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Default Further signs of Spring

Hello All!

It froze quite solidly last night and the horn-rats ate about a hundred
crocuses! They are obviously not poisonous to them.


--


James Silverton
Potomac, Maryland

Email, with obvious alterations:
not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not

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Default Further signs of Spring

James Silverton wrote:
> Hello All!
>
> It froze quite solidly last night and the horn-rats ate about a hundred
> crocuses! They are obviously not poisonous to them.
>
>


Spring keeps teasing us. The days are getting longer and generally
warmer, but it cooled off for the weekend. It is nice to get out and go
hiking in the woods these days.
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Michael "Dog3" wrote:

>> Spring keeps teasing us. The days are getting longer and generally
>> warmer, but it cooled off for the weekend. It is nice to get out and go
>> hiking in the woods these days.

>
> My morning rides have been wonderful for the last month or so. Except
> it's usually dark and I have to rely on the outside arena lights, which
> don't help all that much. I didn't ride this morning. I need to get
> outside and finish a garden project I started yesterday. It is nice to
> get out into the air. It's also nice to air out the house.



This is maple sugaring season and perfect weather for it, dropping below
freezing at night and then above freezing during the day. It is a bit
of a tease, but we have to remember that this is what it is supposed to
be like at this time of year.

I only ride once a week, Sunday mornings. We are still riding inside. I
am looking forward to getting outside, but I will gladly wait until it
is a little warmer.
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Default Further signs of Spring

On Mar 22, 7:36*am, "James Silverton" >
wrote:
> Hello All!
>
> It froze quite solidly last night and the horn-rats ate about a hundred
> crocuses! They are obviously not poisonous to them.
>
> --
>
> James Silverton
> Potomac, Maryland
>
> Email, with obvious alterations:
> not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not


Lots of snail trails and earthworms on the sidewalk and in the street.
Spring has sprung!!!!


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On Mar 22, 9:36�am, "James Silverton" >
wrote:
> Hello All!
>
> It froze quite solidly last night and the horn-rats ate about a hundred
> crocuses! They are obviously not poisonous to them.
>
> --
>
> James Silverton
> Potomac, Maryland
>
> Email, with obvious alterations:
> not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not


Spring here in South Central Texas , is the most beautiful time. Tho
we are in the midst of a teerrible drought, we have definite signs of
Spring.

The deer have their summer coats, and bucks have dropped their
antlers.

Flowers and bushes are Blooming... this in cludes BLUEBONNETS, my
personal favorites!

The Turkeys have returned, I have two large beautiful Toms and their
harem of about a dozen large busy hens. Wild turkeys are comon here
and a lot of fun to watch.

Phoebes are repairing and reconstructing the nest on my back porch,
they raise about two families a year in that little nest. Last year I
heard a big commotion and went out. The parents were frantically
trying to protect the babies from a Large rat snake. I took the rat
snake and put him out behind the pond.Hopefully he is happy there, did
not see him any more and all babies fledged.

The Barn Swallows who nest on the front porch come a little later.
The hummingbirds are back, fighting over the feeder.

Spring has pretty much sprung.
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Default Further signs of Spring


rosie wrote:

On Mar 22, 9:36?am, "James Silverton" >
wrote:
> Hello All!
>
> It froze quite solidly last night and the horn-rats ate about a hundred
> crocuses! They are obviously not poisonous to them.
>
> --
>
> James Silverton
> Potomac, Maryland
>
> Email, with obvious alterations:
> not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not


Spring here in South Central Texas , is the most beautiful time. Tho
we are in the midst of a teerrible drought, we have definite signs of
Spring.

The deer have their summer coats, and bucks have dropped their
antlers.

Flowers and bushes are Blooming... this in cludes BLUEBONNETS, my
personal favorites!

The Turkeys have returned, I have two large beautiful Toms and their
harem of about a dozen large busy hens. Wild turkeys are comon here
and a lot of fun to watch.

Phoebes are repairing and reconstructing the nest on my back porch,
they raise about two families a year in that little nest. Last year I
heard a big commotion and went out. The parents were frantically
trying to protect the babies from a Large rat snake. I took the rat
snake and put him out behind the pond.Hopefully he is happy there, did
not see him any more and all babies fledged.

The Barn Swallows who nest on the front porch come a little later.
The hummingbirds are back, fighting over the feeder.

Spring has pretty much sprung.
--------------

GM wrote:

A lovely story, rosie...makes me wanna move to the country.

