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Anonymous
Will a predator really "go for the easy meal"? If this lion was staring me down and I, for whatever reason, happened to be holding a dead animal, would the lion just eat the animal if I threw it in his direction and ran away?

I guess a more realistic example would be if I was hiking and a bear showed up. Would a bear leave me alone if I threw a bag of beef jerky at him? Or maybe if I had been fishing and I threw a bunch of trout at him.
>> Anonymous
>>296189
Make sure the predator's attention is on the food before moving.
Do not run. Back away slowly.
>> b?tters
in my experience predators will ignore you if you do anything they don't understand, so running and loud noises are out of the question, but moonwalking towards the lion spraying jerky everywhere should make it confused enough to give up on thinking you are an easy target
>> Anonymous
I don't know how it applies to other sorts of animals, but supposedly big cats are most likely to let you leave if you depart on the diagonal.
>> Anonymous
>>296200
>>moonwalking

Oh shit yes.
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
If I were a lion, I would ignore whatever food you threw at me and eat you. Because hey, after I eat you, I could eat whatever it was you were holding, too.
>> Anonymous
>>296200
>>296200

I lol'd. For some reason, the mental image is worth gold. Thank you anon for the belly laughs.
>> Anonymous
If you ran away it would trigger it's prey drive and it would run you down and kill you.
You would have to throw the dead animal and then back away slowly like.