The Great Outdoors
Re: The Great Outdoors
actually, I think the first two are both bear
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Re: The Great Outdoors
as outdoorsy as i am, my only real training in track/scat ID’ing is probably Big Game Hunter on the wii
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
Re: The Great Outdoors
bear
bear
moose or elk....no size comparison to determine.
Just Ledoux it
Re: The Great Outdoors
If/when Ousie gets eaten by a bear, do we bring Lobster back?
Imjustheretohelpyoubuycrypto
Re: The Great Outdoors
No, then we feed Lobster to the elk.
Nero is an angler in the lake of darkness
Re: The Great Outdoors
oh yeah that last one was def a moose print btw. In my driveway lol. Shoulda put something up for size comparison too cuz it was enormous.
Never seen elk in my neighborhood (yet?). Pretty sure it's just not on their migration routes or something. As far as I can tell, this elevation is only migration routes, and only for a few days a year. They pass through between wintering along the river on the downstream end of the county, and summers up at treeline.
We got moose in the hood year round tho, for worse or for worse. Lots of foxes, porcupine, ermine, that sorta stuff. Deer and bear in the summers.
bonus pic! this little dood that just ran up to me in the yard last summer
Never seen elk in my neighborhood (yet?). Pretty sure it's just not on their migration routes or something. As far as I can tell, this elevation is only migration routes, and only for a few days a year. They pass through between wintering along the river on the downstream end of the county, and summers up at treeline.
We got moose in the hood year round tho, for worse or for worse. Lots of foxes, porcupine, ermine, that sorta stuff. Deer and bear in the summers.
bonus pic! this little dood that just ran up to me in the yard last summer
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Re: The Great Outdoors
He probably assumed you were cool, then got close enough to realize that you aren’t me
“By way of contrast, I'm not the one who feels the need to respond to every post someone else makes”
Psych- Every Single Time
Psych- Every Single Time
Re: The Great Outdoors
I've never heard anything quite like this before. I've lived in Flowduh for 10 years and both residences backed up to conservation areas. In both places neighbors have reported seeing Florida panthers. That strikes me as kind of incredible, considering how rare they are. That being said, one was my previous next door neighbor, and it sounded very credible.
Video of male (Florida) panther calling for mate
Video of male (Florida) panther calling for mate
“The Electoral College is DEI for rural white folks.”
Derek Cressman
Derek Cressman
Re: The Great Outdoors
There was a quote in 1923 episode about cities and the outdoors that I loved. Its sad, and its only gotten worse...but its true I think.
You’ve been to New York. You’ve been to Boston. Now close your eyes and imagine those places if the cities weren’t there. Go on, do it…
White sands stretching to forests of hickory and elm taller than the buildings that stand there now. Meadows filled with bison and moose and bear. Millions of salmon swimming up the East River to spawn, so thick you could walk across them. Now think about what’s there now. A thirteen-mile-island of cement, with rivers of sewage runnin’ underneath until they dump it into the bay where salmon don’t dare to swim. That’s what they’ll do to this place. Damn the rivers… Flood the valleys… Cut every tree that stands to build cities. This paradise becomes another concrete desert.
Awhile back there was a discussion about people who say they wish they'd lived back in the 1800s and hownits just a fantasy and life actually sucked and yea yea and how people who say that don't mean it and they're just being obstinate or stupid about it blah blah.
Here's the thing....yes, life was unimaginably tough, conveniences nonexistent. But, you could see unspoiled places, untouched lands. Things we will never see again. Thats what makes it worthy of discussion and worthy of the fantasy. Not the difficulty of survival, thats a given. Of course we like modern creature comforts but my goodness, being able to see things the way they were, the way they were meant to be is something that we can only get in small snippets today.
You’ve been to New York. You’ve been to Boston. Now close your eyes and imagine those places if the cities weren’t there. Go on, do it…
White sands stretching to forests of hickory and elm taller than the buildings that stand there now. Meadows filled with bison and moose and bear. Millions of salmon swimming up the East River to spawn, so thick you could walk across them. Now think about what’s there now. A thirteen-mile-island of cement, with rivers of sewage runnin’ underneath until they dump it into the bay where salmon don’t dare to swim. That’s what they’ll do to this place. Damn the rivers… Flood the valleys… Cut every tree that stands to build cities. This paradise becomes another concrete desert.
