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Naughty Squirrels! by FieroRumor
Started on: 05-22-2007 11:24 AM
Replies: 50
Last post by: Gokart Mozart on 06-20-2007 08:59 PM
FieroRumor
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Report this Post05-22-2007 11:24 AM Click Here to See the Profile for FieroRumorClick Here to visit FieroRumor's HomePageSend a Private Message to FieroRumorDirect Link to This Post
Oh
you little
Bastages!

Stop digging up my
flowers,
or
I will
chase you
around the lawn
with a pointed stick
and look
silly doing so
because you are faster then
I
am
and you have the ability to
climb trees
(a
skill
I seem to lack.)

You see,

there are no bulbs down there
nor crunchy nuts
or acorns

so why don't
you go
get a life?

Little Bastages!

P.S. - my neighbor wants you to stop ruining her tomato plants. You rip one off, taste it, realize you don't like it, then drop it and do it again and again and again...how about you figure out you DON'T LIKE TOMATOES ALREADY?!?!?!?

Naughty little things...!



Edit: THEY must be stopped!
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,208026,00.html

[This message has been edited by FieroRumor (edited 05-22-2007).]

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FieroRumor
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Report this Post05-22-2007 11:29 AM Click Here to See the Profile for FieroRumorClick Here to visit FieroRumor's HomePageSend a Private Message to FieroRumorDirect Link to This Post
1. Squirrels are the spawn of Satan.
They live mysterious lives in the forests plotting against the rest of the world.

2. Squirrels cause millions of dollars of damage to power transformers and lines every year.
They are one of the top causes of power outages and damage to very expensive equipment. They seem to be attracted to transformers and fly into them like Kamikaze pilots.

3. Squirrels have killed innocent citizens by causing car wrecks throughout the years.
How many times have innocent automobile drivers barely avoided running off the road trying to miss (or to hit) a squirrel taunting them in the middle of the road? Some are not so lucky and wreck due to these furry little beasts.

4. Squirrels do millions of dollars worth of home damage.
They are masters of break-ins destroying siding, vents, wires, etc. in the process.

5. Squirrels have no respect for privacy or property rights.
They move into attics and will not leave. They are not invited. An attic is not an oak tree, and they know this. They are too lazy to build their own homes so they try to take over someone else's. They move around in the attic at night scaring young kids and women.

6. Squirrels are notorious thieves, stealing food and property from other animals and people.
They are the most skilled thieves on the planet. They are despised by birds lovers They steal nuts from bird feeders and fruits from trees. When measures are taken to prevent them from getting the prize, they try that much harder.

7. Squirrels assault people's gardens all over the world causing millions of dollars in crop damage.
They get into people's gardens and destroy the vegetables, fruits, and flowers. They rarely even consume them, they just destroy them for the fun of it.

8. Squirrels caused the black death in Europe and currently carry numerous life threatening diseases including rabies and bubonic plague.
It is a historic fact that squirrels, as well as their brothers the rats, were one of the carriers of the black plague in the Middle Ages throughout Europe leading to the horrible death of millions.

9. Squirrels are the most reprehensible animals on the planet and will strike any other animal or human they come in contact with.
There are countless documented accounts of squirrel assaults. They antagonize people and are formidable foes. It is no accident that squirrels are portrayed in film as they are, insane little creatures that do not think anything of taking on people.

10. Squirrels hate Fieros
Naturalists have discovered an alarming behavior among certain squirrels. A squirrel will purposefully mess with the wiring so that a Fiero will catch on fire. Truely shocking behavior!
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NEPTUNE
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Report this Post05-22-2007 12:02 PM Click Here to See the Profile for NEPTUNESend a Private Message to NEPTUNEDirect Link to This Post
These guys make a pretty good living trapping and relocating the cute, furry little critters.
They're in Florida, South Carolina, and Tenessee.
Its about $200 for a weeks worth of trapping.
I'm sure there is somebody in your state that will help you.
www.wildlifesolutions.com
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Report this Post05-22-2007 12:04 PM Click Here to See the Profile for 84BillClick Here to visit 84Bill's HomePageSend a Private Message to 84BillDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by FieroRumor:

1. Squirrels are the spawn of Satan.
They live mysterious lives in the forests plotting against the rest of the world.

2. Squirrels cause millions of dollars of damage to power transformers and lines every year.
They are one of the top causes of power outages and damage to very expensive equipment. They seem to be attracted to transformers and fly into them like Kamikaze pilots.

3. Squirrels have killed innocent citizens by causing car wrecks throughout the years.
How many times have innocent automobile drivers barely avoided running off the road trying to miss (or to hit) a squirrel taunting them in the middle of the road? Some are not so lucky and wreck due to these furry little beasts.

