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Anyone "Northeast" still boating?
On Sat, 27 Dec 2003 02:08:37 -0600, Eric H wrote:
I'm guessing Lloyd is from Billy Clinton territory. We've spent a lot of time around Bull Shoals and Norfork. Nice country. We still own a place in Briarcliff; no house, just a piece of land full of trees, rocks, Copperheads, Tarantulas, scorpions, black bears, skunks, etc. Still, a nice place to live. Harrison Hot Springs + Fraser River = British Columbia |
Anyone "Northeast" still boating?
noah wrote:
On Fri, 26 Dec 2003 09:06:11 -0500, Harry Krause wrote: Capt Lou wrote: The duck hunters in jon boats woke me up this morning, shooting ducks off Boston harbor islands. Of course the commercial fishing guys and the lobstermen are out there year round too. Just this minute a nice gaggle of geese flew over the house and landed in our field. There's a sack'o'corn I tossed out this morning waiting for them. Edges of the fields around here are posted with variations of our infamous "NO Hunting. Period. This Means You." signs. We have several kinds of NO Hunting signs posted, as do our neighbors. Harry, you and I are not as far apart as you think. I hunt, you don't, but I have spent far more money on the preservation of wetlands and support of the migratory birds than I have on my hunting equipment. There are few things more beautiful than a flock of geese or ducks homing in for a landing, or rising up off the water in the early dim light. They are an essential part of the natural world, which is so often dismissed by those who have lost their connection with Mother Earth. Well intentioned people fed geese at the Ann Lee Pond here in Albany last year. Because of the food, the geese stayed well into the winter. At Christmas we had a nasty snowstorm, and many of the geese died, because they were 1,000 miles from habitat and climate that could support them. I don't feed them every day, Noah. We just put out some food in the late fall and winter while the huge flocks are heading south. We have some acreage, and so do some neighbors, and I do believe the geese see the land as a sort of refuge while they are heading to Boca Raton for the winter. Or wherever they are headed. At least they won't encounter any drooling hunters in our immediate area. From summer through fall, most of the wetland ducks and geese feed in the harvested fields in our area, or along the shoreline. Despite some growth, most of the county in which we live still is rural and wooded. We have deer with decent racks wandering across our yards. They're all named Bambi, of course, but they do have different last names. Hopefully, the area will keep its flavor. One of my favorite places to walk is along the base of Calvert Cliffs, which happen to be the largest fossil-bearing deposit of Miocene marine sediments exposed on the East Coast. If you're lucky, you can find the teeth of sharks and sometimes whalebones exposed or right on the beach. Me, I'm on the lookout for Moby Dick. -- Email sent to is never read. |
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