not only must he be on a leash but your dog can only drink if the alcohol is in a cup… not a can or bottle… Prevents trashy look of drunkin dogs
“You’re A Smelly Pirate Hooker”
Pioneer 197 Sportfish
Yamaha F150
not only must he be on a leash but your dog can only drink if the alcohol is in a cup… not a can or bottle… Prevents trashy look of drunkin dogs
“You’re A Smelly Pirate Hooker”
Pioneer 197 Sportfish
Yamaha F150
All I know is, they looked sick, so we gave them some Alka-Seltzer.
You can run, but you’ll only die tired.
passsed 5 dead birds 20-25 miles sse out of MI tues june 26th. Like hearing the explanation and hope its true. Dont really understand why 5 would die within couple hundred yards of each other .
Bite me
fished out of st. marys,GA. seen dead birds there as well…
is anything eating the dead birds. sharks? rednecks? dogs being walked on the beach AFTER 6pm with drunken owners?
I can speak for the rednecks… We only eat road kill:smiley:
BKLong - How was the fishing in St Mary’s. Trailering down to Fernandina pretty soon myself for a short vacation. I heard the gulf is a hell of a run, but there are alot of offshore reefs. Any tips?
R-U-N-N-O-F-T
25 Aquasport W/A
Twin Yamaha 150’S
Z-man Fishing - The Science and Art of Fishing
SilaFlash | EZSkirts | ElaZtech | The Original Chatterbait
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I’m a biologist with the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service working on the seabird mortality that is happening from FL through VA. We are getting some good data coming in relative to numbers and species of birds being found washed ashore, but we lack some very valuable information from offshore. I’ve noticed posts on this Forum indicating the observation of dead birds, and I am requesting those of you that are interested in this matter to look at the link and associated news article and assist us in gathering offshore information. Basically, what we are looking for are: numbers of birds (sick, weak, injured), species (photos are good), date, time, location, other observations. We are not asking anyone to handle or collect birds. At this time, it appears that most of the birds are starving, but some birds are being tested for numerous sources of mortality. If you wish to assist, you can e-mail me here, but the best is craig_watson@fws.gov
http://www.dnr.sc.gov/news/Yr2007/july2/july2_shear.html
Thanks.