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Tim Tim is offline
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Default Crawdad relocation...

Well, after all the rain we've had around ehre I looked down on my
shop floor and saw a rather large crayfish lumbering along.

Hmmm, how that thing get in here?

Don't know, but I took the time to it up and walk out to my dad's pond
and threw it in. I figured he'd be happier there, or he'll make a nice
snack for a catfish.

But I vote for the underdog. I hope it does well.

?: ^ )
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On Mon, 27 Apr 2009 13:50:13 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:

Well, after all the rain we've had around ehre I looked down on my
shop floor and saw a rather large crayfish lumbering along.

Hmmm, how that thing get in here?

Don't know, but I took the time to it up and walk out to my dad's pond
and threw it in. I figured he'd be happier there, or he'll make a nice
snack for a catfish.

But I vote for the underdog. I hope it does well.

Did you check the claws to make sure it wasn't a land crawdad?
If it was, you drowned it.

--Vic
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On Apr 27, 8:03*pm, Vic Smith wrote:
On Mon, 27 Apr 2009 13:50:13 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:

Well, after all the rain we've had around ehre I looked down on my
shop floor and saw a rather large crayfish lumbering along.


Hmmm, how that thing get in here?


Don't know, but I took the time to it up and walk out to my dad's pond
and threw it in. I figured he'd be happier there, or he'll make a nice
snack for a catfish.


But I vote for the underdog. I hope it does well.


Did you check the claws to make sure it wasn't a land crawdad?
If it was, you drowned it.

--Vic


Eh, I threw it close tot he bank. Yeah, it will either sink or swim.
it was one of those long dark ones with the thin long claws. Unlike
the shorter red ones with the fat claws.

When I was a kid I had one like I caught in an aquarium with other
fish. it didn't seem to mind it.

Yeah, "Larry the Lobster"
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On Mon, 27 Apr 2009 19:23:30 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:

Eh, I threw it close tot he bank. Yeah, it will either sink or swim.
it was one of those long dark ones with the thin long claws. Unlike
the shorter red ones with the fat claws.

When I was a kid I had one like I caught in an aquarium with other
fish. it didn't seem to mind it.

Yeah, "Larry the Lobster"


I was kidding anyway. Don't know anything about them except I had
crawdad etouffee once. Red beans, rice and crawdads in a spicy sauce.
Delicious.
My uncle once got a job driving sheet and piles after the foreman
asked if he could climb. Uncle said "Like a squirrel."
First time the foreman asked him to climb a sheet, uncle said "I ain't
going up there. Don't like heights."
Foreman said, "You said you could climb like a squirrel!"
Uncle said "Sure. A ground squirrel."
That's what made me think of "land crawdad."

--Vic


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On Mon, 27 Apr 2009 19:23:30 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:

On Apr 27, 8:03*pm, Vic Smith wrote:
On Mon, 27 Apr 2009 13:50:13 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:

Well, after all the rain we've had around ehre I looked down on my
shop floor and saw a rather large crayfish lumbering along.


Hmmm, how that thing get in here?


Don't know, but I took the time to it up and walk out to my dad's pond
and threw it in. I figured he'd be happier there, or he'll make a nice
snack for a catfish.


But I vote for the underdog. I hope it does well.


Did you check the claws to make sure it wasn't a land crawdad?
If it was, you drowned it.

--Vic


Eh, I threw it close tot he bank. Yeah, it will either sink or swim.
it was one of those long dark ones with the thin long claws. Unlike
the shorter red ones with the fat claws.

When I was a kid I had one like I caught in an aquarium with other
fish. it didn't seem to mind it.

Yeah, "Larry the Lobster"


I had a crawdad from the pet store. I put a betta in the tank, and
when he tried his tough guy act, the crawdad ate it.

Casady


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On Tue, 28 Apr 2009 00:19:16 -0400, wrote:



I think all of these crustaceans do just fine above or below water.
They ship live lobsters in damp seaweed. If you keep them cool and a
little wet, a blue crab will do fine out of the water too.
The other day there was a palmetto bug hanging on to my pool vac hose
about 6" under water. I watched him for a while and he seemed happy as
a clam. I flipped him up on the pool deck and he walked off like
nothing was wrong. Smashing him with my hand did relinquish his life
forces tho.
I think he may have been hiding from this guy who was also hanging out
by the pool.

http://gfretwell.com/wildlife/baby%20rat%20snake.jpg

I put him outside


I heard rat snakes get pretty big. Best not to keep him around, eh?
Lots of lizards down there too.
My uncle had a cushy retirement job cleaning phone kiosk glass down
there. Company car, gas, some rags and unlimited Windex perks.
Had a different route every day, about 3-4 hours per route.
Went with him one day on his Sanibel run. He wanted me see the bass
in the ponds of the gated places. There were some nice ones.
A lizard jumped on me at our first stop and I put him on the roof of
the car, a little Ford. Right up front by the windshield.
The rest of the route we could see his head facing into the wind as we
went down roads, sometimes doing 45 mph.
Don't know why he stayed on there. I flipped him into the grass at
the last stop. He was far from home and his family.
Still feel bad about that. But I don't lose any sleep.