:-)


--
Best
Greg


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Default Further signs of Spring

On Mar 23, 11:50�pm, "Gregory Morrow" > wrote:
> rosie wrote:
>
> On Mar 22, 9:36?am, "James Silverton" >
> wrote:
>
> > Hello All!

>
> > It froze quite solidly last night and the horn-rats ate about a hundred
> > crocuses! They are obviously not poisonous to them.

>
> > --

>
> > James Silverton
> > Potomac, Maryland

>
> > Email, with obvious alterations:
> > not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not

>
> Spring here in South Central Texas , is the most beautiful time. Tho
> we are in the midst of a teerrible drought, we have definite signs of
> Spring.
>
> �The deer have their summer coats, and bucks have dropped their
> antlers.
>
> Flowers and bushes are Blooming... this in cludes BLUEBONNETS, my
> personal favorites!
>
> The Turkeys have returned, I have two large beautiful Toms and their
> harem of about a dozen large busy hens. Wild turkeys are comon here
> and a lot of fun to watch.
>
> Phoebes are repairing and reconstructing the nest on my back porch,
> they raise about two families a year in that little nest. Last year I
> heard a big commotion and went out. The parents were frantically
> trying to protect the babies from a Large rat snake. I took the rat
> snake and put him out behind the pond.Hopefully he is happy there, did
> not see him any more and all babies fledged.
>
> �The Barn Swallows who nest on the front porch come a little later.

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"Michael "Dog3"" > wrote in message
...
> "James Silverton" > news:b2sxl.1732$SU3.321
> @nwrddc02.gnilink.net: in rec.food.cooking
>
>> Hello All!
>>
>> It froze quite solidly last night and the horn-rats ate about a hundred
>> crocuses! They are obviously not poisonous to them.

>
> Oh Gawd. What are "horn-rats"? Whatever they are I don't want them. I'm
> still grateful the English Bluebells I planted in the fall escaped the
> wrath of the tree-rats around here. They're digging up a storm. I don't
> know how those itty bitty squirrels can dig a giant pot hole. Mean little
> *******s.
>
> Michael
>
> --
> “He who does not understand your silence will probably not understand your
> words.”
> ~Elbert Hubbard
>
> You can find me at: - michael at lonergan dot us dot com


I hate them. I had a buck and 3 doe in my backyard last night. I've
planted the tulips, crocus and daff's in the front yard, but they have been
bold lately.


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Default Further signs of Spring

BD wrote:
> "Michael "Dog3"" > wrote in message
> ...
>
>> "James Silverton" > news:b2sxl.1732$SU3.321
>> @nwrddc02.gnilink.net: in rec.food.cooking
>>
>>
>>> Hello All!
>>>
>>> It froze quite solidly last night and the horn-rats ate about a hundred
>>> crocuses! They are obviously not poisonous to them.
>>>

>> Oh Gawd. What are "horn-rats"? Whatever they are I don't want them. I'm
>> still grateful the English Bluebells I planted in the fall escaped the
>> wrath of the tree-rats around here. They're digging up a storm. I don't
>> know how those itty bitty squirrels can dig a giant pot hole. Mean little
>> *******s.
>>
>> Michael
>>
>> --
>> “He who does not understand your silence will probably not understand your
>> words.”
>> ~Elbert Hubbard
>>
>> You can find me at: - michael at lonergan dot us dot com
>>

>
> I hate them. I had a buck and 3 doe in my backyard last night. I've
> planted the tulips, crocus and daff's in the front yard, but they have been
> bold lately.


We planted 400 pansies one year and the deer ate all of them in one
night. All of them. I have to apologize, because I have mentioned this
twice before, but I still have not gotten over it. lol


Becca


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BD wrote:
> "Michael "Dog3"" > wrote in message
> ...
>> "James Silverton" > news:b2sxl.1732$SU3.321
>> @nwrddc02.gnilink.net: in rec.food.cooking
>>
>>> Hello All!
>>>
>>> It froze quite solidly last night and the horn-rats ate about a hundred
>>> crocuses! They are obviously not poisonous to them.

