*New* Thylacine video from Western Australia, plus the top 10 videos of Thylacine's EVER!!!

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  • Опубликовано: 16 сен 2024
  • So many video clips of Thylacine's have been getting around for so many years now that I thought it was time for me to put the best of them all together in one clip. Two of the clips in this video have never been released on You Tube EVER before. You might be forgiven for thinking that some of this footage is worth big bucks, but there is no pot of gold in trying to film a Thylacine, contrary to popular belief. In late 2017/early2018, Forest Galante's Production company offered me $100 for the use of 4 of these clips. Naturally I declined their scabby offer. Even after they dug real deep a few months later and made another counter offer to me of $2000 for the use of only 2 of our video clips, (to be used in Forests now cancelled "program" Extinct or alive), now officially extinct, I still declined and said no to their offer. A man has to have some principles in life. As a result, when Forests show on the Thylacine went to air, he had zero visuals to work with and never really gained much traction. Since then he has made all sorts of outrageous claims to try and stay relevant and look useful. Hopefully Forest raises the money he needs to fund his trip to New Guinea so he can go and mix with the locals over there and maybe find Jesus instead. Recently he made the ridiculous claim that Nick Mooney told him that Nick had seen 2 Thylacine's from a tent once... Claims which Nick has now categorically denied...Anyway, I'm sure that fate will show its hand sooner or later and Forest will actually prove something other than his teeth are really shiny.... and that he needs $5,000,000 to fund his next "program". The best of luck to you Forest !!
    Here is the link to Paul Days original Thylacine footage:
    • Original Thylacine Foo...
    More evidence:
    www.thylacinea...

Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @mbsnyderc
    @mbsnyderc 4 месяца назад +500

    The Thylacine seems to have the same power that bigfoot has to make cameras blurry.

    • @cynthiakoepke2649
      @cynthiakoepke2649 4 месяца назад +13

      I’m in Wa…… Look for him every day… I Love living in the forest 🌲🌲🌲🌲🌲🌲🌲🌲

    • @ak1969
      @ak1969 4 месяца назад +17

      Same goes with "loch Ness" monster". Funny how it goes that way over and over?

    • @Mouse_Metal
      @Mouse_Metal 4 месяца назад +28

      Bold of you to assume the quality of footage you see in professional documentaries can be achieved with some soap box or smartphone "camera". Some of these footages are f-ing old too. Cameras were even crappier back then.

    • @28russ
      @28russ 4 месяца назад +13

      @@Mouse_Metal They all have the ability to focus though.
      And yet, all outta friggin focus. 🤷‍♂

    • @wout123100
      @wout123100 4 месяца назад +11

      and ufo's

  • @carldryan
    @carldryan 4 месяца назад +149

    The only consistent factor with these thylacine videos is that everyone’s smartphone instantly becomes a Nokia 7650 when they start filming.

    • @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886
      @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886  4 месяца назад +33

      If you are that narrow minded from your perspective on how they were filmed and when they were filmed, then why even comment ? One is from 1973, one from 1994, both on film, two are from thermal devices and only 2 of them were filmed on mobile phones. Trail cameras use infra red at night. The occasion of seeing one of these animals at any given time is a shock and catches you off guard, its happened to me 4 times so far and only once did i get it on film, its thermal, its number 2 in this line-up and it is not possibly anything else but a Thylacine when you consider its sheer size. If it is a Quoll, I hope it stays away from my chooks...😳

    • @the_red-plague
      @the_red-plague 4 месяца назад +10

      ​they say the same thing about bigfoot here in the US. And I've heard the damn thing with my own ears
      I know a guy from the noongar tribe that's got a line on some yowies if you are interested

    • @binxbolling
      @binxbolling 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@@thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886Critical thinking is not narrow-mindedness. It's what science is based on, dummy.

    • @binxbolling
      @binxbolling 4 месяца назад +13

      No scientist would find any of this as good evidence.

    • @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886
      @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886  4 месяца назад +14

      No evidence was used for the extinction paper yet that was accepted...

  • @myrrhsolace5875
    @myrrhsolace5875 4 месяца назад +322

    I agree with what “Casual Geographic” said: “If you see a thylacine - for their own sake, NO! You haven’t seen a thylacine!”

    • @markinglese3874
      @markinglese3874 4 месяца назад +12

      My son and I love him. He is so bloody funny.

    • @kingcosworth2643
      @kingcosworth2643 4 месяца назад +4

      That's a silly approach.

    • @kazoot8265
      @kazoot8265 4 месяца назад +32

      @@kingcosworth2643not really. I wish I genuinely wish I could agree with you, but you have to remember there are terrible people in the world. And with the amount of people that know of the search for Thylacines, it wouldn’t be too surprising if there’s a few that would want to benefit from their rediscovery for their own gain. Poachers and illegal animal trade would be swarming for the chance, as sad as it is. Not to mention the media and public attention. The trips people would take into an area that they were found would wind up driving them somewhere else

    • @TogelTr
      @TogelTr 4 месяца назад +18

      @@kazoot8265 Agreed.. here in Java, it is said that the Javanese tiger has been extinct, but actually it is not.. there are still some videos, and even the latest one is a legit DNA test of a piece of hair from an animal seen by 5 people.. I still think we should keep it quiet to protect the animal. It is better that the general public still thinks that it is extinct.

    • @spacerunner357
      @spacerunner357 4 месяца назад

      I remember that.

  • @thechumbucket5775
    @thechumbucket5775 5 месяцев назад +362

    I have lived in Florida for 38 years and never seen a Florida panther in the wild. Im always hiking and exploring nature They are so elusive. I strongly believe theres a small a population of thylacine in Tasmania

    • @Rosesraspberries72
      @Rosesraspberries72 5 месяцев назад

      Have you come across a skunk ape yet?

    • @AFloridaSon
      @AFloridaSon 5 месяцев назад +48

      I've spent most of my 60 years in Florida, and I've never seen a panther here. Outside of Ocala National Park, I've never seen a wild bear here. I think it is reckless of the people in authority to write thylacines off as being extinct. There is some good evidence of them being in Tasmania. But, even though they were supposed to have went extinct thousands of years ago on the Mainland, there are recorded sightings as far back as the early 1800's, when people weren't even looking for them. And Neil has came up with really good evidence that they're still on the Mainland. And also, the indigenous people of New Guinea say they see them sometimes. Also in New Guinea, is The Singing Dogs. Theye were believed to go extinct in the 1970's, but they've been rediscovered. The singing dogs are loud, but they were still not easy to rediscover. It will be even easier for an animal that doesn't make a lot of noise, to hide.

    • @glennllewellyn7369
      @glennllewellyn7369 5 месяцев назад +27

      My son and I saw one yesterday. Black. 5 foot long.
      Sapphire Coast NSW
      Australia

    • @someoneelse4492
      @someoneelse4492 5 месяцев назад +53

      You only need visit Tasmania once to realise we don't have a freaking clue about what's in 80% of the land. I'd be shocked if they weren't still around.

    • @comfortablynumb9342
      @comfortablynumb9342 4 месяца назад +19

      ​@@AFloridaSonmy dad's address is in Weirsdale and he has wild bears that come in his yard regularly. He has different bears around the rental he owns a few miles from his house. In both cases females have gotten used to people. One's cubs played with his dog lots of times. I worry about those bears, dad and the neighbors because they don't have any fear of each other. Dad can pet the momma bear when she has cubs and she lets him feed them by hand. It's not going to end well. But dad is hard headed..