--Vic


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On Tue, 28 Apr 2009 12:19:42 -0400, wrote:

On Tue, 28 Apr 2009 09:33:53 -0500, Vic Smith
wrote:

I heard rat snakes get pretty big. Best not to keep him around, eh?


They don't hurt anything I want to have here.
I see quite a few rat snakes but the black racers tend to keep them
down a bit. This is an adult "yellow"
http://gfretwell.com/wildlife/yellow_rat_snake.jpg

That one brings back fond memories of a belt I had when Disco was
king.

I had a black racer in the screen cage for about 3 weeks. He ate all
the lizards, frogs and pretty much anything else that moved. I was
going to keep him but my wife said he had to go.

http://gfretwell.com/wildlife/Black%20racer.jpg
http://gfretwell.com/wildlife/Black%20Racer%202.jpg

These guys are pretty
not to be confused with the coral snake (that has a black nose)

Would have fooled me. I think I would be running too fast to check
its nose.

http://gfretwell.com/wildlife/scarlet_snake.jpg

Lots of lizards down there too.


Mostly anoles and a few gecko. The Cuban anoles pretty much ate all
the chameleons years ago. They are very rare now


I've only identified 2 lizard species down there.
Little ones with a whole tail and little ones missing some tail.
But I've never been in the brush.
Maybe the chameleons have adapted to the point of invisibility.

--Vic
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On Apr 28, 9:33*am, Vic Smith wrote:


A lizard jumped on me at our first stop and I put him on the roof of
the car, a little Ford. *Right up front by the windshield.
The rest of the route we could see his head facing into the wind as we
went down roads, sometimes doing 45 mph.
Don't know why he stayed on there. *I flipped him into the grass at
the last stop. *He was far from home and his family.
Still feel bad about that. *But I don't lose any sleep.

--Vic

Is that how the Geico commercials got started?

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On Tue, 28 Apr 2009 18:20:27 -0500, Vic Smith
wrote:

These guys are pretty
not to be confused with the coral snake (that has a black nose)

Would have fooled me. I think I would be running too fast to check
its nose.


The venom from a coral snake is bad news, a neurotoxin similar to that
of a cobra. Luckily, they are small and have a short strike, and short
fangs. I would rather step around one, than spot a ten foot rattler
five feet away. There is another snake that looks very similar, that
is not venomous. Remember, there are no poisonous snakes. They are all
good eating.

Casady
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wrote in message
news
On Mon, 27 Apr 2009 21:41:33 -0500, Vic Smith
wrote:

On Mon, 27 Apr 2009 19:23:30 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:

Eh, I threw it close tot he bank. Yeah, it will either sink or swim.
it was one of those long dark ones with the thin long claws. Unlike
the shorter red ones with the fat claws.

When I was a kid I had one like I caught in an aquarium with other
fish. it didn't seem to mind it.

Yeah, "Larry the Lobster"


I was kidding anyway. Don't know anything about them except I had
crawdad etouffee once. Red beans, rice and crawdads in a spicy sauce.
Delicious.
My uncle once got a job driving sheet and piles after the foreman
asked if he could climb. Uncle said "Like a squirrel."
First time the foreman asked him to climb a sheet, uncle said "I ain't
going up there. Don't like heights."
Foreman said, "You said you could climb like a squirrel!"
Uncle said "Sure. A ground squirrel."
That's what made me think of "land crawdad."

--Vic


I think all of these crustaceans do just fine above or below water.
They ship live lobsters in damp seaweed. If you keep them cool and a
little wet, a blue crab will do fine out of the water too.
The other day there was a palmetto bug hanging on to my pool vac hose
about 6" under water. I watched him for a while and he seemed happy as
a clam. I flipped him up on the pool deck and he walked off like
nothing was wrong. Smashing him with my hand did relinquish his life
forces tho.
I think he may have been hiding from this guy who was also hanging out
by the pool.

http://gfretwell.com/wildlife/baby%20rat%20snake.jpg

I put him outside


The only time my wife ever called and asked if I could come home from work
early was when she opened a bottom kitchen drawer and found a 4' red rat
snake curled up.


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