>> Oh Gawd. What are "horn-rats"? Whatever they are I don't want them. I'm
>> still grateful the English Bluebells I planted in the fall escaped the
>> wrath of the tree-rats around here. They're digging up a storm. I don't
>> know how those itty bitty squirrels can dig a giant pot hole. Mean little
>> *******s.
>>
>> Michael
>>
>> --
>> “He who does not understand your silence will probably not understand your
>> words.”
>> ~Elbert Hubbard
>>
>> You can find me at: - michael at lonergan dot us dot com

>
> I hate them. I had a buck and 3 doe in my backyard last night. I've
> planted the tulips, crocus and daff's in the front yard, but they have been
> bold lately.
>
>

They don't like daffodils, IIRC. I used to get them in my yard in New
Jersey. They ate my tulip bulbs even when I planted them with dried
blood. They ate the GD rose bushes, thorns and all! One weekend we went
camping and came home to fins $100 worth of Impatiens chewed to the roots.

Broke me from crying when I watched "Bambi", that's for sure!

--
Janet Wilder
way-the-heck-south Texas
spelling doesn't count
but cooking does
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On Sun, 22 Mar 2009 12:44:59 -0500, Janet Wilder wrote:

> BD wrote:
>>
>> I hate them. I had a buck and 3 doe in my backyard last night. I've
>> planted the tulips, crocus and daff's in the front yard, but they have been
>> bold lately.
>>

> They don't like daffodils, IIRC. I used to get them in my yard in New
> Jersey. They ate my tulip bulbs even when I planted them with dried
> blood. They ate the GD rose bushes, thorns and all! One weekend we went
> camping and came home to fins $100 worth of Impatiens chewed to the roots.
>
> Broke me from crying when I watched "Bambi", that's for sure!


<snort>

you could try 'bambi meets godzilla' instead:

<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n-wUdetAAlY>

your pal,
thumper
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blake wrote on Mon, 23 Mar 2009 16:46:20 GMT:

>> BD wrote:
>>>
>>> I hate them. I had a buck and 3 doe in my backyard last
>>> night. I've planted the tulips, crocus and daff's in the
>>> front yard, but they have been bold lately.
>>>

>> They don't like daffodils, IIRC. I used to get them in my
>> yard in New Jersey. They ate my tulip bulbs even when I
>> planted them with dried blood. They ate the GD rose bushes,
>> thorns and all! One weekend we went camping and came home to
>> fins $100 worth of Impatiens chewed to the roots.
>>
>> Broke me from crying when I watched "Bambi", that's for sure!


> <snort>


> you could try 'bambi meets godzilla' instead:


> <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n-wUdetAAlY>


I sometimes talk with a friend who is an enthusiastic gardener, when I
take a morning walk. She showed me some stuff she was spraying on her
plants, which she said was coyote urine (real or synthetic I don't
know!) It smelled pretty horrible and would keep me out of my yard,
never mind deer!

--

James Silverton
Potomac, Maryland

Email, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not

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"Michael "Dog3"" > wrote in message
...
> "James Silverton" > news:b2sxl.1732$SU3.321
> @nwrddc02.gnilink.net: in rec.food.cooking
>
>> Hello All!
>>
>> It froze quite solidly last night and the horn-rats ate about a hundred
>> crocuses! They are obviously not poisonous to them.

>
> Oh Gawd. What are "horn-rats"?


That's what the cheap lazy *ignorant* *******s who won't put up fencing call
deer... of course only the stags are horny. Hungry deer will eat
everything, only a proper fence will deter them... and since it's
impractical to fence everything put out something they will prefer over your
puny bulbs, like a few bales of rib sticking hay. And since if there re
deer you likely live rural so leave some acreage forested and some fallow so
the deer will still have habitat, remember they were here first, and by
giving them space they will repay you tenfold. And anyway some other
critter is digging up your bulbs, deer don't dig bulbs but they will eat
what sprouts, they'll eat the flowers if rabbits don't beat them to it.
There are lots of smaller nocturnal critters that will dig bulbs,
woodchucks, raccoons, possum, skunks, muskrat, fox, a long list. Ruminants
like deer won't dig for food, this time of year if there's no herbage yet
they'll eat twigs and tree bark.

> Whatever they are I don't want them. I'm
> still grateful the English Bluebells I planted in the fall escaped the
> wrath of the tree-rats around here. They're digging up a storm. I don't
> know how those itty bitty squirrels can dig a giant pot hole. Mean little
> *******s.
>
>

Squirrels are only dgging up your bulbs because by spring they've depleted
their cache of stored food... toss out a few handfuls of in-shell peanuts
and sunflower seeds each day (they're cheap), once they're hooked on better
vittles they won't want your stinkin' TIAD bulbs.



