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#166 |
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Random Account
Aug 2009
32·7·31 Posts |
I was curious and wanted to see where it was. Homer is the "garden spot" of Alaska, sitting on the south end of the state on the coast. Lots of Pacific Ocean to bee seen. 60°F is typical in the summer months. It might not be a bad place to live.
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#167 | |
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Feb 2017
Nowhere
10010001000112 Posts |
Quote:
What actually does lie across Cook Inlet just west of the Kenai Peninsula is the Lake Clark Wilderness Area. I heard about this area because of a program I saw on PBS entitled Alone in the Wilderness. It was about a man named Richard Proenneke who in 1967 retired at age 50, built a cabin in that wilderness area on the shore of Twin Lakes, and lived there for the next thirty years. The film was made by a friend, Bob Swerer, and as far as I could tell, it was Bob Swerer's voice narrating, apparently reading from Richard Proenneke's diary. The Richard Proenneke Historic Site is shown on some maps. It is in the western part of the wilderness area. If you locate the city of Kenai on the west side of the Kenai Peninsula, the historic site is almost due west of there. |
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#168 | |
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Romulan Interpreter
Jun 2011
Thailand
7·1,373 Posts |
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No joke! ![]() Edit: and to be on topic. . Last fiddled with by LaurV on 2020-12-17 at 06:58 |
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#169 | |
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Feb 2017
Nowhere
4,643 Posts |
Turkey that had online fans but real-life haters is killed
Quote:
And turkeys are not alone in behaving this way. Other wild animals can also become aggressive if they learn to associate people with food. Aggressive human panhandlers are nothing compared to a wild animal that gets ornery because it isn't getting an expected handout. Or maybe if it doesn't come fast enough. I've heard of people who feed other wild animals because they "love" them. Like bears. Last fiddled with by Dr Sardonicus on 2020-12-18 at 01:51 Reason: fignix posty |
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#170 |
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Random Account
Aug 2009
32·7·31 Posts |
At Dale Hollow Lake. Birds of a feather...
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#171 |
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"Kieren"
Jul 2011
In My Own Galaxy!
2·3·1,693 Posts |
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#172 | |
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6809 > 6502
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Aug 2003
101×103 Posts
978510 Posts |
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#173 | |
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"Kieren"
Jul 2011
In My Own Galaxy!
1015810 Posts |
Quote:
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#174 | |
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Random Account
Aug 2009
32×7×31 Posts |
Quote:
Perhaps all this socializing around people in Alaska is a result life experiences. The eagles do not fear people because they have not had a reason to do so. A lot of the population there are Native Americans we simply refer to as Eskimo's. These people would never harm an eagle out of respect and reverence. Here, in the lower 48, they've been shot, poisoned, and handled by vets. This makes them afraid, so they stay as far from people as possible, and seldom congregate. |
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#175 |
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Feb 2017
Nowhere
4,643 Posts |
I saw a Pileated Woodpecker fly almost directly over me the other day at about treetop level. About all I got a really good look at was the underside of its wings, which were black around the edges surrounding a good-sized white area. I watched it land on the side of a tree. No mistaking that kind of landing. Woodpecker. Unfortunately, it was in shadow so it was just a silhouette, so I didn't get a good look at the shocking red crest. But I had two solid points of ID. Tracking its flight to its landing gave me its approximate height as it passed above me, hence a size estimate - about the size of a Crow. The Pileated is the only woodpecker that big. Besides, as it flew over me it was calling. That call reminds me of a Kookaburra. AFAIK the Pileated is the only Woodpecker that sounds like that.
Someone living nearby got some pics today of Woody Woodpecker hammering away at a rotting stump on their property. Then it visited one of their bird feeders, which is tube-shaped with perches, and is filled with Sunflower seeds. Woody obviously had already learned how to perch on that type of feeder. Last fiddled with by Dr Sardonicus on 2020-12-25 at 20:16 Reason: Fix punctuation |
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#176 |
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Random Account
Aug 2009
7A116 Posts |
Back in the '90's, this type of woodpecker killed two big water-maple trees in my dad's yard. I imagine the trees were in the process of dying. Once cut down, the woodpeckers chipped what was left nearly a foot into the ground. They never touched the Sugar-Maples.
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