  • @Taipan108
    @Taipan108 5 месяцев назад +245

    If I was a thylacine, I’d stay elusive too.

    • @AlexPlaysGaming
      @AlexPlaysGaming 4 месяца назад +9

      Especially after the humans of Australia snuffed them all out, and kept the last one in captivity

    • @Taipan108
      @Taipan108 4 месяца назад +9

      @@AlexPlaysGaming it’s a despicable history.

    • @Arjunarjunskiy
      @Arjunarjunskiy 3 месяца назад +1

      Can you prove that you're not a thylacine?

    • @Taipan108
      @Taipan108 3 месяца назад +1

      @@Arjunarjunskiy Hmm… Well, I do try to avoid people too, but I’m not that good at it.

    • @looloo4029
      @looloo4029 3 месяца назад

      @@Taipan108the Tasmanian government put a £1- bounty on thylacine (Tasmanian Tiger) scalps. It was during the depression and people were desperate for the money. Over 1300 scalps were presented to the government.

  • @KursRage
    @KursRage 4 месяца назад +24

    5:50, I have owned two female Blue Healers in my lifetime, and one had somewhat weak hips. When she ran, she moved just like this animal, by pulling both rear legs forward simultaneously while running. Her name was Sadie T. 🙂

    • @slappy8941
      @slappy8941 4 месяца назад +1

      *heelers

    • @mikehunt7419
      @mikehunt7419 3 месяца назад

      @@slappy8941*looser

    • @populustremulus228
      @populustremulus228 День назад

      I shared my life with the most amazing kelpie, she had a hip broken by a truck once, and after that when times get rainy, she would move exactly like in the video too.
      God I miss her!!!

  • @williamdecatur4340
    @williamdecatur4340 4 месяца назад +12

    Checking in from Georgia, USA. I would love for the Thylacine to still be alive. These videos, many of which I've never seen before, have convinced me it is. Subscribed!! Keep i ut

  • @tri-tarot-tops7133
    @tri-tarot-tops7133 7 дней назад +1

    This was a great video, thank you for compiling. All footage I had never seen before. Keep up the good work!

  • @marianthatos6667
    @marianthatos6667 4 месяца назад +11

    I see thylacines. Very happy and grateful for this.

  • @o-ruff1483
    @o-ruff1483 5 месяцев назад +23

    the last video looks extremely promising. As an animator and animal artist I can tell I see stripe looking pattern too. Also I read that thylas would follow their prey with their noses to the ground. The silhoette also looks like a thyla, I found similar posed thyla photos and compared to frames. Pretty many similarities ! Hope to see more videos and gosh I wish that animal stopped for a few seconds x)

    • @minerran
      @minerran 19 дней назад

      I didn't see any stripes and I did look for them. Why could they not be red foxes. As an animal artist, you know they are very similar in profile, no?

    • @o-ruff1483
      @o-ruff1483 19 дней назад

      @@minerran could be anything . They are not very similar if you pay attention to the body proportions. yet I`ve never seen a fox with black pattern on their backs.

    • @byronwhitman5203
      @byronwhitman5203 9 дней назад

      Yes

  • @zignalf2053
    @zignalf2053 5 месяцев назад +13

    Great to see all these videos in one place, along with your commentary. The last one is very convincing. Your dedication to this is much appreciated!

  • @ignisign7604
    @ignisign7604 5 месяцев назад +71

    I have gone back and forth a lot on whether Thylacine are still around or not. I definitely want them to be, but I've always leaned on, "oh, it's just a sick fox." But, in the convincing footage, they all have that weird gait. That's what's making me lean more towards them being around than not

  • @secretzrevealed
    @secretzrevealed 3 месяца назад +5

    i like to consider myself optimistic about the existence of thylacines to this day, i don’t want to say they 100% still are alive because i don’t like being Wrong but i love watching sighting videos and i love to think they’re still alive. thanks for the awesome video!! love from the US

  • @thompsonfamilyhuntingadven4036
    @thompsonfamilyhuntingadven4036 4 месяца назад +46

    10, Dingo/wild dog.
    9, Fox with mange.
    8, feral cat with prey in it mouth.
    7, fox with mange.
    6, dingo/wild dog, carries injured hind leg doesn’t swap legs.
    5, bandicoot.
    4, no stripes visible, fox with mange. The skin fold can appear to be stripes.
    3, feral pig.
    2, ?? Big feral cat or quoll.
    1, saddle back dingo x
    Not a single reasonable piece of footage.

    • @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886
      @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886  4 месяца назад +6

      Hahaha thanks for your two bobs worth.

    • @MegaMarco313
      @MegaMarco313 4 месяца назад

      ​@@thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886 Don't buy the fact that for some reason, in modern times with this incredible technology, every video of a so called thylacine sighting is still a tease with ambiguity. enough with all the crap. You trying to tell me with everyone looking, in a concentrated area of a relatively small land mass, for the last god knows how many decades, THIS is the best that\s been come up with? Go find it, film it and no more teases. get a hundred believers, stick cameras everywhere, track every location and get the real thing. otherwise, this is just a mental illness.

    • @counterstrike89
      @counterstrike89 4 месяца назад +3

      @@thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886 Red foxes have large hind legs for leaping, and they have very long front legs also, they never hobble, red foxes have extreme grace and speed, the top of the animal kingdom vs any animal as far as gait and all around running ability.

    • @aargreborn
      @aargreborn 4 месяца назад

      ​The last footgae, you can kinda see stripes​@@thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886

    • @ScorpIron58
      @ScorpIron58 4 месяца назад

      And don't forget ~a fox with mange

  • @krispycool1
    @krispycool1 4 месяца назад +16

    Back in the 1990s I was hitch-hiking from Adelaide to Melbourne with my dog and I decided to camp overnight in the Grampians because I was in no hurry. Early next morning looking down over a meadow valley around 500ish meters away were 2 animals that I couldn't identify. It was half light and a long way off. At first they looked a bit like badgers but then I noticed their legs were much longer, the light wasn't good enough to tell what color they were, maybe greyish, they soon noticed me watching and bolted into the bush. I have always wondered what they were.

  • @1fires1
    @1fires1 4 месяца назад +14

    The Tassie government spent $30 million trying to find a single fox that escaped from a container. The only thing they found was a stuffed one at a local market. So what hope have they got in finding the tiger? 😁

    • @davida.4933
      @davida.4933 4 месяца назад +2

      Well they might just get lucky with hundred of cameras who knows...

    • @kingcosworth2643
      @kingcosworth2643 4 месяца назад +4

      Government wouldn't know their arse from their elbow. there is not a single thing they can do well, and it costs them an awful lot to fail)

    • @papryk99
      @papryk99 2 месяца назад

      Is it true?

  • @Corteum
    @Corteum 4 месяца назад +35

    11:36 "i can count six stripes"
    bro, there's no stripes! 😂

    • @carlossanchezsanchez9505
      @carlossanchezsanchez9505 4 месяца назад +11

      I mean honestly if you are not able to see those stripes as obvious as I see them even without focusing, without slowing the video, I think you should buy new glasses. I even see them on its tail. I counted more than 6

    • @Corteum
      @Corteum 4 месяца назад +6

      @@carlossanchezsanchez9505 It's not even about that. There's just no stripes. I've played games like doom and mnecraft. That's all that is. Just a bunch of blurred pixels. lol It's just pixels bro. Maybe it's you that needs to get _your_ eyes checked. 😂

    • @carlossanchezsanchez9505
      @carlossanchezsanchez9505 4 месяца назад +1

      @@Corteum take a closer look at video number 1 and you will see them.

