Originally posted by dave b:
I get a little nervous when I see one perched, looking me over. That can't be a good omen.
I work for the Highway Department. When we see buzzards circling us, we read it as a sign that break's over!I get a little nervous when I see one perched, looking me over. That can't be a good omen.
Originally posted by glypnir:
I guess I shouldn't really be surprised that a vulture thread turns into an attack Obama thread. This seems to happen pretty often.
And they do NOT work well in a gumbo.
Don't ask me how I know this Frowner
Originally posted by 7.62foryou:
He means me Wheelgunner. I never miss a chance to insult someone who insults me on a daily basis. (Me thinks we have a president and a congress that does that also, for different reasons though.) Oh so sensitive!![]()
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Originally posted by bdGreen:
Turkey buzzards are quite extraordinary. Their sense of smell is the keenest sense they have and it is what brings them to their dinner tables. They can drift in the sky for hours upon hours just by utilizing the updrafts.
They do not kill.
They do not attack.
They don't have talons for picking up their food stuffs.
They just feed off of rotting decaying flesh.
Their featherless head is designed to go into body cavities without gooey stuff sticking to their feathers.
After they induldge in their meals, during flight they urinate on their own legs and feet. The enzymes in the urine aid in killing the bacteria from standing in a body cavity and lunching down.
Amazing creatures. They are well advanced.
bdGreen
Well, I can say it wasn't my first choice but I do tend to "Play by the Rules" and since I was going through part of the Multi-Service Jungle Survival School in Panama at the time and the "Rules" were you ate whatever you caught, well, that pretty much says it all.Originally posted by Wheelgunner840: KKG, I can honestly say that I have never heard of anyone ever trying to eat a seagull.