JKH Posted May 18 Posted May 18 You'd think a cat would know better, but one time I saw a mature barn cat touch an e-fence with his nose. Must have been a new object. He approached cheetah speed and didn't see him for a couple days. There are historical anecdotes about electrical problems and effects around hairy folks. Both that and infrasound are possible, or insert theory, but that's the one that is so seemingly woo and hard to explain.
CallyCat Posted June 22 Posted June 22 The next time you go out carry one of those lightning strike detectors with you to see if it registers anything when you think you've been zapped.
Babar1296 Posted June 23 Posted June 23 On 2/12/2024 at 10:38 AM, Huntster said: Well, radio receivers can detect infrasound, and so far the only native animals I can come up with in a google search that can be expected to be found in the PNW that emit infrasound is a pigeon. Radio receivers cannot detect sound. Sound is wave in the atmosphere, radio is an electromagnetic wave. 2
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