    • @Corteum
      @Corteum 4 месяца назад +2

      @@carlossanchezsanchez9505 I was referring specifically to 11:35 .

    • @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886
      @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886  4 месяца назад +7

      @@Corteum if playing video games is the top of your resume of expertise, then thanks for the interest. Maybe try looking at them on a decent sized screen instead of a phone or maybe your eyes are trashed from playing too many video games...?

  • @undeadtrev
    @undeadtrev Месяц назад +7

    I've seen them in Gippsland early 90's. They were quite close and undeniably Thylacine. It was a powerful encounter.

    • @user-su5lo8hr3c
      @user-su5lo8hr3c 28 дней назад

      So powerful it knocked you down and made passionate love to your face🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @sarahbass6116
    @sarahbass6116 4 месяца назад +31

    I am convinced that the thylacine survives in remnant populations.
    The main reason no-one has firm evidence of the thylacine is that it’s learnt that
    humans = extreme danger.

    • @billfraser8189
      @billfraser8189 4 месяца назад +3

      Well, that and it's extinct. At least in Australia and Tasmania

    • @cjod33
      @cjod33 4 месяца назад +2

      ​@@billfraser8189 and the Wolomi Pines are extinct too! 😂

    • @whatthefox4787
      @whatthefox4787 4 месяца назад

      Positive identification means an area invasion of Scientists, Govt, and all manner of other entities and the Thylacine will NEVER be left alone to recover. The people who see them know its a TTiger. The people who photograph them know its a TTiger. By all means leave shared photos blurry enough to cause a LITTLE doubt so theyre left alone, but keep some clear pics for your own files. 😉👍

  • @malloywest8766
    @malloywest8766 4 месяца назад +2

    I Truly hope they still do exist. Thank you for your coverage

  • @juliegarrett8389
    @juliegarrett8389 5 месяцев назад +62

    That last one was very compelling. I really do hope there's a population out there, keeping itself away from supposed civilisation. Thanks, Neil, for compiling this list.

    • @SuperGravey
      @SuperGravey 5 месяцев назад +11

      There is not one population but many.
      A few people know where they are but don't want people crawling all over the joint.
      Yes, I have a very good idea of where they are and I'm not allowed to say. All I can say is Gipsland.

    • @markkane3739
      @markkane3739 5 месяцев назад +2

      I agree with you there Julie - it's the only one that can't be called "too blurry" or "fails for another physiological reason". I also really hope that there's an extant population still!

    • @juliegarrett8389
      @juliegarrett8389 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@SuperGravey I really hope you're right. I've spent years driving around north-west Tasmania, never seen one unfortunately, so it's wonderful to think that they may be elsewhere.

    • @SuperGravey
      @SuperGravey 5 месяцев назад

      @@juliegarrett8389 the population that we know of is safe. The farmers know all about them but one seems to be a cowboy shooting whatever walks past according to locals.
      This is where I tried to call the government but nobody listens. Yes, according to a well known person, they have been accidentally shot and bodies discarded because they thought they were foxes.
      As Neil and others have mentioned 1080 baits are rife and secondary kills will and do happen.
      Our leaders are not leading, they are protecting the money. If you want to know what to look up, look up de-extinction events and read the laws.
      You'll find that many towns and massive international contracts would have to be cancelled. As Neil once said, you'll never find the thylacine.

    • @eviejade6320
      @eviejade6320 5 месяцев назад

      I agree. Of course there is a clown on here who reckons it's a Quoll. Must be the most mutated Quoll I've ever seen. Dr Moreau must have got hold of the poor bugger.

  • @tunydd7775
    @tunydd7775 4 месяца назад +5

    Great video, thanks for sharing! 💙💜👍👍

  • @georgeredbranch652
    @georgeredbranch652 4 месяца назад +8

    I've been following the TAGA for a while now. I live in N.W. Tasmania. If the tiger is still around it will be found by people like you. Images of these animals will be rare for eg. My wife and l have only seen wild devils twice in 13 years, and of those 2 encounters we were only able t o photograph 1. And these are animals that though endangered are around. Right place, right time, and luck. Keep up the great work you do.

  • @gaijininja
    @gaijininja 4 месяца назад +48

    Here you go.
    10. Large male grey fox.
    9. Juvenile grey fox.
    8. Dog.
    7. Red fox.
    6. Red fox. Common loping gait injured foxes.
    5. Cat.
    4. Dog.
    3. Likely fake. Thermal, the animal should be lighter.
    2. See, animal is lighter on thermal. Quoll. Has the shape and gait of one.
    1. Awesome, caught one of the red foxes that delusional people don't believe are in Tasmania.
    Now, I have seen a red fox numerous times in Tassie, at St Peters Pass, and at almost a stop, 10m in front of the van, with 200W of drive light shining on it at Woodbury Rd Woodbury, where it crosses the Currajong Rivulet. Living in Victoria, I have seen thousands of red and grey foxes, of all sizes, in all states of alive and dead, how the move across various soils. Along with various feral dogs and cats of all sizes. I can pick the animal at 200m on the side of the road at night in the illumination of LED spot lights, and the only mistakes I make is A) Misidentifying a large cat and a small grey fox at the far reach of the lights, and B) Not running over every single one of the pests. Also, I spent decades walking the Tassie bush, silently, at all hours of the day and night. Saw plenty of quoll, bandicoot, a few sugar gliders, a few devils, wombats, plenty of roos and wallabies, feral dogs and cats. Never a Thylacine, and never a fox until the 2000's. I'm sure if I believed a small population of Thylacines had somehow survived, and not died out due to a genetic bottleneck, I would be seeing them in every video of common explainable animals. Now, if people looking for them are actually serious, and do find actual irrefutable proof they still exist, they would be beyond stupid to make that public. They would share easily debunked proof, to enforce the idea that they are obsessed nuts, while keeping the animal safe from the rush of people looking for it.

    • @sheldongryba4803
      @sheldongryba4803 4 месяца назад

      I live in Canada. I see fox on a regular basis for 30 years. The gait alone is no where near a fox. The tail is another dead give away. You are delusional if you think that is a fox.

    • @merrygomouse
      @merrygomouse 4 месяца назад +11

      Gray fox? In Australia since when?

    • @hegyesipeter5457
      @hegyesipeter5457 4 месяца назад +4

      You are so mean, I was hoping at least one of them is it.

    • @xxitactical_8723
      @xxitactical_8723 4 месяца назад +4

      There are no gray foxes in Australia bro

    • @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886
      @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886  4 месяца назад +3

      Thanks for that Uncle Arthur.

  • @50caliber29
    @50caliber29 4 месяца назад +35

    Do you know what would be good for providing solid evidence in these sorts of cases, high resolution cameras, video cameras & high res night vision. If only we had those things available. Oh wait 🤔.
    Just once I'd like to see a picture or video that doesn't look like it was taken with a camera from 1879 with vaseline spread on the lens.

