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LMAO! Good one!
On Sun, 11 Sep 2005 01:19:18 -0700, John Sobieski ] wrote: Found this at http://tinyurl.com/7kgcf I thought it cute. I'll repeat it here. ____________________________________________ I guess by now everyone realizes I took the day off. (too many posts) I want to thank everone that responded to my earlier post of "A Sad Day For Me". It does my heart good to know that there are such caring people in this world. Thank uou all!!! My wife and I made it to the viewing today and I had the chance to say my last goodbyes to a dear friend. OK, true story. My hunting buddy and I took my old boat ( a lot smaller than my present boat ) to a lake in upstate New York. This was about 15 years ago, before I started my own company and could actually take a vacation. The lake was a well known passageway by canoe or when frozen over by foot or skates. We were looking for campsites along the lake that were used by Rogers Rangers of F&I War fame. They wore clothes with the buttons marked RR. We had hoped to find one of these rare buttons. We didn't, but not for lack of trying. We landed the boat in a secluded forested and rocky area of the lake. We agreed to fan out and hunt and meet back at the boat in an hour in the event either of us found the signs of a camp site. Being a long time hunter in the woods, I had come across copperheads before but the swinging of the detector loop in front of me sent them fleeing off. Since I was a boy scout, I was taught to never just step over a fallen tree, just in the event a snake was laying in the shade on the other side. No exception to the rule here either. Anyways, I was swinging the coil I noticed a movement right at the head of the coil. I froze and stared down. There was a rattlesnake about 3' in front of me coiled up, head raised a bit, and the tail began to buzz. Now here is where stupidity took over. Instead of quickly jumping backward, I took the shovel I had in my hand and swung it sideways and lopped off the snakes head. Then I cut it up with the edge of the shovel into a half dozen pieces. My heart was pounding, sweat was pouring, and I was just shaking all over. After I had regained some of my senses, I actually thought about taking the head back with me, boiling the tissue off, and keeping the skull as a souveneir. But I didn't have anything that I could put the head into without fear of accidentally getting punctured by a fang. So I left it. Back to the boat I went. When I got back to the boat, there was another boat that had pulled in alongside. The other boater greeted me with a "Hello, you aren't looking for snakes are you?" I said "No" and was just about to tell him of my experience when he said "Good". Then he went on to say he was a herpatologist studying rattlesnakes in the area. Uh oh I thought, time to play it cool. We exchanged some pleasantries and he told me that rattlesnakes were "protected" in the state. I asked him what the snake popultion was in that area and he told me about 10 per square mile. About then, my buddy came back to the boat. I told him to jump in because I knew of a better place to go. Started up the engine and wished the other boater "Good Luck". As soon as I could get away from shore enough, I hit the throttle wide open and zipped to another spot many miles away. When I returned to work after the vacation, I related the story to a fellow engineer. He had a bit of a stutter. He listened to the story and said "You shshould have tatold him there were only nnine". Regards, Relic Hunter ____________________________________________ Regards, SOB -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." |
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