Awhile back there was a discussion about people who say they wish they'd lived back in the 1800s and hownits just a fantasy and life actually sucked and yea yea and how people who say that don't mean it and they're just being obstinate or stupid about it blah blah.
Here's the thing....yes, life was unimaginably tough, conveniences nonexistent. But, you could see unspoiled places, untouched lands. Things we will never see again. Thats what makes it worthy of discussion and worthy of the fantasy. Not the difficulty of survival, thats a given. Of course we like modern creature comforts but my goodness, being able to see things the way they were, the way they were meant to be is something that we can only get in small snippets today.
Just Ledoux it
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Re: The Great Outdoors
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
Re: The Great Outdoors
Look at the way she was dressed. It's like she was asking to be kicked in the head by a moose!
“The Electoral College is DEI for rural white folks.”
Derek Cressman
Derek Cressman
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Re: The Great Outdoors
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
Re: The Great Outdoors
Fantastic pictures. Personally, I have < 0 desire to swim, scuba dive, or snorkel in the open ocean in the dark.
#shudder
“The Electoral College is DEI for rural white folks.”
Derek Cressman
Derek Cressman
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Re: The Great Outdoors
you and my wife both
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
Re: The Great Outdoors
As if there weren't already enough things not to like about the state:
Alligators in Oklahoma. Native alligators are living in the Southeastern most part of the state, and researchers are finding out a lot about them!
Alligators in Oklahoma. Native alligators are living in the Southeastern most part of the state, and researchers are finding out a lot about them!
“The Electoral College is DEI for rural white folks.”
Derek Cressman
Derek Cressman
Re: The Great Outdoors
No thank you:
Oct 2, 2021 Florida Panther encounter.
A Florida panther nearly steps on my feet. I pretend I'm a tree. Thought it might turn out differently there for a second. My front yard, Naples, Florida, USA.
Oct 2, 2021 Florida Panther encounter.
A Florida panther nearly steps on my feet. I pretend I'm a tree. Thought it might turn out differently there for a second. My front yard, Naples, Florida, USA.
“The Electoral College is DEI for rural white folks.”
Derek Cressman
Derek Cressman
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Re: The Great Outdoors
while i’m sure such an encounter would be unnerving if not downright terrifying, just laying eyes on one of the rarest big cats in the world would make it worthwhile for me
plus, that’s an inherent “risk” that comes with living where you do…no different than gators (imo), and it’s why i once declined a job offer from UF
plus, that’s an inherent “risk” that comes with living where you do…no different than gators (imo), and it’s why i once declined a job offer from UF
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
Re: The Great Outdoors
I'd love to see one too. My next door neighbor in Orlando saw one come out of the conservation area behind our houses-she saw something out of the corner of her eye and did a double take, and there it was. She wanted to snap a picture and knew I was home and would be interested, but didn't have her phone on her and decided to watch it instead of getting the phone. (Wise choice, as a former birder.)
Her husband was skeptical, as was I, but when he got home from work (From "Woke" Disney), he showed her a picture of a panther and she said "that's it". She had told me it had a long body and a long tail, which increased the possibility.
Having built and ridden lots of mt bike trails around KC on Park Dept., county, and Corps of Engineer land, mt bikers, among a slew of others, have occasionally reported seeing mt lions/pumas/cougars around Ks (and Mo) for decades. The state wildlife dept always said people were mistaken, and it was likely a bob cat or a coyote. And in the unlikely event it was really a cougar, it was probably a young nomadic male out looking for a territory who was essentially lost. I still don't think the Ks Dept of Wildlife think there are any mating pairs in the state. (An adult male mt lion's territory can be ~ 100 sq. miles!)
Her husband was skeptical, as was I, but when he got home from work (From "Woke" Disney), he showed her a picture of a panther and she said "that's it". She had told me it had a long body and a long tail, which increased the possibility.
Having built and ridden lots of mt bike trails around KC on Park Dept., county, and Corps of Engineer land, mt bikers, among a slew of others, have occasionally reported seeing mt lions/pumas/cougars around Ks (and Mo) for decades. The state wildlife dept always said people were mistaken, and it was likely a bob cat or a coyote. And in the unlikely event it was really a cougar, it was probably a young nomadic male out looking for a territory who was essentially lost. I still don't think the Ks Dept of Wildlife think there are any mating pairs in the state. (An adult male mt lion's territory can be ~ 100 sq. miles!)
“The Electoral College is DEI for rural white folks.”
Derek Cressman
Derek Cressman