    • @JPMonstie
      @JPMonstie 4 месяца назад +5

      Yeah, the issues are distance and poor, to zero light which requires very expensive gear to combat and also is impractical because you need serious zoom lenses which lose nearly all of your viewing area from being recorded. he triggering range of trail cams is also very limited. Who’s going to leave 1K-2K worth of camera gear out for weeks at a time in the bush?
      None are 100% conclusive but some are very suspicious of the Thylacine. I use a lot of trail cams but unless they’re Reconyx (very expensive) or similar quality, the images are very hit and miss…mostly miss. Poor definition and lighting make them good for blurry images most of the time alas.

    • @50caliber29
      @50caliber29 4 месяца назад +5

      @@JPMonstie and yet we have perfectly legible footage of a kangaroo on one of the videos web cam footage. We have Go-Pro's that literally power RUclips that produce HD images under every hostile, low light scenario imaginable.
      Millions of people have perfectly legible high resolution photos of animals from things like safaris taken by normal people with average cameras. I can go on RUclips hunting channels and see high res night vision video where identifying animals is easy because you can literally see the individual hairs in their fur.
      However try to take a picture of anything like big foot, Loch Ness monster, Thylocine etc & all of a sudden 240p resolution, blurred, underexposed, trial cams that only film the arse region or suddenly develop focus issues when a Dodo passes the lens.
      Answer me this, if you are going big foot hunting properly, not messing about but a serious endeavour. Would you not take the best camera equipment possible. High speed shutter, auto exposure, auto stabilisation? Seems common sense but for some reason the default camera seems to be a 110 disposable from 1974. Futurama did it best with conspiracy photographer.

    • @Rebecca.Wildlife
      @Rebecca.Wildlife 4 месяца назад +5

      Best footage of a thylacine I've seen is the one of the last one to exist in that zoo! and we didn't even have the kind of quality cameras you can get now! It's all lies and wishful thinking .. the thylacine is extinct and it should serve as a reminder to people that life is precious

    • @Brandanmayhew
      @Brandanmayhew 3 месяца назад

      Would you like some fries with that armchair expert? YOU go and try then. Zooming in causes pixelation and distortion. Have you never fully zoomed in on an area before on your Samsung or iPhone? How stupid are you, seriously

    • @byronwhitman5203
      @byronwhitman5203 9 дней назад

      Did they have Vaseline in 1879?

  • @duncanwallace7760
    @duncanwallace7760 4 месяца назад +73

    It's amazing that even in the top 10 videos, there are none that come close to being as clear as the millions of cat videos people manage to film on their phones each year.

    • @MegaMarco313
      @MegaMarco313 4 месяца назад

      exactly. these people are living a mental illness.

    • @altruismfirst6489
      @altruismfirst6489 4 месяца назад

      A filthy rodent of Siberian-bolsehvik dna that was camera-shy now is more elusive thanks to his israel-moresad background, DanAndrews and all his cronies would be better extinct. As for those questioning the low quality video footages, many must take into account this has always been an elusive nomadic animal in nature not an alpha predator like the Dingos that can also hunt in packs unlike Thylacines. Great research and excellent effort, thank you.

    • @Effemo58
      @Effemo58 4 месяца назад +2

      and the only one vid. where it is neat, we only see micro-bands in the lower-left corner of the screen...

    • @jasminecollins897
      @jasminecollins897 4 месяца назад +7

      I hate to break it to you, bud, but there are a LOT of cats out there. Like, so fucking many cats. If there were only a few hundred, or even a few thousand, cats in the world and they weren't domesticated. You wouldn't see many good videos of them, either.

    • @jasminecollins897
      @jasminecollins897 4 месяца назад +1

      @@MegaMarco313 what are you talking about?

  • @alanholloway1264
    @alanholloway1264 4 месяца назад +18

    there never seems to be crystal clear unmistakeable footage

    • @Brandanmayhew
      @Brandanmayhew 3 месяца назад +1

      Would you like fries with that🤪?

  • @dansemacabre6515
    @dansemacabre6515 4 месяца назад +57

    My family have been feeding an "extinct" species of Woodpecker on our property since the 1960s. Tried informing a University they're not extinct. Silence was deafening

    • @jasminecollins897
      @jasminecollins897 4 месяца назад +23

      If you're talking about the ivory billed woodpecker, there are a whole lot of researchers who would love to hear from you. Please do try again. Just because one institution isn't interested, doesn't mean no one is.
      And if you have video or pictures, please do share them with people who can officially ID them. Any footage from something like a bird feeder camera would make a huge difference, especially. Researchers are working very hard right now to prove they're not extinct, but they're challenging to catch on camera because of their difficult to access preferred habitat and shy behavior. If yours are used to being fed, they'd be excellent subjects.

    • @jasminecollins897
      @jasminecollins897 4 месяца назад +16

      And on a personal level, I'd love to see any pictures or video of the woodpeckers if you've posted them anywhere.

    • @dansemacabre6515
      @dansemacabre6515 4 месяца назад

      @@jasminecollins897 Hi Jasmine. This was over 2 decades back when I 1st tried notifying academia about the bird. It's not an Ivorybilled WP. It's a type of redheaded WP supposedly extinct for several decades. I do have pictures of them but they're on my old iPhone 4 & you can't even get batteries for those anymore.
      I still feed them but they only appear for maybe 5 or 6 weeks out of the year. 30+ years ago, the neighbors behind us had a cherry tree & these WPs nested there. Seeing them was frequent, an almost daily occurence. The man who owned the property died & the new owner cut the tree down. The birds vanished for several years but began reappearing some years later, albeit only briefly once per year.
      I still feed them when they show & it's a true joy to see them. Beautiful creatures! I forget the specific name of the bird & haven't found info on them online but I'll keep searching. My delay in getting back to you was because I used to have a folder on the birds with articles & info I xeroxed from various books back in the day. Can't remember where I put that folder & attempts at finding it proved fruitless.
      I'll attempt taking pictures next time the birds show

    • @jeannemorton7371
      @jeannemorton7371 4 месяца назад

      Used to live next to the great dismal swamp, always saw the extinct species of ivory billed woodpecker in that area of va. No one was interested at the time 10+ yrs ago.

    • @ladameeidolon
      @ladameeidolon 4 месяца назад +3

      @dansemacabre6515 Totally understand you. It's been the same over here in NZ regarding sightings of the South Island kōkakō.

  • @bidenisasnake9932
    @bidenisasnake9932 4 месяца назад +13

    Davinci Resolve can make things come to life.

  • @seangere9698
    @seangere9698 4 месяца назад +47

    The Belair Tiger video: Look at the tip of the tail, it has a white tip. From what i remember of photos, they should have a black or tan tipped tail right. The white tip and the russet semi shaggy fur and black socks makes me think more of a fox than a tiger.

    • @raptore.x
      @raptore.x 4 месяца назад +5

      oh yeah that one is for sure a red fox, i live somewhere you see a few a day this time of year and while i can say some of the animals in this video arent foxes id confidently say that one is

    • @beatglauser9444
      @beatglauser9444 4 месяца назад +5

      @@raptore.x I agree: That is a fox I am sure. More than half of the videos could easily be foxes and some maybe stray dogs. If a fox looses some hair on the tail it can look like a long stiff one like the Tasmanian tiger had.

    • @steviedj6730
      @steviedj6730 4 месяца назад

      Looks like a Roo to me

    • @AderynBach42
      @AderynBach42 4 месяца назад

      mangy fox. My dude is in denial.

