Were those rabid though? Or maybe there's stages, not sure. But my point is animals that normally would avoid humans/have no reason to attack do so when rabid. I've seen this several times on here on these posts and there's serious ignorance about rabid animal behavior. I mean FFS, think about - if you say someone is behaving "rabidly" you don't generally mean "catatonic."
I know at least with humans rabies makes you afraid of water to the point where you literally can't drink water and become super dehydrated. Maybe they were at that stage.
Were those rabid though? Or maybe there's stages, not sure. But my point is animals that normally would avoid humans/have no reason to attack do so when rabid. I've seen this several times on here on these posts and there's serious ignorance about rabid animal behavior. I mean FFS, think about - if you say someone is behaving "rabidly" you don't generally mean "catatonic."
I know at least with humans rabies makes you afraid of water to the point where you literally can't drink water and become super dehydrated. Maybe they were at that stage.
Yes. Rabies affects animals differently, AND it has stages. I read up since this first comment