4. Squirrels do millions of dollars worth of home damage.
They are masters of break-ins destroying siding, vents, wires, etc. in the process.

5. Squirrels have no respect for privacy or property rights.
They move into attics and will not leave. They are not invited. An attic is not an oak tree, and they know this. They are too lazy to build their own homes so they try to take over someone else's. They move around in the attic at night scaring young kids and women.

6. Squirrels are notorious thieves, stealing food and property from other animals and people.
They are the most skilled thieves on the planet. They are despised by birds lovers They steal nuts from bird feeders and fruits from trees. When measures are taken to prevent them from getting the prize, they try that much harder.

7. Squirrels assault people's gardens all over the world causing millions of dollars in crop damage.
They get into people's gardens and destroy the vegetables, fruits, and flowers. They rarely even consume them, they just destroy them for the fun of it.

8. Squirrels caused the black death in Europe and currently carry numerous life threatening diseases including rabies and bubonic plague.
It is a historic fact that squirrels, as well as their brothers the rats, were one of the carriers of the black plague in the Middle Ages throughout Europe leading to the horrible death of millions.

9. Squirrels are the most reprehensible animals on the planet and will strike any other animal or human they come in contact with.
There are countless documented accounts of squirrel assaults. They antagonize people and are formidable foes. It is no accident that squirrels are portrayed in film as they are, insane little creatures that do not think anything of taking on people.

10. Squirrels hate Fieros
Naturalists have discovered an alarming behavior among certain squirrels. A squirrel will purposefully mess with the wiring so that a Fiero will catch on fire. Truely shocking behavior!



Must be why god hates america.
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FieroRumor
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Report this Post05-22-2007 12:18 PM Click Here to See the Profile for FieroRumorClick Here to visit FieroRumor's HomePageSend a Private Message to FieroRumorDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by NEPTUNE:

These guys make a pretty good living trapping and relocating the cute, furry little critters.
They're in Florida, South Carolina, and Tenessee.
Its about $200 for a weeks worth of trapping.
I'm sure there is somebody in your state that will help you.
www.wildlifesolutions.com


Nah, I'll just catch 'em and turn them into jerky.

mmmmmmm good eatin!

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Report this Post05-22-2007 12:29 PM Click Here to See the Profile for NEPTUNESend a Private Message to NEPTUNEDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by FieroRumor:


Nah, I'll just catch 'em and turn them into jerky.

mmmmmmm good eatin!


Maybe you can use the fur to make nice warm G strings for some of those poor, outsourced Canadian Strippers.
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Report this Post05-22-2007 12:32 PM Click Here to See the Profile for 84BillClick Here to visit 84Bill's HomePageSend a Private Message to 84BillDirect Link to This Post
LOL
 
quote
Originally posted by NEPTUNE:
Maybe you can use the fur to make nice warm G strings for some of those poor, outsourced Canadian Strippers.


Little furry woodland creatures covering little furry woodland creatures?
Sounds almost like a win win..
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Report this Post05-22-2007 12:37 PM Click Here to See the Profile for TaijiguySend a Private Message to TaijiguyDirect Link to This Post
We have three feral cats that live in our garage and hunt around our property. I've never seen a single squirrel anywhere on our 6 acres. Don't know that a cat could actually take out a squirrel, but apparently squirrels avoid them....
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Report this Post05-22-2007 12:47 PM Click Here to See the Profile for FieroRumorClick Here to visit FieroRumor's HomePageSend a Private Message to FieroRumorDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by Taijiguy:

We have three feral cats that live in our garage and hunt around our property. I've never seen a single squirrel anywhere on our 6 acres. Don't know that a cat could actually take out a squirrel, but apparently squirrels avoid them....


The cats around here usually leave them alone, but there is one Tom that would attack 'em. Maybe if I give him some pounce treats, he'll take care of these little buggers...

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Report this Post05-22-2007 12:57 PM Click Here to See the Profile for loafer87gtSend a Private Message to loafer87gtDirect Link to This Post
You need this book. Got it for my dad a few years ago to help with with his ongoing war with the clever little rodents.

Outwitting Squirrels: 101 Cunning Stratagems to Reduce Dramatically the Egregious Misappropriation of Seed from Your Birdfeeder by Squirrels

[This message has been edited by loafer87gt (edited 05-22-2007).]

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Report this Post05-22-2007 01:14 PM Click Here to See the Profile for DeabionniSend a Private Message to DeabionniDirect Link to This Post
Awww, who wouldn't want some of these guys hanging around yer house.

