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Outdoor & Recreation
Safety and Survival
Wild dogs and prospecting
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<blockquote data-quote="Deepseeker" data-source="post: 591660" data-attributes="member: 13321"><p>Just my two bobs worth on this. Last year I was detecting along the ridge of the Bald Hills in Kingower, just to see what I could find near an old mine there. I got there just as the sun came up, and not far from a rocky outcrop was a recently deposited scat. It was neither Domestic or feral cat, and it definitely wasn't Fox or Pig. It was large, more like on the scale of a human log, but just laying there on the ground with no attempt to bury it or scratch over it.</p><p></p><p>It unnerved me to say the least, as one of my favorite books that I own is Barbara Triggs "Tracks, Scats and Other Traces"- A Guide to Australian Mammals, which also shows and describes the scats of introduced and feral animals that you may come across in the field. And, there's nothing like it in the book.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Deepseeker, post: 591660, member: 13321"] Just my two bobs worth on this. Last year I was detecting along the ridge of the Bald Hills in Kingower, just to see what I could find near an old mine there. I got there just as the sun came up, and not far from a rocky outcrop was a recently deposited scat. It was neither Domestic or feral cat, and it definitely wasn't Fox or Pig. It was large, more like on the scale of a human log, but just laying there on the ground with no attempt to bury it or scratch over it. It unnerved me to say the least, as one of my favorite books that I own is Barbara Triggs "Tracks, Scats and Other Traces"- A Guide to Australian Mammals, which also shows and describes the scats of introduced and feral animals that you may come across in the field. And, there's nothing like it in the book. [/QUOTE]
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