    • @ukrpgfan4029
      @ukrpgfan4029 4 месяца назад

      @@beatglauser9444 Loses. Not Looses.

  • @susanblack7782
    @susanblack7782 4 месяца назад +7

    That is a Thylacine on the Jan. 2, 2024 video!!! The back legs have the short hock, and stripes for sure!!! This is awesome to see! Congratulations!!! I’m so proud for you!!!

  • @chrisnewtownnsw
    @chrisnewtownnsw 4 месяца назад +3

    You legend, I'm 100% convinced they aren't extinct after seeing this. Nice work.

  • @newcountryguy
    @newcountryguy 4 месяца назад +20

    Any time a film goes blurry and gets shaky to hide part of an alleged creature sighting it's most likely fake.

  • @the_beef4762
    @the_beef4762 4 месяца назад +8

    Think this may be the year we finally get a CLEAR definitive video of a Thylacine. Praying for it. Just to know they're alive and somewhat thriving would be amazing. Truly a beautiful animal.

  • @Paul_Rohde
    @Paul_Rohde 4 месяца назад +25

    It would appear that the only reason why possible recordings of the thylacine are always fuzzy or blurred, is that when a recording is of higher quality that allows for a secure identification, it is always realised to be another animal.

    • @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886
      @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886  4 месяца назад

      So glad to hear you have had your epiphany. Good for you.👍

    • @apterachallenge
      @apterachallenge 4 месяца назад +3

      Can you be more specific? Can you perhaps provide a link to a high quality recording of an animal that was suspected to be a thylacine, but isn't? Or are you just making up an argument based on no evidence?

    • @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886
      @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886  4 месяца назад +1

      @@apterachallenge i have all sorts of audio comparisons in this clip to eliminate ANY known possible other candidates
      ruclips.net/video/9nC4J6NuZu4/видео.htmlsi=lGIpZrKxcgc5AzaE

    • @apterachallenge
      @apterachallenge 4 месяца назад +1

      @@thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886 Thanks for the link, but my question was directed to the other person who seems to think that anything that's higher resolution would turn out to be something else.

    • @byronwhitman5203
      @byronwhitman5203 9 дней назад

      ​@@thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886good response

  • @TheBaldrick07
    @TheBaldrick07 2 месяца назад +2

    Loved your video. I do hope you have positive success and finally prove that these animals do exist. I took forward to that day

  • @fasterman3
    @fasterman3 5 месяцев назад +45

    I hope they put up a bunch more trail-cams in the area of the last ones since it is the newest sighting. It was definitely compelling.

    • @ThreeLittleBirds111
      @ThreeLittleBirds111 4 месяца назад +6

      I'm the 14th like ..I only gave you a like because I hate # 13, (My Mom died when I was holding her hand on the 13th)
      This is the first ti I ever posted this. I'm 69 and I'm to old to BS .

  • @jenniferjes8524
    @jenniferjes8524 5 месяцев назад +21

    WOW, I loved this video. ❤ Thank you Neil

    • @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886
      @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886  5 месяцев назад +6

      No worries. Thanks for sticking around...

    • @zxyatiywariii8
      @zxyatiywariii8 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@@thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886Thank you, liked and subbed! What a wonderful channel!

  • @antonnym214
    @antonnym214 Месяц назад +1

    "What if it's not the photographer's fault? what if Bigfoot is just blurry? There could be a large, out-of-focus creature roaming the countryside." -- Mitch Hedberg.

  • @shanevonharten3100
    @shanevonharten3100 4 месяца назад +36

    Youve certainly convinced yourself. The trouble is even with modern technology theres not a single clear picture and without it , theyre just fuzzy dreams.

    • @Brandanmayhew
      @Brandanmayhew 3 месяца назад

      Blows my mind how you can be so closed minded along with 34 other Muppets. 😂🤪 imagine thinking that when you zoom all the way in that your camera is still crystal clear. Have you not used your camera before and taken a video. Go outside and try it for yourself. You're clueless

  • @rosscronkhite9722
    @rosscronkhite9722 4 месяца назад +14

    All of the vids are too out of focus. What are the odds of all of the vids being out of focus. Same with bigfoot.

    • @Brandanmayhew
      @Brandanmayhew 3 месяца назад

      Well why the hell are you here? To not see it? I don't get it? Same as bigfoot. You probably watch bigfoot videos and complain that they're blurry too. Wow🤦‍♂️ bigfoot and yowies 1000% exist whether your peanut brain wants to handle it or not. The world isn't stopping for you😂 maybe open your eyes and brain and learn how to see them. Ignorant armchair expert sitting in his house

    • @Brandanmayhew
      @Brandanmayhew 3 месяца назад

      You go out and try get some proof nuffy

  • @Gustamegillgetaguyskitty-ti6ox
    @Gustamegillgetaguyskitty-ti6ox 4 месяца назад +9

    None of these videos are even slightly convincing, sorry. I see foxes, dogs, even a cat but no Thylacines whatsoever.

    • @888jucu
      @888jucu 4 месяца назад +2

      Saved me 14mins, thanks 👍

  • @RavenMadd9
    @RavenMadd9 4 месяца назад +2

    Thank you American fascinated by your tiger

  • @NobleTreizeN13
    @NobleTreizeN13 5 месяцев назад +13

    Is there any way we could watch the last footage uncompressed please? It looks pretty damn convinving and I'm saying that while watching it with the horrible RUclips compression so the original file must be even better.

  • @neilbedford5082
    @neilbedford5082 Месяц назад +1

    I live in the UK but have watched this story for years, ever since a frightening close encounter with a black puma in the English countryside got me looking into similar stories. Clearly I am on the opposite side of the planet but logic tells me there could well be a surviving colony of these fascinating animals - I do hope so

    • @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886
      @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886  Месяц назад +1

      @@neilbedford5082 cheers. Seeing one really does open up your mind to the possibilities that's for sure.

  • @roncarby7409
    @roncarby7409 4 месяца назад +12

    I watched all of the videos and did not see any thylacines. Sorry.

    • @TreadMotorsports
      @TreadMotorsports 4 месяца назад

      And you are to the rest of the world? ( Nobody ) I assume?

  • @selfretired3025
    @selfretired3025 4 месяца назад +3

    Because of the videos from 30-40 yrs ago, we can more easily tell what we are looking at. It's not as far fetched to believe as things that never existed, because they did... quite recently. And because of these comparisons, I do believe they still exist... and hope they continue to breed. They are fascinating animals, indeed.

  • @AnthonyWhitewwfilms
    @AnthonyWhitewwfilms 4 месяца назад +17

    Sorry dude. You want it so bad you are seeing it everywhere. I would love nothing more than it to be still out there. Unfortunately the Tazzie Tiger is a part of history.

  • @Mark-ew5jm
    @Mark-ew5jm 5 месяцев назад +23

    Great video Neil…..the last animal was the most distinctive example of a thylacine. Thanks for your work and also for sharing.

  • @oso9809
    @oso9809 4 месяца назад +10

    So you see one on the thermal but didn’t go look for tracks?

  • @Frombie_01
    @Frombie_01 4 месяца назад +10

    My main takeaway from that 14 minutes of life that I'll never get back is, you blokes really need to upgrade your trail cameras. Also how did Thylacines get to South and Western Australia? Did they catch the Spirit of Tasmania across to Melbourne then head west? If they did come across by ferry, then why not head north? As we all are aware Queensland, Beautiful one day, Perfect the next."

