Pink Kate
#651
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Off Topic the reported bear attack
I was told by family that live in Utah to always park around the
corner if I wanted service.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Lon wrote:
>
> I know what you mean. I always get a big sticker that says
> "Please don't shoot
> I grew up in Kalispell"
> to put near my California plates when I go up thru Montana any more.
corner if I wanted service.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Lon wrote:
>
> I know what you mean. I always get a big sticker that says
> "Please don't shoot
> I grew up in Kalispell"
> to put near my California plates when I go up thru Montana any more.
#652
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Off Topic the reported bear attack
I was told by family that live in Utah to always park around the
corner if I wanted service.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Lon wrote:
>
> I know what you mean. I always get a big sticker that says
> "Please don't shoot
> I grew up in Kalispell"
> to put near my California plates when I go up thru Montana any more.
corner if I wanted service.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Lon wrote:
>
> I know what you mean. I always get a big sticker that says
> "Please don't shoot
> I grew up in Kalispell"
> to put near my California plates when I go up thru Montana any more.
#653
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Off Topic the reported bear attack
I was told by family that live in Utah to always park around the
corner if I wanted service.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Lon wrote:
>
> I know what you mean. I always get a big sticker that says
> "Please don't shoot
> I grew up in Kalispell"
> to put near my California plates when I go up thru Montana any more.
corner if I wanted service.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Lon wrote:
>
> I know what you mean. I always get a big sticker that says
> "Please don't shoot
> I grew up in Kalispell"
> to put near my California plates when I go up thru Montana any more.
#654
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: the reported bear attack
"L.W.(Bill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:44498C50.6CD817C1@***.net...
: Hi Earle,
: They're cute:
Yea.. a mutt only a mother could love.
Now THESE are good lookin' Dawgs!
www.puppydogweb.com/ gallery/greatdanes/e.htm
Kate
#655
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: the reported bear attack
"L.W.(Bill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:44498C50.6CD817C1@***.net...
: Hi Earle,
: They're cute:
Yea.. a mutt only a mother could love.
Now THESE are good lookin' Dawgs!
www.puppydogweb.com/ gallery/greatdanes/e.htm
Kate
#656
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: the reported bear attack
"L.W.(Bill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:44498C50.6CD817C1@***.net...
: Hi Earle,
: They're cute:
Yea.. a mutt only a mother could love.
Now THESE are good lookin' Dawgs!
www.puppydogweb.com/ gallery/greatdanes/e.htm
Kate
#657
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: the reported bear attack
Of God! The first one was a Pappion, the rat dog my Mom owned:
http://puppydogweb.com/rotate/newrotate_08.jpg Sorry too sick to see the
Danes.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Kate wrote:
>
> Yea.. a mutt only a mother could love.
> Now THESE are good lookin' Dawgs!
> www.puppydogweb.com/ gallery/greatdanes/e.htm
>
> Kate
http://puppydogweb.com/rotate/newrotate_08.jpg Sorry too sick to see the
Danes.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Kate wrote:
>
> Yea.. a mutt only a mother could love.
> Now THESE are good lookin' Dawgs!
> www.puppydogweb.com/ gallery/greatdanes/e.htm
>
> Kate
#658
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: the reported bear attack
Of God! The first one was a Pappion, the rat dog my Mom owned:
http://puppydogweb.com/rotate/newrotate_08.jpg Sorry too sick to see the
Danes.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Kate wrote:
>
> Yea.. a mutt only a mother could love.
> Now THESE are good lookin' Dawgs!
> www.puppydogweb.com/ gallery/greatdanes/e.htm
>
> Kate
http://puppydogweb.com/rotate/newrotate_08.jpg Sorry too sick to see the
Danes.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Kate wrote:
>
> Yea.. a mutt only a mother could love.
> Now THESE are good lookin' Dawgs!
> www.puppydogweb.com/ gallery/greatdanes/e.htm
>
> Kate
#659
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: the reported bear attack
Of God! The first one was a Pappion, the rat dog my Mom owned:
http://puppydogweb.com/rotate/newrotate_08.jpg Sorry too sick to see the
Danes.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Kate wrote:
>
> Yea.. a mutt only a mother could love.
> Now THESE are good lookin' Dawgs!
> www.puppydogweb.com/ gallery/greatdanes/e.htm
>
> Kate
http://puppydogweb.com/rotate/newrotate_08.jpg Sorry too sick to see the
Danes.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Kate wrote:
>
> Yea.. a mutt only a mother could love.
> Now THESE are good lookin' Dawgs!