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On Mar 22, 8:59*am, "Michael \"Dog3\"" > wrote:
> "James Silverton" > *news:b2sxl.1732$SU3.321
> @nwrddc02.gnilink.net: in rec.food.cooking
>
> > Hello All!

>
> > It froze quite solidly last night and the horn-rats ate about a hundred
> > crocuses! They are obviously not poisonous to them.

>
> Oh Gawd. What are "horn-rats"? *Whatever they are I don't want them. I'm
> still grateful the English Bluebells I planted in the fall escaped the
> wrath of the tree-rats around here. *They're digging up a storm. *I don't
> know how those itty bitty squirrels can dig a giant pot hole. Mean little
> *******s.
>
> Michael
>
> --
> “He who does not understand your silence will probably not understand your
> words.” * * * * *
> * * * * * * * ~Elbert Hubbard
>
> You can find me at: - michael at lonergan dot us dot com


===============================
Squirrels here don't dig holes. (I think! - at least I've never seen
one in the act or any evidence. Moles and gophers and prairie dogs dig
holes. So do salamanders, believe it or not!
Lynn in Fargo
Waiting for the Flood


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Lynn from Fargo Ografmorffig wrote:
> Squirrels here don't dig holes. (I think! - at least I've never seen
> one in the act or any evidence. Moles and gophers and prairie dogs dig
> holes. So do salamanders, believe it or not!
> Lynn in Fargo
> Waiting for the Flood
>



Squirrels will bury nuts then dig them up later. When temperatures
reach over 100 degrees, they will find a shady spot and dig a shallow
hole about the size of a hubcap. They lay in it with their legs all
splayed out. The dirt is now nice and cool.


Becca
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Becca > wrote:

> Squirrels will bury nuts then dig them up later. When temperatures
> reach over 100 degrees, they will find a shady spot and dig a shallow
> hole about the size of a hubcap. They lay in it with their legs all
> splayed out. The dirt is now nice and cool.


PETA has just announced a program to teach squirrels how to swim.
We're causing them undue discomfort by this global warming trend.

-sw
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On Mar 22, 12:48*pm, "Michael \"Dog3\"" > wrote:
> Lynn from Fargo Ografmorffig :
> in rec.food.cooking
>
> > ==============================Squirrels here don't dig holes. *(I
> > think! - at least I've never seen one in the act or any evidence.
> > Moles and gophers and prairie dogs dig holes. *So do salamanders,
> > believe it or not! Lynn in Fargo
> > Waiting for the Flood

>
> Believe me. Squirrels dig holes. *Lots of them.
>
> Michael
>
> --
> “He who does not understand your silence will probably not understand your
> words.” * * * * *
> * * * * * * * ~Elbert Hubbard
>
> You can find me at: - michael at lonergan dot us dot com


And once dug, they put something into the hole. That's how I get
sprouting walnut trees all over my yard.

Susan B.
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In article >,
says...
>
> Lynn from Fargo Ografmorffig >
> :
> in rec.food.cooking
>
> > ==============================Squirrels here don't dig holes. (I
> > think! - at least I've never seen one in the act or any evidence.
> > Moles and gophers and prairie dogs dig holes. So do salamanders,
> > believe it or not! Lynn in Fargo
> > Waiting for the Flood

>
> Believe me. Squirrels dig holes. Lots of them.
>
> Michael


Must be why I don't see many squirrels in the city. Kind of hard to dig
through concrete.


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"Michael "Dog3"" > wrote:

>> It froze quite solidly last night and the horn-rats ate about a hundred
>> crocuses! They are obviously not poisonous to them.

>
> Oh Gawd. What are "horn-rats"?


I knew this would be the first response. You mean you couldn't tell
he's referring to deer? I mean ... isn't it obvious with the
similarities between deer and rats?

-sw


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"Michael "Dog3"" > wrote:

> Sqwertz >
> : in rec.food.cooking
>
>>
>> I knew this would be the first response.

>
> Wooo Hooo!!! If that is the case, you should open your own psychic
> hotline.
>
>> You mean you couldn't tell he's referring to deer? I mean ... isn't it
>> obvious with the similarities between deer and rats?

>
> Perhaps it was obvious to you but it was not obvious to me. Your
> intellect is far more superior than mine ya' know.


Uhh, I was siding with you by being sarcastic. That was pretty
obvious if you weren't on the defensive. Apparently you missed the
little flame war between he and I when he used the term in another
thread.

Stop being so... sensitive. Sheesh.

-sw
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