    • @terryhunt2659
      @terryhunt2659 4 месяца назад

      Thylacines originally lived throughout the south west portion of Australia - as their numbers were reduced, Tasmania was the last area that they remained somewhat numerous in, it wasn't their origin.

  • @jancyvargheese5351
    @jancyvargheese5351 4 месяца назад +2

    Wow, the last footage from 2024 looks very convincing! I think we need more camera traps and videos from that area

  • @CraftyCleetus
    @CraftyCleetus 5 месяцев назад +5

    Very promising, well done man. Your stripey bum clip is the go to defensive piece of footage I've referred to but this new one is pretty compelling

  • @Martin-lc1sk
    @Martin-lc1sk 4 месяца назад +9

    10 fox
    9 80% sure juvenile fox
    8 unsure
    7 definitely definitely red fox colour and white tip to tail so distinctive
    6 unsure as back lit and injured, probably dog or fox
    5 numbat with front quarters raised (maybe climbing on log)
    4 maybe thylacine
    3 hard to see enough detail, probably fox
    2 maybe thylacine, the tail is held level more than a fox usually does
    1. Dog, the stripes are shadows accentuated by the poor quality

  • @user-iy7gc2vt7v
    @user-iy7gc2vt7v 5 месяцев назад +24

    That's amazing Neil the last one is defo a thylacine this is great all the best from Scotland.

  • @trevorstevenson4038
    @trevorstevenson4038 4 месяца назад +15

    Why are there people obsessed with this?
    Is it pride?

    • @MarkMarkMarkSmith
      @MarkMarkMarkSmith 4 месяца назад +5

      "Obsessed" is the key-word here... When people are obsessed, logic, common-sense and analytical faculties go out of the window...

    • @TucoDog-ho6fw
      @TucoDog-ho6fw 4 месяца назад +2

      No it’s just wishful thinking

    • @adreabrooks11
      @adreabrooks11 3 месяца назад

      Romanticism. It's a cheerful thought that maybe these things aren't dead after all.
      Which, I'm not saying they are or aren't extinct; I'm just saying we have yet to get any solid evidence (clear photos, clear tracks, DNA). I don't live in Tassie, so who am I to judge?

  • @comfortablynumb9342
    @comfortablynumb9342 4 месяца назад +26

    That animal looks like its right leg is injured no matter what it is. It's not making contact with the ground at times.

  • @hannakinn
    @hannakinn Месяц назад

    My father used to sing a song about Australia to me when I was a very small child. He'd never been to Australia and had no friends from there so I'm not sure why he sang that song to me but I loved it and I'm very glad he did. I was always interested in Australia and I was absolutely enchanted when I learned about Tasmanian Tigers aka Thylacines. Pre internet I was only able to view images in a few library books or on a nature program here and there over the decades but once I was online, prior to the internet having a graphical interface, I looked for information about these wonderful creatures. I really hate that they were hunted to the point of being declared extinct. The film footage of the "last" poor thylacine has always just about broken my heart. I really really want these animals to still exist. I also want the American Passenger Pigeon to still exist. In a perfect world I would be able to travel to locations where thylacines had been spotted and help locate proof of their survival but that's not going to happen. I do however now have the pleasure of being able to watch the efforts of others in their quest to locate thylacines. I do so hope they're out there. I'd love to see a family of them, to learn how they rear their young. I think it's so interesting how a marsupial developed over the ages to fill the niche that existed for a predator in a land devoid of large felines and canines. I personally find thylacines to be beautiful creatures. I especially love the shape of their eyes. I wonder if things had been different if they could've been domesticated like dogs and cats. I still have a lot of that little girl in me that used to dream of Australia as my daddy sang to me.

    • @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886
      @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886  Месяц назад

      hannakinHi Hanna, thanks for your story. I 1st learnt about it when i was about 8 years old. It took a long time for the bug to bite, but bite it did...👍

  • @rodrigolizarraga9324
    @rodrigolizarraga9324 4 месяца назад +14

    All of them looks like foxes, except from the first one that looks like a lion. And I have seen foxes moving like that and looking like that when they have a desease that can’t remember the name

    • @GregM-ws4hq
      @GregM-ws4hq 3 месяца назад

      You think the No. 1 video at 10:56 looks like a fox?

    • @rodrigolizarraga9324
      @rodrigolizarraga9324 3 месяца назад +1

      @@GregM-ws4hq if you look at the heels are way to high for a Tasmanian tiger, I don’t really think is a Tasmanian tiger, and if you see the available Tasmanian tiger footage, they don’t move kind of like that, while foxes do. I can’t say 100% is not

    • @Brandanmayhew
      @Brandanmayhew 3 месяца назад +1

      Get some glasses. None of them look like foxes🤪 want me to get specsavers number for you?

  • @Bynggo
    @Bynggo 5 месяцев назад +2

    Fabulous coverage. Appreciate your dedication. Thank you. Don’t tell too many people the locations because some but will want to shoot it to make sure it’s real. 🙄

  • @NealosMetropolos
    @NealosMetropolos 4 месяца назад +35

    Mammals obviously can't exist in isolation. Several thousand individuals are required as a minimum viable population in the wild. If there is ONE thylacine, there has to be thousands of them.

    • @nathanmcgrath9038
      @nathanmcgrath9038 4 месяца назад +5

      That's a really good point mate your correct.

    • @yfelwulf
      @yfelwulf 4 месяца назад +2

      At least a few dozen to breed it was a top predator prey limit numbers and there is way more now that 200 years ago.

    • @sandrahealey6385
      @sandrahealey6385 4 месяца назад +7

      They're marsupials....

    • @TramcarTrev
      @TramcarTrev 4 месяца назад +3

      Sadly you are correct. A single animal of any species could not survive as a single animal. If there are Thylacines out there why do we never find a carcase.

    • @snoutysnouterson
      @snoutysnouterson 4 месяца назад +3

      ​@@sandrahealey6385What's your point?

  • @egrffin8534
    @egrffin8534 3 месяца назад +1

    Most of the videos where impressive yet still questionable, but the last one although fuzzy, ticked all the boxes for a true Tassie tiger. I am now convinced they are still alive out there. Also my mother saw one back in the 80's early morning on her drive from Portland to Heywood in S.W. Victoria. And she described it as having the most vivid stripes across its rump and realizing it was not a dog while it's back legs bounced rather than ran across the road. !

  • @rhwoodwork119
    @rhwoodwork119 4 месяца назад +5

    Wow, very exciting stuff.
    I love how in the "last" footage of a thylacine, the thylacine bit the cameraman on his butt.

  • @Ai-he1dp
    @Ai-he1dp 4 месяца назад +46

    None were convincing unfortunately.

    • @Brandanmayhew
      @Brandanmayhew 3 месяца назад

      You are not convincing either. Get some glasses kid

  • @timthompson6092
    @timthompson6092 5 месяцев назад +5

    Hi just wondering with number 2 the one you video of the the thylacine dis you check for DNA to me when it looked like it was sitting I thought it might have been doing a poo

  • @dinkohrvat344
    @dinkohrvat344 4 месяца назад +8

    Really doubt these animals exist on the mainland . Fox and wild dog poisoning would have killed them all. Possibly a small population could survive in Tasmania but I would think it would be very seriously inbred if it survives at all .Only hope is the cloning research now underway with preserved embryos in various museums .

