no of course not. you should go back to school and so should i because it is a legend that can only be found in the library. thank you for your time. because what i have just explained is utter nonsense
Cougars are no longer considered native to Georgia, though residents occasionally report seeing what they believe to be the large, long-tailed cats also known as panthers and mountain lions. In years long passed, the mountain lion was native to Georgia but have been extirpated.
I'm in Marion county, Tennessee..... It's 3am and I'm listening to one right now.
I'm in Robertson County and saw one dead on the side of the I-24 three days ago. 6/28/10
Doubtful. There used to be, especially along the mountainous border with North Carolina, but these have been gone for over 100 years or more.
There have been numerous reports of possible cougars in Georgia but there is no conclusive evidence. None of the reports have been confirmed.
North Georgia!
Yes there are mostly near north Georgia
Yes
no
wolves
wolves in the wild, and humans when they are domesticated. But one type of dog has no predator and that is the Georgia Bulldawg.
Alaskan Tundra Wolves, Alexander Archipelago Wolves, Arabian Wolves, Arctic Wolves, Baffin Island Wolves, Bernard's Wolves, British Columbian Wolves, Cascade Mountain Wolves, Dire Wolves, Eastern Timber Wolves, Ethiopian Wolves, Common Gray Wolves, Great Plains Wolves, Greenland Wolves, Hokkaido Wolves, Honshu Wolves, Hudson Bay Wolves, Iberian Wolves, Indian Wolves, Interior Alaskan Wolves, Iranian Wolves, Italian Wolves, Kenai Peninsula Wolves, Labrador Wolves, Mackenzie Valley Wolves, Mackenzie Tundra Wolves, Maned Wolves, Manitoba Wolves, Mexican Wolves, Mogollon Mountain Wolves, Newfoundland Wolves, Red Wolves, Southern Rocky Mountain Wolves, Texas Gray Wolves, Tibetan Wolves, Tundra Wolves, and Vancouver Island Wolves are all that I know of, and some of these might not even be around anymore.
Yes, at least one son. I smoked pot with him at Piedmont College in NE Georgia about 6 years ago.
Arctic Wolves Timber Wolves Red Wolves Ethiopian Wolves Indian Wolves Asiatic Wolves European Wolves (probably extinct)
Wolves in Wolves' Clothing was created in 2005.
Some species of wolves are the gray wolves, red wolves, antic wolves and the coyote-wolf hybrid.
Some wolves like gray wolves and arctic wolves are.
There were wolves in 1995 and there are still wolves.
A pack of wolves is a collection of wolves.
The collective nouns are a pack of wolves or a rout (or route) of wolves.