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1st February 08, 05:36 PM
#1
 Originally Posted by string
I've never hunted with a full-auto assault weapon...now, a semi-auto with 10 in the gun, and 130 more rounds, yes...but never a full-auto.
Okay...back on topic...
Congrats Kevin. We had a roadkill fox out by the park I worked at this summer, but alas, none of us got to it before some idiot ripped the tail off. Good luck with the tanning!
~Yeti
PS - I really need to start logging String out when I'm on her computer...*sigh*
String I just can't see you standing there with an shotgun saying:
"Be vewy, vewy quiet. I'm hunting WABBIT!"
Oh wait I see Yeti's sig, never mind 
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1st February 08, 05:50 PM
#2
 Originally Posted by ccga3359
String I just can't see you standing there with an shotgun saying:
"Be vewy, vewy quiet. I'm hunting WABBIT!"
Oh wait I see Yeti's sig, never mind

I can see String standing there with a shot gun. She scares me.
Um... just in case you have the signatures turned off, mine says, "Just Hopping Around the Brier Patch."
I tried to ask my inner curmudgeon before posting, but he sprayed me with the garden hose…
Yes, I have squirrels in my brain…
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1st February 08, 05:59 PM
#3
Kevin,
Good luck in your efforts to join the Full Mask Sporran Club for Men.
Cheers
Jamie
-See it there, a white plume
Over the battle - A diamond in the ash
Of the ultimate combustion-My panache
Edmond Rostand
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1st February 08, 06:23 PM
#4
 Originally Posted by ccga3359
String I just can't see you standing there with an shotgun saying:
"Be vewy, vewy quiet. I'm hunting WABBIT!"
Hehehe...you'd be surprised. The only loaded gun in her house is hers. She's actually quite comfortable with a shotgun.
And, yes Ted, you have reason to be scared.
~Yeti
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1st February 08, 06:31 PM
#5
 Originally Posted by Yeti
Hehehe...you'd be surprised. The only loaded gun in her house is hers. She's actually quite comfortable with a shotgun.
And, yes Ted, you have reason to be scared.
~Yeti
I don't want to end up as a sporran... or a sweater.
I tried to ask my inner curmudgeon before posting, but he sprayed me with the garden hose…
Yes, I have squirrels in my brain…
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1st February 08, 08:52 PM
#6
OK. In the interest of full disclosure here's what Detroit does to Mother Nature. Gruesome picture at this link:
image deleted
This was a Gray Fox, or Urocyon cinereoargenteus. It's a slightly smaller and more wily cousin of the more common Red Fox, Vulpes vulpes. The Gray prefers more tangled undergrowth, rugged terrain, and has a more aggressive manner with both prey and its own predators- coyotes. The fur is generally darker, as seen above, and lacks much of the silky texture you might think of when picturing a fox....So, if it looks like I'm having a bad hair-sporran day, then it's not my fault.
Gray fox are one of the few canids left who actually climb trees. If we had a few more of these in our neighborhood, the utility companies might win their war against the cable-chewing gray squirrels. The other climbing canines I know are my sister's 3 Blue Heelers. They're just plain odd.
I'm sad for this poor animal, but promise to treat it with the reverence that it deserves.
No more gruesome images. I promise.
Kevin.
Last edited by kevinkinney; 4th October 08 at 06:49 PM.
Institutio postulo novus informatio supersto
Proudly monkeying with tradition since 1967.
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4th February 08, 09:49 AM
#7
 Originally Posted by kevinkinney
Gray fox are one of the few canids left who actually climb trees.
Interesting side note (at least to me ):
I never knew any foxes could climb trees until visiting the fox glade at Brookgreen Gardens near Myrtle Beach, SC and seeing greys and reds lounging in some very high branches. The guide mentioned that normally, red foxes can not climb trees but these had learned the behavior from watching the grey foxes they were kept with. Unfortunately, my last visit there was the first with a camera and no foxes were resting in the trees that day.
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29th February 08, 10:38 PM
#8
" I never knew any foxes could climb trees until visiting the fox glade at Brookgreen Gardens near Myrtle Beach, SC and seeing greys and reds lounging in some very high branches. The guide mentioned that normally, red foxes can not climb trees but these had learned the behavior from watching the grey foxes they were kept with."
And if this behavior persists someday we'll have . . . . .

And that is going to make for some really tiny full mask sporrans.
Fair winds,
Capt Bruce
Last edited by ohneplo; 29th February 08 at 10:41 PM.
Reason: Lefdt out a line
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