  • @RenoLaringo
    @RenoLaringo 4 месяца назад +21

    Just like any random ufo footage out there... Lots of assumptions, not so much evidence.

    • @C21H30O2
      @C21H30O2 4 месяца назад +3

      I've lived in Michigan for almost 40 years. We have black bear in our woods, they destroy our bird feeders every year. Never seen one in the wild, only seen their scat a couple of times. Spend some time in the woods or wilderness and you'll get why people still believe they could be alive.

  • @jasonsnow4177
    @jasonsnow4177 4 месяца назад +8

    Niel waters would think a beaver is a tiger at this point.

    • @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886
      @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886  4 месяца назад +2

      😂😂 correct. Every beaver I have cum across has also been referred to as some type of feline. You know me too well.

    • @Brandanmayhew
      @Brandanmayhew 3 месяца назад

      🤪 braindead comment. Want me to get specsavers number out for you? I had to organise an oppointment for a friend recently because he couldn't even make out the crystal clear words a few inches from his eyes. Seems like you have the same issue. And while I'm there, would you like some fries with that😂🤪

  • @davida.4933
    @davida.4933 5 месяцев назад +9

    I agree #1 and 2 could be thylacines. Regarding #1, the animal seems too large for a fox. Also agree the lowered shoulder/neck/head is less common in dingos/dogs compared to thylacine footage, but there is YT footage of dingos tracking or exploring scents with lowered shoulder/neck/head. This also occurs to an extent when they are running full out. I also see what appears to be stripes. The animal's tail and rear do look thlacine-ish. The lack of definitive resolution undoubtedly will not convince skeptics, but I'm sure many of us appreciate that the owner of the video sent the footage along to Neil and for Neil presenting it here.

  • @gregjameson2141
    @gregjameson2141 4 месяца назад +8

    The last video is low resolution, and NO stripes can be seen on your video. All these so called sightings and there has not been one "Good" image yet, Not one

  • @brendonwilson99
    @brendonwilson99 4 месяца назад +6

    I’m posting this comment BEFORE viewing the video. This is in the off chance my viewing matches with the WA viewing and video. I would swear that while travelling to Esperance from Kalgoorlie for a holiday I saw a Thylacine near Norseman.
    Oh…..shame, viewed the video now and they don’t say where in WA.

    • @theduggans1
      @theduggans1 4 месяца назад +3

      You're not the first person to have seen them in Noresman.

  • @lordcommandersnow1625
    @lordcommandersnow1625 5 месяцев назад +4

    some of those vids are really good, i really like the one filmed in the neighbourhood. its still hard to confirm but good video man. i hope one day you get clear footage. keep it up.

  • @Boudica_Boo_Keltoi
    @Boudica_Boo_Keltoi 4 месяца назад +6

    After all these years (I'm 61), you have finally confirmed to me of the existence of the Thylacine. How exciting! Now I just wish that people would take your research seriously. I have always been on the fence about the issue, but all of those videos have been the convincing factor. Keep up with your excellent work! I'll be following intently. ❤

    • @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886
      @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886  4 месяца назад +2

      Thanks for that. When you see this animal 3 or 4 times, hear it yip from your front verandah, find it's prints all over the country, and keep finding its headless lungless leftovers after a meal, you simply know that it is a ll around you, often and no amount of hecklers or doubters will ever sway you otherwise. It is a conviction of connection to the land and a confident place to be.

    • @MrFatbag
      @MrFatbag 4 месяца назад

      ​@@thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886 what do the yips sound like?

  • @MrGef12
    @MrGef12 5 месяцев назад +7

    Last one most convincing Neil ..hope to see more mate 👌👍

  • @ScottM436
    @ScottM436 4 месяца назад +28

    Lol, just like every Bigfoot video, these are all blurry, with camera shake or some other reason why we can't see anything that would clearly identify the animal.

  • @Bob-Whiting
    @Bob-Whiting 4 месяца назад +2

    You just can't miss that butt, the thick tail base, the stripes, the jawline and snout, I am so glad we/you have a surviving "tiger" population. The world is a better place for it. I applaud the efforts of TAGA, The Thyla Army and yourself. Good on you! They MUST be protected, Forever now.

  • @tommykennedy4655
    @tommykennedy4655 4 месяца назад +7

    It's hard to believe this guy he put up photos not that long ago of a cat and said it was a thylacine when he knew it was a cat.

  • @MsOSheDidIt
    @MsOSheDidIt 4 месяца назад +1

    Those are so amazing. Thanks for sharing this. I really hope they are still alive. So sad that they were killed by colonists to extinction. Here in the US so many animals were also killed just to kill. I love your accent and never get tired of the Aussie videos. 🫶👍

  • @onenewworldmonkey
    @onenewworldmonkey 4 месяца назад +2

    I'm sorry. Injured dogs, fat injured dogs, fat shaggy injured dogs-all blurry do not give me hope. Ironic how you overlaid the original by which the final one was faked. They can do incredible things these days. The blurriness isn't right either.
    Why must you stick with Australia or New Zealand? Weren't they in Borneo?

  • @2011Matz
    @2011Matz 4 месяца назад +27

    To actually see these videos as those of Tigers, one has to want to. There is nothing here to convince the non-enthusiast.

  • @sandraviguerias2769
    @sandraviguerias2769 4 месяца назад +1

    Nature will always find a way!!

  • @liamrmorgans921
    @liamrmorgans921 4 месяца назад +7

    Couldn’t that last one be a dingo? Don’t they sometimes have stripes?

  • @Tamaresque
    @Tamaresque 3 месяца назад +2

    I was sure I had seen one on a back road on the border between Mt Martha and Safety Beach Victoria back in 1997, long before the area was built up and there was still a lot of scrub there. It was night and it moved across the road in front of me, lit up by my headlights.
    I didn't tell anyone as I didn't want to be ridiculed. However, years later I told a friend who lived nearby at the same time, in Rosebud. She told me that her husband had also thought he'd seen a Thylacine and it was robbing his chook house in the early hours of one night. Like me, he also never told anyone for fear of ridicule.

  • @CooeeAdventures
    @CooeeAdventures 5 месяцев назад +20

    1080 baits will eliminate what may remain of any struggling population if it is out there sadly.

    • @buddsbait
      @buddsbait 4 месяца назад +1

      Do they use this bait in Tazzie?

    • @Nick-rr5cy
      @Nick-rr5cy 4 месяца назад +2

      I thought they had stopped using it years ago ,maybe some very limited use

    • @danc.5509
      @danc.5509 4 месяца назад +4

      I thought native Australian animals were immune to 1080?

    • @L0U1SE
      @L0U1SE 4 месяца назад

      Thanks for the input 🙄👏🏻

    • @zxyatiywariii8
      @zxyatiywariii8 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@@buddsbaitUnfortunately yes it's legal there. However, some animals have developed a resistance to it, so hopefully some tigers have too. . .

  • @loksterization
    @loksterization 5 месяцев назад +1

    Even if only one of these 10 videos shows a thylacine, it means they are not extinct. And for sure, I think this evidence is very compelling. We need more people to explore the huge Australian wilderness, especially south of the dingo fence, and get us some better evidence to silence the critics for good.