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Report this Post05-22-2007 01:23 PM Click Here to See the Profile for RenegadeFiero86Send a Private Message to RenegadeFiero86Direct Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by FieroRumor:

1. Squirrels are the spawn of Satan.
They live mysterious lives in the forests plotting against the rest of the world.

2. Squirrels cause millions of dollars of damage to power transformers and lines every year.
They are one of the top causes of power outages and damage to very expensive equipment. They seem to be attracted to transformers and fly into them like Kamikaze pilots.

3. Squirrels have killed innocent citizens by causing car wrecks throughout the years.
How many times have innocent automobile drivers barely avoided running off the road trying to miss (or to hit) a squirrel taunting them in the middle of the road? Some are not so lucky and wreck due to these furry little beasts.

4. Squirrels do millions of dollars worth of home damage.
They are masters of break-ins destroying siding, vents, wires, etc. in the process.

5. Squirrels have no respect for privacy or property rights.
They move into attics and will not leave. They are not invited. An attic is not an oak tree, and they know this. They are too lazy to build their own homes so they try to take over someone else's. They move around in the attic at night scaring young kids and women.

6. Squirrels are notorious thieves, stealing food and property from other animals and people.
They are the most skilled thieves on the planet. They are despised by birds lovers They steal nuts from bird feeders and fruits from trees. When measures are taken to prevent them from getting the prize, they try that much harder.

7. Squirrels assault people's gardens all over the world causing millions of dollars in crop damage.
They get into people's gardens and destroy the vegetables, fruits, and flowers. They rarely even consume them, they just destroy them for the fun of it.

8. Squirrels caused the black death in Europe and currently carry numerous life threatening diseases including rabies and bubonic plague.
It is a historic fact that squirrels, as well as their brothers the rats, were one of the carriers of the black plague in the Middle Ages throughout Europe leading to the horrible death of millions.

9. Squirrels are the most reprehensible animals on the planet and will strike any other animal or human they come in contact with.
There are countless documented accounts of squirrel assaults. They antagonize people and are formidable foes. It is no accident that squirrels are portrayed in film as they are, insane little creatures that do not think anything of taking on people.

10. Squirrels hate Fieros
Naturalists have discovered an alarming behavior among certain squirrels. A squirrel will purposefully mess with the wiring so that a Fiero will catch on fire. Truely shocking behavior!


i almost died after i read this laughing and its soo true. up north at my buddies cabin we used to hunt those little bastards with our bb guns pump of coarse and even then the bb's would only bounce off the squire and not even enter the skin so we had to shoot them each like ten times. and that i guess would break enough of their insides that they just died. but they are little nasty ****ers. we were chasing one shooting it and it was above us in a tree and it jumped straight down to land on my face luckily i moved and it just hit the ground real hard like.
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Report this Post05-22-2007 01:50 PM Click Here to See the Profile for Cliff PennockClick Here to visit Cliff Pennock's HomePageSend a Private Message to Cliff PennockDirect Link to This Post
Don't let their size fool ya!

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Report this Post05-22-2007 02:02 PM Click Here to See the Profile for PyrthianSend a Private Message to PyrthianDirect Link to This Post
well, I have seen the rare sight of a squirrel falling out of a tree. hit the ground with a solid thud - and laid there for 2-3 mins - then got up & ran right back up....
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Report this Post05-22-2007 02:07 PM Click Here to See the Profile for FieroRumorClick Here to visit FieroRumor's HomePageSend a Private Message to FieroRumorDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by RenegadeFiero86:


i almost died after i read this laughing and its soo true. up north at my buddies cabin we used to hunt those little bastards with our bb guns pump of coarse and even then the bb's would only bounce off the squire and not even enter the skin so we had to shoot them each like ten times. and that i guess would break enough of their insides that they just died. but they are little nasty ****ers. we were chasing one shooting it and it was above us in a tree and it jumped straight down to land on my face luckily i moved and it just hit the ground real hard like.


When I was a kid, they used to rip open my roof and live (and die) in the crawlspace. Ugh, it was an ongoing battle. We had metal grating put in, and they ripped that off too. I plinked one with my BB rifle, and it didn't kill it. I finished him off with a stick,(ughhh) and it left me feeling REALLY awful. Last animal that I killed...

As for these critters,

I'm not gonna kill 'em, I'm just gonna shake my fist at 'em and make fun of their mommas. Maybe toss a few water balloons at 'em...
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Report this Post05-22-2007 02:11 PM Click Here to See the Profile for whadeduckSend a Private Message to whadeduckDirect Link to This Post
I got the squirrells out of my yard for a little while by hitting them with a super soaker full of ice-cold water. Didn't want to kill 'em. But they got out of the yard after a few shots of that water. I could hit 'em at 75ft with the super soaker I have.

