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    #13
    Only "wild life" I've seen was the neighbor observing
    dirt bike tracks through his freshly seeded crop

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      #14
      When you are on your tractors, you may want to tune in:

      CBC's Ideas will be broadcasting a series of three on factory farming called "Have Your Meat and Eat it Too" by journalist Jill Eisen.

      They air on CBC Radio 1, at 9:04 p.m.

      May 17th:factory farming/ problems.

      May 24 arguments for/ against eating meat.

      May 31 alternative ways of raising livestock/consuming meat.

      Have to be good to talk me out of a beef tenderloin, but just in case, shall I freeze the cutworms? Pars

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        #15
        Lol I don't lead a wildlife any more that pill pilsner fella use to run wild but I haven't seen him for awhile must still be down in vegas

        I sure wish I new more about birds because I keep seeing some I've never seen before

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          #16
          If they haven't got an hour glass shape, they are not worth looking at!!

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            #17
            Wear a blindfold.

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              #18
              Wilagro, have you spring migrated to colder clime?

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                #19
                Too many hour glass shapes turn into one minute timers!!

                Look, but don't touch, never got anybody into any trouble. And now you are promoting blindfolds. SCHEESCH!

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                  #20
                  Lots of adult Horned Larks but NO little ones.. Cold and snow must have driven the adults off their nests. As of this PM we are 10% done.Lots of fun going around wet spots.

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                    #21
                    Blindfold promotes imagination. Not sure what your talking about anyway, I must be tired. 13 percent done planting and tomorrow just scratching with cult, only a 1.3 man show around here this year so going to be long days after tonight. No one mention owls, is see plenty of them. The wife would think I am owly, I need to cheer up :-))

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                      #22
                      Saw three baby bunnies. Two of them ran sideways and immediately hid. The other ran ahead of the tractor for about 200 yards before it decided to run sideways and then a hawk got it.

                      When I told my wife she was sad for the bunny. I said "How come no one ever cheers for the hawk? They need to eat too!"

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                        #23
                        Twenty years ago when the first moose came to our uplands, people said they won't stay once the sloughs dry up. They are lily pad and willow eaters. Yeah right!, it now takes ten minutes to find one, or you are not trying, and we have a hunting season.

                        Ten years ago the mule deer and elk first appeared. Now there are permanent herds. Elk, also, have a hunting season for our zone.

                        Five years ago the first sightings and tracks of a predator (and not the grassy weed one) are now common.

                        This year, it's black bears in the countryside. The neighbour says, you watch, soon there will be timber wolves.

                        I believe I'll keep my eyes open on my walking field trips. I'll leave the blindfold for the adventurous ones that like to reach out with their imaginative touch.

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