  • @BicBradley
    @BicBradley 4 месяца назад +24

    It wouldn't be the first time humans thought an animal had gone extinct only to find them alive and doing well years afterward.

    • @user-digitalfarmgirl
      @user-digitalfarmgirl 4 месяца назад

      Yes, like the IVORY- BILLED Woodpecker , the poster child for extinction. It is not extinct, it's just gotten more wily, wary & wild. Hiding in the swamps of Louisiana.

  • @antonnym214
    @antonnym214 Месяц назад +2

    Nagorka's film is, if not definitive, at least compelling. I like the Paul Day video as well. It can't be a fox. Foxes have much bushier tails. This tail is long, thin and stiff.

  • @user-ef1fd3jb2v
    @user-ef1fd3jb2v 4 месяца назад +26

    This video tells me two things 1. Australians will see whatever they want to see whether it's there or not. And 2. Australian camera makers have no focusing option on their cameras.

    • @ScorpIron58
      @ScorpIron58 4 месяца назад +2

      But they are either quite far away, trail cam, or there and gone so fast I think they did well to capture it at all. And some are definitely clear enough, as it has a very distinctive shape, blurry or not, you can still make it out clear enough. The strange gait is also significant, or do you think 3 of these shots just happened to be dogs injured in exactly the same way ?

    • @user-ef1fd3jb2v
      @user-ef1fd3jb2v 4 месяца назад

      @@ScorpIron58 You're distinct shape (sorry I am laughing so hard) is exactly what I said in my first point. Be specific, it is a distinct shape of what? I'm going to tell you, your distinct shape is exactly what you imagine it to be. A triangle is a distinct shape. a lot of people see a spaceship as a triangle. Many people see an arrow as a triangle. Some people only see triangles as pyramids. So you see your distinct shape means absolutely nothing to the next person

    • @ScorpIron58
      @ScorpIron58 4 месяца назад +1

      @@user-ef1fd3jb2v Distinct shape of a Tasmanian Tiger~ what else would I mean dude? Maybe you need glasses or something.

    • @user-ef1fd3jb2v
      @user-ef1fd3jb2v 4 месяца назад

      @@ScorpIron58 Or maybe my mind is a little more complex than your simple mind. Let me explain your distinct shape sees a Tasmanian tiger. I see a blurred image of any animal of a certain size with four legs. (even though there is no specific size in any of those films) Some people's imagination run wild, other people look for indisputable facts. Going over some of the comments on this video I see many people are in dispute of your distinctive shapes

    • @ScorpIron58
      @ScorpIron58 4 месяца назад +4

      @@user-ef1fd3jb2v Yeah, and some ''complex minds'' are full of egoistic blindness.

  • @linricks3634
    @linricks3634 4 месяца назад

    I camp a lot of the time in the southwest forests. I have seen a black panther years ago. not a thylacine but I do believe that the Nannup tiger is a thylacine. I live in hope.

  • @kheidi197
    @kheidi197 5 месяцев назад +4

    Bravo 🌸💯🐯

  • @peterh.7078
    @peterh.7078 5 месяцев назад +12

    Great narration. Interesting video. Thanks

  • @markrayner8300
    @markrayner8300 5 месяцев назад +9

    Absolutely 💯 love this, it gives me hope that this beautiful animal is extant!!

  • @bellabergen963
    @bellabergen963 4 месяца назад +2

    BLESS YOU keep fighting the good fight. totally could see the stripes and especially with the back legs comparison of actual thy pic shown side by side with new footage it matched up tightly!

  • @GreenGibbon
    @GreenGibbon 5 месяцев назад +15

    Well done, Neil! Fascinating stuff.

  • @cjslippin9274
    @cjslippin9274 4 месяца назад

    It’s a pity there’s some division in the Thylacine Search community/supporters, Only hope is that some competition might push us all towards a result! Keep the work up Neil!

    • @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886
      @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886  4 месяца назад

      Yeah it's like anythimg unfortunately. There is always someone who wants to capitalise on the hard work done by others and claim it as their own. Or worse, they try and discredit your work and efforts because they are just wannabes with nothing but hype and cheap talk to keep them relevant. We just look for evidence and present it and have done for nearly 10 years now. However, I never take kindly to people trying to rip me off financially and then bagging me out cos of their own lack of ANY substance.

  • @carlossanchezsanchez9505
    @carlossanchezsanchez9505 5 месяцев назад +13

    Holy crap 😳😳😳!!! Perfect body shape look at the space between the back and the front legs…and lots of clearly defined stripes. I am in TOTAL SHOCK with the last video (number 1)... Finally! It is a FACT, the thylacine still exists. I mean, I wonder what Nick Mooney and Forrest Galante have to say now to you. The last video is thylacine. 100%. A male thylacine walking alone at night in Western Australia. Wow!! 😱😱😱Congratulations from Barcelona, Spain! ❤🎉 I am so happy!

  • @evelynhinman3192
    @evelynhinman3192 4 месяца назад +4

    When I was a young girl I learned that the Tasmanian Tiger was extinct. This saddened me. I had trouble thinking that humans could hunt animals to extinction. A few months ago when I discovered your videos. I became so excited to see that the Tiger still exists. I hope and pray that this unusual animal is still in existence. Please keep up with the search and awearnes of their existence. Best wishes from the US.

  • @oldogre5999
    @oldogre5999 3 месяца назад +2

    The first one at 2:08 looks like the dogs that run around in India and Egypt, those little goldish colored things. But pay close attention to it's rear end where the tail joins the body, the Thylacine has a more torpedo shaped rear end, this one is shaped more like a mammals rear end that is really rounded not elongated like every video of a real Thylacine I've ever seen!

    • @annrhodes3544
      @annrhodes3544 Месяц назад +1

      Those dogs in Australia are called dingoes.

    • @oldogre5999
      @oldogre5999 Месяц назад

      @@annrhodes3544 Really? NO SHIT! But I did not refer to Dingoes did I? If I wanted to say those dogs looked like those dogs that run around in Australia I would have said... "They look like those dogs in Australia" you know? But I didn't I said they looked like those little dogs from India.... Are THOSE dogs Dingoes too?

  • @jackcowling3277
    @jackcowling3277 5 месяцев назад +3

    You should Definitely get ahold of forest gilante, he’s obsessed with thylacines and has the funding to help try find one

    • @marianneamy
      @marianneamy 5 месяцев назад +1

      Galant is a huge fraud.

    • @ItsMeMattCarter
      @ItsMeMattCarter 5 месяцев назад

      Forest has done more damage to conservation biology than any other single person in the world. He is the sole reason Americans aren't allowed now on the Galápagos to go and film for projects and has straight up lied and been caught doing it multiple times about things "he found" when in reality he didn't.

    • @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886
      @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886  5 месяцев назад +3

      Maybe read the video description and then you might be able to see why this is just not gonna happen.

    • @davida.4933
      @davida.4933 5 месяцев назад

      @@thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886 Have to agree with you, Neil. Commenting on the video referencing NM, I said to effect -are you sure Nick claimed to have seen two thylacines from his tent?" Just no need to create a lie...big disappointment. Also, $100 offer was an insult. $2000 fair, but don't blame you one bit.

  • @simon6ppc246
    @simon6ppc246 Месяц назад

    Very interesting video as some do look promising but i honestly think some were foxes but even so keep up the good work.