Wildlife Cameras Capture Photos of Jokers Dressed as Lions, Gorilla
This Nov. 22, 2016 photo provided by the Gardner Police Department shows a person dressed in a gorilla costume that was captured on one of the two motion-activated cameras intended to investigate reports of mountain lions at a park in Gardner, Kan. Police discovered images of smaller animals as well as pranksters dressed as animals, monsters and Santa Claus, but no mountain lions were detected. (Gardner Police Department via AP)
Motion-activated cameras intended to capture images of mountain lions in a Kansas park have instead snapped pictures of pranksters dressed as animals, monsters and Santa Claus .
Police said they found the images on the two cameras at the park in Gardner on Monday.
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Interspersed among images of skunks and coyotes were photos of people wearing costumes pretending to be lions wrestling, a gorilla , various monsters and an old person with a walker. And of course Santa made an appearance during the three nights of high jinks.
The cameras were established this month to investigate reports of mountain lions. No mountain lions were detected.
Of course they weren't detected! The Mountain Lions were a heckofa lot smarter than the people who tried to photograph them-- the lions outwitted the humans by putting on costumes. The lions disguised themselves as humans disguised as animals!.
(Looks like the lions once again out-foxed the humans)
"(Looks like the lions once again out-foxed the humans)"
That can't be true. You're lion to us.
The pigs are becoming more like the humans (to coin a phrase
"The pigs are becoming more like the humans (to coin a phrase "
That's not so bad. What's worse is the humans starting to look more and more like pigs.
Scopes Monkey Trial
The Scopes Trial , formally known as The State of Tennessee v. John Thomas Scopes and commonly referred to as the Scopes Monkey Trial , was an American legal case in 1925 in which a substitute high school teacher, John Scopes , was accused of violating Tennessee's Butler Act , which had made it unlawful to teach human evolution in any state-funded school. [1]
Doncha Make a Monkey Out of Me!
Kansas has no mountains, thus no mountain lions.
Kansas has no mountains, thus no mountain lions.
Ah-- no wonder they couldn't find any!
(But I can't help wonderiong why they were looking for them there. What will these geniuses do next I wonder-- look for deep see fish in the Sahara Desert?)
Dear Friend Kavika: KS isn't much on oceans either.
Rockchalk Jayhawk, Jayhawk Rockchalk.
Go Jayhawks!
E.
I suspect that they were a bit confused. Since the rash of earthquakes in neighboring Oklahoma they may have thought that they were in Oklahoma's new mountains created by the earthquakes...
Of course they could have asked Toto.