No. She was hungry and spotted a few tasty looking humans.
2007-12-30 01:41:51
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answer #1
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answered by mini metro 6
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My cats are able to scale the 12ft high wall at the back of my house. If that is how high a wall is to try and keep a tiger in, someone is having a laugh and i doubt very much they would volunteer to test the tigers ability to get over.
2007-12-30 09:00:42
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I recon it was just after a snack, or maybe off to settle a territorial grievance, or both at the same time.
I could buy into desperation to leave captivity but it's a bit abstract and I would rank the above motivations as more in line with Tiger psychology.
2007-12-30 08:33:27
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answer #3
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answered by mince42 4
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I think the fact that a tiger scaled a 12ft wall showed why you shouldn't be throwing things and taunting a tiger!
2007-12-30 10:05:17
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answer #4
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answered by Patriot011 2
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I think someone made a big blunder. I noticed on a video a lot of sweeping marks in that moat. Makes me think someone has been doing a clean up. I wonder was the moat partly filled in and reduced the size the tiger had to jump maybe the tiger had tried in the past and finally got up that wall on Christmas day.
2007-12-30 11:06:21
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answer #5
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answered by BUST TO UTOPIA 6
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No i don't think so . But it does show how ignorant we are on how to treat them. As others have said a 12ft foot fence is nothing to a tiger. They aren't domestic little pets and should always be treated with the respect they deserve.
2007-12-30 08:55:40
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answer #6
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answered by Ariana 5
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A twelve foot high wall is no obstacle for a Tiger, it would be like a cat jumping up two steps on the stairs.
2007-12-30 08:35:28
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Pretty much, Tigers are wild animals, they belong in the wild. Unless the Tiger was raised in captivity from birth, then it can never be tamed.
2007-12-30 08:28:52
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answer #8
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answered by Grey Man 5
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No it doesnt as she had been raised in captivity since birth. It shows not to taunt a tiger that is in an enclosure with a fence not high enough.
2007-12-30 09:56:50
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answer #9
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answered by mnwomen 7
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This is a wild animal, and should not, be caged,the conservation of these, and all wild animals surely should be done within, their own environment,
Before the introduction of zoos, and wild life parks, and man etc, these creatures survived and multiplied,in many numbers prior, to the introduction of those I have mentioned.
I would suggest that a human or, beast of the field will revert back to that natural state of -trying to be free-,ask any ex-POW
2007-12-30 09:35:52
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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Sure does, feel a zoo is next to solitary confinement for criminals. The tiger probably went stark raving mad.
2007-12-30 09:23:46
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answer #11
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answered by lonetraveler 5
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