[QUOTE=Superkilll307;43739562]To be honest id do the same if i lived In sweden[/QUOTE]
Why? Are you saying this for comedy purposes or what? Sweden is one of the better places to live regardless of the fact that a moose committed suicide there.
[editline]31st January 2014[/editline]
[QUOTE=Neckbird;43731483]i believe you're confusing a ~500kg moose with an insect[/QUOTE]
notice the key word 'imagine'
Also it's not impossible to say that parasites could evolve to be able to control a few of the brain functions of bigger hosts.. they can already lie dormant in your body for years till they flow through your blood to your brain and; you don't want that.
Sleep tight Bulwinkle.
Rocky must be devestated.
[editline]31st January 2014[/editline]
[QUOTE=RudeMcRude;43739939]Sleep tight Bulwinkle.[/QUOTE]
Fucker
[QUOTE=Moustacheman;43740372]Rocky must be devestated.
[editline]31st January 2014[/editline]
Fucker[/QUOTE]
it actually works out since you posted different characters
[QUOTE=Bat-shit;43738437]how can you tell it was a suicide and not just a frightened moose?[/QUOTE]
Hello and welcome to Sensationalist Headlines. Is this your first visit?
Sounds like Overtoun Bridge
[quote]Studies have shown that since the 1950s or 1960s numerous dogs have leaped from the bridge at the rate of about one dog per year. Dogs that leap over the bridge parapet fall 50 feet (15 m) onto the waterfalls below. Some dogs that survived this drop, and were then taken back to the bridge, have jumped again. The only linking factors for this unexplained event are that dogs mostly jump from the same side of the bridge, in clear weather, and they are breeds with long snouts.[6]
As the unexplained phenomenon received international media attention, the Scottish SPCA sent an animal habitat expert to investigate the causes as to why dogs kill themselves at Overtoun Bridge. Initially Dr David Sands examined sight, smell and sound factors. After eliminating what a dog could potentially see and hear on the bridge, he eventually focused on scent following the discovery of mice and mink in undergrowth on the side of the bridge from which dogs often leaped. In a test, the odours from these animals were spread around an open field. Ten dogs were unleashed - representing the most common breeds that jumped off the bridge. Of the dogs tested, only two showed no interest in any of the scents while nearly all the others made straight for the mink scent. Sands concluded that, although it was not a definitive answer, the potent odour from male mink urine was possibly luring keen-nosed dogs to their deaths.[6][/quote]
rip in peace :(
[img]http://puu.sh/Jbau[/img]
Sorry, you need to Log In to post a reply to this thread.