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Mind Boggling

#1

Occasionally I read these articles or see videos about how some small town is having trouble with wildlife.   A couple of years ago, there was some small town having trouble with aggressive raccoons.   This video is about how a small town is having trouble with wild turkeys!  

 

http://www.msn.com/en-us/video/animals/t...vi-AAklvdL

 

I just don't understand what the problem is.   Get out the shotguns and start blasting!   Problem solved!  

 

What is with these people? 


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#2

We just had a womam attacked by a black bear in my area......

 

So Yeah.....

 

Get out the shotguns and start blasting..........


Is currently experiencing life at several What the F's per hour
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#3

I just drove home from work a few weeks ago and there were 6 wild turkeys sitting on my porch.  I don't have a shot gun or anything, but if I did we'd have had a feast.  Pretty cool thing to see.


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#4

My point is, why do people let wild animals intimidate them?   Especially little ones like turkeys and raccoons.   Aren't we at the top of the food chain?   Aren't we the dominant species?   How can people let themselves be intimidated by aggressive wild animals?   For sure, stay away from bears.   But raccoons?   Turkeys?   Are you serious?   Give everybody a three foot broomstick.   Those turkeys will learn who's the boss. 


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#5

Turkeys have real sharp spurs on their legs and can do some damage if provoked


Is currently experiencing life at several What the F's per hour
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#6

Quote:Turkeys have real sharp spurs on their legs and can do some damage if provoked
 

I'm not saying one should tackle a wild turkey.   But I would think a nice 6 foot broom handle would do the job nicely.   If not that, then some shotguns.  

 

How in the world can this town not be able to figure out how to rid themselves of nuisance turkeys? 

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#7

Quote:I'm not saying one should tackle a wild turkey.   But I would think a nice 6 foot broom handle would do the job nicely.   If not that, then some shotguns.  

 

How in the world can this town not be able to figure out how to rid themselves of nuisance turkeys? 
 

Read the gun thread on The Sideline. Some people have lots of guns, do you expect them to leave them locked up all the time?

If something can corrupt you, you're corrupted already.
- Bob Marley

[Image: kiWL4mF.jpg]
 
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#8

Quote:I'm not saying one should tackle a wild turkey. But I would think a nice 6 foot broom handle would do the job nicely. If not that, then some shotguns.


How in the world can this town not be able to figure out how to rid themselves of nuisance turkeys?


I tackled some Wild Turkey once, left a terrible hang over the next day.
“An empty vessel makes the loudest sound, so they that have the least wit are the greatest babblers.”. - Plato

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#9

Quote:Occasionally I read these articles or see videos about how some small town is having trouble with wildlife.   A couple of years ago, there was some small town having trouble with aggressive raccoons.   This video is about how a small town is having trouble with wild turkeys!  

 

http://www.msn.com/en-us/video/animals/t...vi-AAklvdL

 

I just don't understand what the problem is.   Get out the shotguns and start blasting!   Problem solved!  

 

What is with these people? 
PETA is the problem and organizations like them...Once back in the 80's in Idaho there were so many rabbits running around the country side that farmers were being wiped out...all the farmers and volunteers from neighboring counties came to help kill the rabbits...They named it the "Bunny Bop" PETA and all kinds of animal rights activists protested and of course sued to end the Bunny Bop but the Judges agreed with the farmers and so did the Supreme Court...

 

Below is excerpts from the article


<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;"> 

<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;">"About 800 men, women and children, armed with ax handles, baseball bats, tire tools and golf clubs, stretched across a mile of the desolate prairie near Mud Lake and rounded up jackrabbits which they claim have done an estimated $5 million in crop damage.



<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;">"Many of the jackrabbits were beaten to death during the drive and others captured in a pen had their necks broken and their heads decapitated.''



<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;">The first jackrabbit drive on record in Jefferson County was in 1891 in Market Lake, which is now Roberts, according to a 1981 Post Register article.



<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;">Drives were held in the region whenever jackrabbits threatened crops, often in correlation with their 10-year population cycle.



<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;">However, the weekly drives in the winter of 1981-1982 brought media attention that turned the drives into a national circus."...

<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;">"There were casualties beyond the quarter-million — some say more than 1 million — dead jackrabbits. There were two court trials, $10 million in crop damages and a black eye dealt to the region's reputation.

<div>
<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;">Sometime in the fall of 1981, jackrabbits overran the sagebrush at a rate of about one per square acre, according to expert estimates. They spilled out of the desert and ate through haystacks and acres of grain and alfalfa. Damage estimates topped $10 million.



<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;">A jackrabbit can grow up to nine pounds and eat a pound or more of food a day.



<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;">Orvin Twitchell and other men formed the Mud Lake Farmer's Rabbit Committee and appointed Twitchell chairman.



<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;">They hatched and executed a plan to hold jackrabbit drives every weekend from November to March. Volunteers would walk through sagebrush, shoulder to shoulder, funneling thousands of jackrabbits toward pens where they'd be exterminated in accordance with the 4-H handbook: a swift blow to the back of the head.



<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;">Today Twitchell, 84, helps run the Mud Lake Museum.



<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;">"We had a problem, and we set out to fix it,'' he said. "We aren't talking about Peter Cottontail. These are desert rats. That's all they are.''



<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;">"As far as jackrabbit killing methods go, clubbing was beautifully simple.



<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;">Before long, the Idaho Humane Society, Fund for Animals and other animal rights groups tried to stop the drives. Their spokesmen said they understood farmers had to kill the jackrabbits; they wanted it done in a more humane fashion, and they didn't want children participating in the drives."

<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;">"Lawyers from The Animal Fund took the farmers to court seeking to stop the drives on grounds of animal cruelty.

<div>
<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;">Judges backed the farmers first in district court, then in the Idaho Supreme Court.



<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;">Twitchell claims that after the decision was upheld, the head of The Animal Fund, Cleveland Amory, accused him of being a bad winner.



<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;">"I told him, 'You son of a [BLEEP], we shouldn't be here in the first place,''' Twitchell said. "The judge didn't like me saying that in court.''



<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;">The jackrabbit population fell in 1983.



<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;">Mud Lake hasn't seen a jackrabbit drive since."

<p style="color:rgb(68,68,68);font-size:16px;">http://magicvalley.com/news/local/mud-la...963f4.html


</div>
</div>


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#10

People have been taught by progressives to be weak.there are some who literally can't do things for themselves. Had the United States been populated with this generation, there would be no United States. Fortunately, this ugly trend may reverse under new leadership. The "can do" mindset will hopefully return to Americans, and the ridiculous notion that things can't be done without the government will start to prevail.
What lies behind us, and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us.







 




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#11

Quote:I'm not saying one should tackle a wild turkey.   But I would think a nice 6 foot broom handle would do the job nicely.   If not that, then some shotguns.  

 

How in the world can this town not be able to figure out how to rid themselves of nuisance turkeys?


Ever been to Davis?
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#12

Quote:I tackled some Wild Turkey once, left a terrible hang over the next day.
That stuff can do a number on you for sure.

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