> www.puppydogweb.com/ gallery/greatdanes/e.htm
>
> Kate
#660
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: the reported bear attack
The world just keeps turning. 40 years back when I was a Cadet at the
Air Force Academy, we suplimented the measly amount we were paid by
taking a weekend or so a month hunting varmits (mountain lion and
coyotes) for the scalp bounty the offered by the state. I remember
commenting at the time that it looked like we were making the same
mistake they made down in West Texas in the early 50's when I helped a
state trapper hunt down coyotes. He maintained (and it was easy to
see what he meant even then) that it was job security for him. Soon
as you thin out the coyotes to a critical number, the damned jack
rabbits would do what rabbits do and over-run the place. Sure enough,
the late 50's saw jack rabbits explode out there and then he got paid
to hunt rabbits. Around here, deer and rodents exploded after the
coyotes were pretty much hunted out so they over-reacted and protect
the mountain lion and coyote (and suffered the costs of protecting the
Prebbles Jumping Mouse, which were a favorite coyote snack) until now
rodents and deer are to the point that they offer extra season hunting
much of the time.
When I taught feedback control systems, I always used a simulation
called "Sharks and Fish" to illustrate feedback stability. So much
available fish food, each fish needed a certain amount to survive and
breed. Sharks ate fish, each shark needs a certain amount of fish to
survive and breed. In an undisturbed setting, the whole system would
settle to an equilibrium state where there were not enough sharks to
eat all the fish, there were not enough fish to eat all the food so
there was a fairly stable number of sharks, fish, and available extra
fish food. Stick your finger in and disturb the stable state and you
start to oscillate between either fish starving to death because there
weren't enough sharks, or sharks starving because there weren't enough
fish. Given enough time, a permanent alteration in one of the
parameters would result in a new equilibrium for each population if
the disturbance persisted or it would return to the original
equlibrium once the disturbance was removed. Same analogy holds for
pretty much the entire ecosystem. If we meddle, the equlibrium is
altered. If we try and go to extremes and completely remove an
established factor or introduce a new factor (like rabbits in
Ausatralia) all bets are off. There is a place for wolves and
mountain lions in some number - but not in my front yard!
I still can't find any jsutification for armadillos, though.
on Fri, 21 Apr 2006 20:32:14 UTC "Earle Horton"
<NurseBustersNoSpam@msn.com> wrote:
> If your Montana locals are anything like the specimens we have in Colorado,
> they are dumb as a post, and self-serving too. If you have any backbone at
> all, you will sooner or later come into conflict with them, and then you
> will find out exactly how ignorant people can be. Where can you go next,
> after you burn your bridges in Montana?
>
> You don't know much about politics, if you think Colorado is full of "tree
> huggers". The tree hugger belt extends from Denver to Boulder, with small,
> and I do mean small, centers scattered throughout the rest of the state.
>
> I do not claim to "understand" the wilderness, but I do tolerate it a lot
> better than you do. I don't have plans to kill all the wolves, lynx,
> cougars, bear, rattlesnakes, and anything else that has claws or teeth to
> defend itself, and turn the place into another North Carolina.
>
> I didn't notice the pictures, but here's one. http://www.pweeta.org I
> figure a wolf has just as much right to eat a hamburger, as I do.
>
> Earle
>
> "Nathan W. Collier" <Nathan@NoSpam.com> wrote in message
> news:bea2g.46$2i5.6578@news.uswest.net...
> > "Earle Horton" <NurseBustersNoSpam@msn.com> wrote in message
> > news:44490aaf$0$24450$a82e2bb9@reader.athenanews.c om...
> > > overly romantic East Coast
> > > city refugee mountain man wannabees stick out like a sore thumb and
> > > disturb
> > > that natural order.
> >
> > drop the ignorant horseshit until you spend some time up here with the
> > locals. where the hell do you think i learned it? oonce upon a time i
> was
> > just as ignorant as you are (in relation to the wolf). i thought they
> were
> > beautiful animals and couldnt understand why so many NATIVE montanans ride
> > around with "kill wolves" bumper stickers on their vehicles........until
> it
> > was explained to me and then i saw it for myself. continue to sit in your
> > house and think the wolf looks pretty in pictures all you want. when you
> > really want to find out for yourself, drag your *** out of your house and
> go
> > see for yourself. i notice you didnt respond at all to the pictures i
> > linked you to. as ive said, youve spent to much time with the tree
> huggers
> > in colorado.
> >
> >
> > > The ranchers out here lease federal and state lands for pennies, know
> > > which
> > > side their bread is buttered on, and rarely take such a hostile attitude
> > > towards the local wildlife and the people who are looking out for it.
> > > Many
> > > of them are even conservationists of one kind or another.
> >
> > lol you cant begin to compare colorado ranchers with rural
> montanans/wyoming
> > folks where the wolf was dumped in their back yards.
> >
> >
> > > It is odd, that many of those who would escape from the cities to live
> in
> > > the wilderness, cannot really stand the wilderness the way it is either.
> >
> > and YOU "understand" wilderness from colorado? lol.
