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Tuesday, August 28, 2012

CRYPTOZOOLOGY ONLINE: On The Track (Of Unknown Animals) Episode 54






The latest episode of our monthly webTV show from the CFZ and CFZtv, bringing you news on our activities within cryptozoology and natural history as well as the latest cryptozoological, and monster hunting news from around the world. This episode brings you: CFZ in winter The first snow and snow damage Walking The ditches of Huddisford What happenned to the fallow deer Animal crossing Unseasonal flowers Coloured frogs Kennerland Cross Moles The Walland Farm trailcams Walland Farm at night Badgers/deer/rabbits/foxes Are there still red squirrels in Devon? Bigfoot in storage The Loch Lomond Monster The cat who steals tobacco Corinna looks at out of place birds New and Rediscovered: Rediscovered monkey New and Rediscovered: New lemur New and Rediscovered: New tiny frogs

7 comments:

  1. I couldn't actually find the video online. If anyone can find it please let me? know

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  2. Could you please provide a link to that video of what? looks like a crocodile in Loch Lomond?

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  3. Erm... ?_? Duracell and energizer are really cheep batteries, what site claimed they would? work for a year? Oh, and neither of those batteries are supposed to get wet, they both have a habit corroding if there remain in moist areas to long.

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  4. it's a boat, a small speed boat or motor boat,? it looks that big/strange because what you are actually seeing is the water drag, the little part that looks like 'the plesiosaur's head' is the boat.

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  5. Bruennich's guillemot is the thick-billed? murre in North America.

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  6. Dark-eyed juncos in my part of the world are very common, and they are always called "snowbirds." I didn't know they were dark-eyed juncos? until I was about 20 years old.

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  7. Fallow deer are not native to? Britain in recent times. Red deer are. The Fallow deer were introduced by Normans.

    In the United States, moose have a hard time living where there are lots of white-tailed deer. White-tailed deer have parasites that more easily infect moose, so the moose's range in the United States is quite limited from what it might be.

    I wonder if something like that is going on with the red deer vs. fallow deer issue.

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