Free Wildebeests

I have placed twenty five beautiful wildebeests in a sack. This sack, I have left beneath the lightning tree in Watershed park. First one to the sack gets to plow his field with 25 wildebeests (Sorry I couldn't make it a number divisible by 2, 3, or 4. You'll need a wide plow. However 25 is divisible by one so an infinitely tiny plow will also work).

Today's lesson in harmony:
"    bind your head with silk!"

Comments

geocache

anybody Geocache?

Yes..


My friend has a GPS..

We did Priest Point Park..


They are still out here, I think

NEWS RELEASE
WASHINGTON DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE
600 Capitol Way North, Olympia, WA 98501-1091

June 22, 2001
Contact: Jack Smith, (360) 249-1222
Steve Pozzanghera, (360) 902-2506

 

Wildlife agency seeks information on wild pigs

OLYMPIA – If you see a wild pig on the Olympic Peninsula, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) wants to know about it.

Seriously.

Jack Smith, regional WDFW wildlife manager, said he's received an increasing number of reports from people who have seen – and sometimes shot – wild pigs in an area stretching from the Quinault Indian Reservation to the Wynochee River valley.

"We're concerned that these critters could be spreading," Smith said. "Left unchecked, they can be extremely destructive to native vegetation and wildlife species."

Smith isn't talking about ordinary pigs that just slipped away from the farm. The ones he's concerned about can weigh 300 pounds or more. Sporting long guard hair, they are dark brown to black in color and have a generally scruffy appearance.

They also have tusks like a European wild boar and can be dangerous when confronted.

"Like wild boars around the world, these guys aren't known for having a good temperament," Smith said.

In fact, Washington's wild pigs probably share the same lineage, said Steve Pozzanghera, deputy assistant director for the WDFW wildlife program, who explains that at least one game farm imported wild boars from eastern Europe to the Olympic Peninsula in the 1930s.

"The pigs we're hearing about are probably the descendants of those imported boars and feral pigs that escaped from area farms years ago," Pozzanghera said.

Because WDFW currently considers the animals to be "feral domestics," they can be hunted without a license, Pozzanghera said.

And that, apparently, is what an increasing number of people are doing.

Smith said he had heard about members of the Quinault tribe hunting wild pigs on the reservation for years but has recently received reports of pigs being taken by nontribal hunters from Humptulips to the Grisdale logging camp site on the Wynochee. The clearest evidence was a photo of a slain pig Smith received from the owner of a sporting goods store in Montesano.

"I've heard of about 10 taken since Mother's Day," Smith said. "If wild pigs are proliferating on the Peninsula, we need to know about it."

If you see or shoot a wild pig on the Olympic Peninsula, Smith asks that you contact him at (360) 249-1222. If, however, you're interested in information about where to hunt wild pigs, Smith asks that you instead call one of the sporting goods stores in the Grays Harbor area.

"I'm really not interested in becoming a wild pig hunting guide," he said, "and I know that sporting goods dealers in Montesano and Aberdeen have more information than anybody about where and how these pigs can best be hunted."

 

One of these animals was

That's one mean lookin' pig!One of these animals was killed and then stuffed and put on display in a Montesano sports goods store a few years ago. The image here looks pretty close in size, except the Montesano boar had bigger tusks. Frankly, I'd much rather run into a black bear than one of these monsters out here in Grays Harbor County.

A few years ago a couple of

A few years ago a couple of buddies and I took off toward Grisdale to see if we could bag one. I had my trusty .270 and a single-action 44 strapped to my hip, my buddies were similarly armed. We ran into two guys hauling out something similar to what you see above. After helping them haul the thing back to their truck and watching them drive, the three of us exchanged knowing glances and get the f*&# out of dodge.

Yup. Welcome to Grays Harbor

Yup. Welcome to Grays Harbor County, Norm.

faggotsall of you

faggots
all of you

A question

How impaired are you? Or rather, how impaired were you? It is a well known fact that many people drink/drug and drive the web.

Also, do you mean faggots, faggots, faggots, or faggots? Is this a sign that you are craving this?

I'm all for the absurd and silliness and random Discordian endeavors. That doesn't mean I like or agree with everything I read and hear. Feedback for you, this reminds me of the hell of high school. High school often mirrors the cruelty of the world. And words do have power.

Anybody holding meds for

Anybody holding meds for eelcozy?

"Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired, signifies in the final sense a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed." President Dwight D. Eisenhower April 16, 195