Author Topic: What is this??? I know it is not bigfoot, but I think it is pretty rare.  (Read 1093 times)

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Offline skyhigh_seller

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Photo sucks.  You need to enlarge photo, but I think someone will know.  It was seen 2 days consecutively out my window.  I live in Central New York.

Offline Graybeard

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Beats me all I see no matter how much I blow it up is vegetation. I see no critters period. Where in the photo is a subject that you are asking about?


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Offline Oldshooter

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Quote
Beats me all I see no matter how much I blow it up is vegetation

Me neither!   ???
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Offline skyhigh_seller

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Just right of center.

Offline Silvertp

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All I see that is "critteresque" looks like a fox w/ white tip on tail.  Can't really tell based on the photo being kinda foggy looking.

Course, you know what a fox looks like, so what did it look like to you?  Give us a description, size, color, what did it act like, how did it move?  Then get a better picture if possible...maybe try a little baiting to get a closer shot.

Silvertp

Offline Glanceblamm

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I am running a good monitor here and it turned the fox w/white tip tail into a deadfall, or one large branch. First thing that caught my attention was the stump at the upper left hand side but I had seen a few of those before.

Offline Graybeard

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I'm running a 32" high quality monitor with a very high end video card in my super computer and I still see nothing that looks like a critter. If you mean the horizonal thing with what could be a white tail it looks more bunny rabbit than anything else critter like but I still think it's a piece of downed tree. It's at the base of a tree leaning left and just above the green growth?

Even on my monster monitor blown up 400% it doesn't look like an animal to me.


Bill aka the Graybeard
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Jesus is the way, the truth, and the life anyone who believes in Him will have everlasting life!

Offline Ladobe

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Does somebody actually not know what a fox looks like?   I took the plunge along with the rest of the suckers just for kicks though... if I had to go with any of the guesses, it would be the fox after heavily scrutinizing the picture with PSP.   

With little information given as if it was obvious has buffoonery written all over it, or a case of too much wacky tabacky.

Evolution at work. Over two million years ago the genus Homo had small cranial capacity and thick skin to protect them from their environment. One species has evolved into obese cranial fatheads with thin skin in comparison that whines about anything and everything as their shield against their environment. Meus

Offline skyhigh_seller

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I could see it clearly, but photo is bad, through window and moving.  White tipped tail can only mean red fox and it is black with mottled red.  It must be a Red Fox cross phase.  I have never ever heard of anyone seeing one.  Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Mammals shows them.

Offline Manitobahunter

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From what I can tell from the pic I would say it is a cross fox.  You can find the odd one here in southern Manitoba.  When I lived and


worked up north I would buy fur for the Hudson Bay Co. now the Northern stores.  Bought quite a few up there.



Shoot straight

Offline kansasj

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I think it is nobama in disquise looking for a press conference!
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Offline Catfish

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Looks like a cross fox to me too.

Offline gube

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Looks like a "silver or cross fox" to me. We have the silvers out here in Alberta.
Here's some good photos of the "cross fox"
http://www.oceanlight.com/lightbox.php?x=cross_fox__fox__mammal__animal
aim small miss small
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Offline maximus

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It's just a Red Fox,just a little different color variation.Iv'e seen them red,black,and redish black.But the tail always keeps it's white tip.

Offline Aardvark

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Here is a close up of the pic:


Here is another fox:
/^\__/^\
((*)   (*))
 ``(oo) ``
(V\/vv\/V)

Offline mattl

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Saw from your profile that you live in Texas and I am sure that it is warmer there than where I live in Colorado, so could it be a fox that is just shedding it's winter coat and you can see it's darker undercoat?  I use to see fox all the time when I lived in Illinois and they were always darker in the spring during turkey season than they were in the winter.  It may be a "cross fox", but I think it's just a regular red fox that is loosing his winter coat.  Just my opinion.

Matt

Offline Oldshooter

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Aardvark , Thanks for that close up, until that, I had not seen nothing! But then my eyes aren't what they once were! I had just written this thread off. I'd say it was definitely a fox.  ;D
“Owning a handgun doesn’t make you armed any more than owning a guitar makes you a musician.”

"Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy, its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery."

Offline FourBee

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nice blow-up there Aardvark.   What kinda set-up are you using to pull that out??????
Enjoy your rights to keep and bear arms.

Offline skyhigh_seller

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I am curious if anyone knows they % of population that is cross?  I understand there will be local and regional differences, but is it 1%, 0.1% or less?  I did a bit of searching and found no info.

Thanks

Maybe a high volume trapper or fur buyer could figure their percentage.