow this is wild!! My guess is the Moose wanted to stay on the tracks since they were a solid surface. Moose don’t really do well in deep snow, especially in forests! That’s one reason why they can sometimes live in lower elevations during the winter
My father worked for Canadian National Railway for 37 years. Although he had never personally seen it, he often said that engineers claimed that moose would charge locomotives. The crew would shut off the headlight, thought to have "enraged" bull moose in rut. Even claimed some instances of large moose having derailed the train, when their carcasses piled up under the wheels. How about it rail fans, ever hear stories of moose derailing trains before? Reply if you have. My father would loved to have seen this video. Most people back then didnt even believe moose would charge a train. Noticed the deep snow in the woods, easy walking is probably what attracts them to the rail line. Thanks for posting.
Maybe you could go out on top of the locomotive and pull the conductor's beard lol, or if you had one he could do it to ya too. That seems to be the trick for getting Caribou off the tracks... Maybe this will work too lol