> >
> > --
> > Nathan W. Collier
> > http://UtilityOffRoad.com
> > http://7SlotGrille.com
> > http://InlineDiesel.com
> > http://BighornRefrigeration.com
> > http://ConcealedCarryForum.com
> >
> >
>
>
--
Will Honea
Air Force Academy, we suplimented the measly amount we were paid by
taking a weekend or so a month hunting varmits (mountain lion and
coyotes) for the scalp bounty the offered by the state. I remember
commenting at the time that it looked like we were making the same
mistake they made down in West Texas in the early 50's when I helped a
state trapper hunt down coyotes. He maintained (and it was easy to
see what he meant even then) that it was job security for him. Soon
as you thin out the coyotes to a critical number, the damned jack
rabbits would do what rabbits do and over-run the place. Sure enough,
the late 50's saw jack rabbits explode out there and then he got paid
to hunt rabbits. Around here, deer and rodents exploded after the
coyotes were pretty much hunted out so they over-reacted and protect
the mountain lion and coyote (and suffered the costs of protecting the
Prebbles Jumping Mouse, which were a favorite coyote snack) until now
rodents and deer are to the point that they offer extra season hunting
much of the time.
When I taught feedback control systems, I always used a simulation
called "Sharks and Fish" to illustrate feedback stability. So much
available fish food, each fish needed a certain amount to survive and
breed. Sharks ate fish, each shark needs a certain amount of fish to
survive and breed. In an undisturbed setting, the whole system would
settle to an equilibrium state where there were not enough sharks to
eat all the fish, there were not enough fish to eat all the food so
there was a fairly stable number of sharks, fish, and available extra
fish food. Stick your finger in and disturb the stable state and you
start to oscillate between either fish starving to death because there
weren't enough sharks, or sharks starving because there weren't enough
fish. Given enough time, a permanent alteration in one of the
parameters would result in a new equilibrium for each population if
the disturbance persisted or it would return to the original
equlibrium once the disturbance was removed. Same analogy holds for
pretty much the entire ecosystem. If we meddle, the equlibrium is
altered. If we try and go to extremes and completely remove an
established factor or introduce a new factor (like rabbits in
Ausatralia) all bets are off. There is a place for wolves and
mountain lions in some number - but not in my front yard!
I still can't find any jsutification for armadillos, though.
on Fri, 21 Apr 2006 20:32:14 UTC "Earle Horton"
<NurseBustersNoSpam@msn.com> wrote:
> If your Montana locals are anything like the specimens we have in Colorado,
> they are dumb as a post, and self-serving too. If you have any backbone at
> all, you will sooner or later come into conflict with them, and then you
> will find out exactly how ignorant people can be. Where can you go next,
> after you burn your bridges in Montana?
>
> You don't know much about politics, if you think Colorado is full of "tree
> huggers". The tree hugger belt extends from Denver to Boulder, with small,
> and I do mean small, centers scattered throughout the rest of the state.
>
> I do not claim to "understand" the wilderness, but I do tolerate it a lot
> better than you do. I don't have plans to kill all the wolves, lynx,
> cougars, bear, rattlesnakes, and anything else that has claws or teeth to
> defend itself, and turn the place into another North Carolina.
>
> I didn't notice the pictures, but here's one. http://www.pweeta.org I
> figure a wolf has just as much right to eat a hamburger, as I do.
>
> Earle
>
> "Nathan W. Collier" <Nathan@NoSpam.com> wrote in message
> news:bea2g.46$2i5.6578@news.uswest.net...
> > "Earle Horton" <NurseBustersNoSpam@msn.com> wrote in message
> > news:44490aaf$0$24450$a82e2bb9@reader.athenanews.c om...
> > > overly romantic East Coast
> > > city refugee mountain man wannabees stick out like a sore thumb and
> > > disturb
> > > that natural order.
> >
> > drop the ignorant horseshit until you spend some time up here with the
> > locals. where the hell do you think i learned it? oonce upon a time i
> was
> > just as ignorant as you are (in relation to the wolf). i thought they
> were
> > beautiful animals and couldnt understand why so many NATIVE montanans ride
> > around with "kill wolves" bumper stickers on their vehicles........until
> it
> > was explained to me and then i saw it for myself. continue to sit in your
> > house and think the wolf looks pretty in pictures all you want. when you
> > really want to find out for yourself, drag your *** out of your house and
> go
> > see for yourself. i notice you didnt respond at all to the pictures i
> > linked you to. as ive said, youve spent to much time with the tree
> huggers
> > in colorado.
> >
> >
> > > The ranchers out here lease federal and state lands for pennies, know
> > > which
> > > side their bread is buttered on, and rarely take such a hostile attitude
> > > towards the local wildlife and the people who are looking out for it.
> > > Many
> > > of them are even conservationists of one kind or another.
> >
> > lol you cant begin to compare colorado ranchers with rural
> montanans/wyoming
> > folks where the wolf was dumped in their back yards.
> >
> >
> > > It is odd, that many of those who would escape from the cities to live
> in
> > > the wilderness, cannot really stand the wilderness the way it is either.
> >
> > and YOU "understand" wilderness from colorado? lol.
> >
> > --
> > Nathan W. Collier
> > http://UtilityOffRoad.com
> > http://7SlotGrille.com
> > http://InlineDiesel.com
> > http://BighornRefrigeration.com
> > http://ConcealedCarryForum.com
> >
> >
>
>
--
Will Honea