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gila-river wrote:Great, now the cops want to install dishwashers to. Just do your job Red and stop encroaching on our rights to replace appliances. That is not the responsibility of police.:lol:
Rick wrote:banknote wrote:It was his first day out after tangling with a nutria 10 days ago. Face held together just fine.
Nutria in Oregon, who woulda thunk it?
Bootlipkiller wrote: all the mallards I killed today had boners do to my epic calling.
Redbeard wrote:
3legged_lab wrote:Rick wrote:banknote wrote:It was his first day out after tangling with a nutria 10 days ago. Face held together just fine.
Nutria in Oregon, who woulda thunk it?
Must've been a small beaver.
jarbo03 wrote:3legged_lab wrote:Rick wrote:banknote wrote:It was his first day out after tangling with a nutria 10 days ago. Face held together just fine.
Nutria in Oregon, who woulda thunk it?
Must've been a small beaver.
My favorite
Rick wrote:banknote wrote:It was his first day out after tangling with a nutria 10 days ago. Face held together just fine.
Nutria in Oregon, who woulda thunk it?
AKPirate wrote:jarbo03 wrote:3legged_lab wrote:Rick wrote:banknote wrote:It was his first day out after tangling with a nutria 10 days ago. Face held together just fine.
Nutria in Oregon, who woulda thunk it?
Must've been a small beaver.
My favorite
Shaved small beaver...mmmm
Bootlipkiller wrote: all the mallards I killed today had boners do to my epic calling.
3legged_lab wrote:More than 600 nutria farms existed in Oregon and Washington from the 1930s to the 1950s. Flooding and storms damaged holding structures, allowing nutria to escape. Farmers also released their stock when nutria farming became uneconomical. By the 1940s, nutria had been captured by trappers on both sides of the Cascade Mountains in Washington
I had no idea.
AKPirate wrote:The sins of Boot and Gaddy are causing the Cali drought and knowing they have no limits to their depravity... :mrgreen:
Bootlipkiller wrote: all the mallards I killed today had boners do to my epic calling.
gila-river wrote:Great, now the cops want to install dishwashers to. Just do your job Red and stop encroaching on our rights to replace appliances. That is not the responsibility of police.:lol:
3legged_lab wrote:Collar of shame.
Best way in the world to knock all the shit off your coffee table.
AKPirate wrote:Jason is usually right but sometimes wrong
banknote wrote:Rick wrote:banknote wrote:It was his first day out after tangling with a nutria 10 days ago. Face held together just fine.
Nutria in Oregon, who woulda thunk it?
Only good nutria's a dead nutria.
Rick wrote:banknote wrote:Rick wrote:banknote wrote:It was his first day out after tangling with a nutria 10 days ago. Face held together just fine.
Nutria in Oregon, who woulda thunk it?
Only good nutria's a dead nutria.
The coyote seems to agree:
For the record, he's forbidden to mess with any fur larger than rice rats, least he get macked chasing a squirrel or cat across the road, with the lone exception being an allowance made for running off his namesakes when his ancient Brittany brother is afield with us. And he's generally quite good about following those rules. How the scene above came to pass I could not say with certainty and can only guess the encounter was a surprise to both. The coyote's not a fighter, but he's plainly like his old man when it comes to quitting once the adrenalin's boiling. Had me wishing I'd broken up the affair sooner, rather than filming, or that he had, in fact, grabbed his own tail thinking it the nutria.
Rick wrote:banknote wrote:Rick wrote:banknote wrote:It was his first day out after tangling with a nutria 10 days ago. Face held together just fine.
Nutria in Oregon, who woulda thunk it?
Only good nutria's a dead nutria.
The coyote seems to agree:
For the record, he's forbidden to mess with any fur larger than rice rats, least he get macked chasing a squirrel or cat across the road, with the lone exception being an allowance made for running off his namesakes when his ancient Brittany brother is afield with us. And he's generally quite good about following those rules. How the scene above came to pass I could not say with certainty and can only guess the encounter was a surprise to both. The coyote's not a fighter, but he's plainly like his old man when it comes to quitting once the adrenalin's boiling. Had me wishing I'd broken up the affair sooner, rather than filming, or that he had, in fact, grabbed his own tail thinking it the nutria.
Bootlipkiller wrote: all the mallards I killed today had boners do to my epic calling.
banknote wrote:For some reason the video won't play for me. I will definitely try again later.
Ki tried to get him some beaver today. I was able to call him off it before things got ugly. I can't believe he'll listen to a "here" when he's on a critter, but I'll take it. He is 10 months old today.
This drake sailed 150yds onto a river bar covered in willow thickets. Never would have found it without him.
rebelp74 wrote:Yeah I have a yacht, suck it bitches!
banknote wrote:For some reason the video won't play for me. I will definitely try again later.
Ki tried to get him some beaver today. I was able to call him off it before things got ugly. I can't believe he'll listen to a "here" when he's on a critter, but I'll take it. He is 10 months old today.
This drake sailed 150yds onto a river bar covered in willow thickets. Never would have found it without him.
banknote wrote:For some reason the video won't play for me. I will definitely try again later.
Ki tried to get him some beaver today. I was able to call him off it before things got ugly. I can't believe he'll listen to a "here" when he's on a critter, but I'll take it. He is 10 months old today.
This drake sailed 150yds onto a river bar covered in willow thickets. Never would have found it without him.
3legged_lab wrote:That dog of yours makes me smile rick, quite the personality. He may actually be better known than you.
numinous wrote:My girl Pippa Jean. Upland and waterfowl queen! Second pic is her retrieving her first goose. She will be 2 in February.
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