------------------
Whade' "The Duck Formerly Known As Wade" Duck
'87 GT Auto
'88 Ferrario
'84 Indy

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Report this Post05-22-2007 02:43 PM Click Here to See the Profile for SLOWnSTEADYSend a Private Message to SLOWnSTEADYDirect Link to This Post
i love squirrels.
espescialy with hot sauce and soem potatoes and gravy!

But i really do like them too. Just cant decide if I like them enough to stop eating them...
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Report this Post05-22-2007 03:47 PM Click Here to See the Profile for FastkxSend a Private Message to FastkxDirect Link to This Post
i had some that used ot come and steal the bird food we put out on our deck, so I started shooting them with my bb gun out the back door and they have since stopped. But my dog will be ready if they come back she loves scaring the crap out of them and "treeing" them.
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Report this Post05-22-2007 04:37 PM Click Here to See the Profile for Cliff PennockClick Here to visit Cliff Pennock's HomePageSend a Private Message to Cliff PennockDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by Fastkx:

i had some that used ot come and steal the bird food we put out on our deck, so I started shooting them with my bb gun out the back door and they have since stopped. But my dog will be ready if they come back she loves scaring the crap out of them and "treeing" them.


Not to start anything, but why? It's a bit strange you would put food out there to help "wild" animals, then shoot them if they come and get it. I'm pretty sure the squirrels couldn't read your "no wings - no service" sign.
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Report this Post05-22-2007 05:06 PM Click Here to See the Profile for FieroRumorClick Here to visit FieroRumor's HomePageSend a Private Message to FieroRumorDirect Link to This Post
More fun to watch 'em slip slide off of THESE: ---> http://www.birdsforever.com/baffles.html
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Report this Post05-22-2007 05:17 PM Click Here to See the Profile for RenegadeFiero86Send a Private Message to RenegadeFiero86Direct Link to This Post
yea they could you didnt know squirels are masters of all languages and cultures which is why they are little perfect spies. they can survive in any weather and any country. and they will always steal your stuff. but when we used to shoot em they would fall outa tree's 50' tall and hit the ground and keep running. those little buggers are crazy. and i know that my german shepard husky would love chasing them around and eaten them if she could catch one. i mean they are cool lookin but they are fun to hunt. smart fast and cunning.


and eating them .... well thats one step too far haha. i couldnt eat a little rodent. and whats the big deal with killin them? they are rodents and have babies all year round which is why its legal to hunt them all year long, along with rabbits and other small furry creatures.
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Report this Post05-22-2007 06:03 PM Click Here to See the Profile for Gokart MozartClick Here to visit Gokart Mozart's HomePageSend a Private Message to Gokart MozartDirect Link to This Post
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DoLvM2hh13Q

Welcome To Our Squirrel Recipe Home Page.

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Report this Post05-22-2007 06:37 PM Click Here to See the Profile for 84BillClick Here to visit 84Bill's HomePageSend a Private Message to 84BillDirect Link to This Post
http://www.fileden.com/file...04/SmallSquirrel.wmv

http://tinyurl.com/5tbq4

[This message has been edited by 84Bill (edited 05-22-2007).]

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Report this Post05-22-2007 08:00 PM Click Here to See the Profile for RaydarSend a Private Message to RaydarDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by FieroRumor:
...Squirrels cause millions of dollars of damage to power transformers and lines every year.
They are one of the top causes of power outages and damage to very expensive equipment. They seem to be attracted to transformers and fly into them like Kamikaze pilots...


People at the power company call them 'pole rats'.
They'll run along the energized power lines, then step on to the grounded case of the transformer, which blows the fuse that feeds the transformer (sounds like a cannon shot.) It also blows the squirrel into the middle of next week.

 
quote
Originally posted by Fastkx:
...But my dog will be ready if they come back she loves scaring the crap out of them and "treeing" them.


They run along the top of our fence and taunt the dog.
She finally caught one of the little bastages. Played with it until it didn't move any more.

Go ahead. Make my day...

[This message has been edited by Raydar (edited 05-22-2007).]

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Report this Post05-22-2007 08:16 PM Click Here to See the Profile for lurkerSend a Private Message to lurkerDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by FieroRumor:
Nah, I'll just catch 'em and turn them into jerky.

dont eat the brains, they can give you mad squirrel disease.

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Report this Post05-22-2007 10:27 PM Click Here to See the Profile for Scott-WaClick Here to visit Scott-Wa's HomePageSend a Private Message to Scott-WaDirect Link to This Post
One day about two years ago... my dog was laying out in the sun sleeping and one of the squirrels that she'd usually be chasing to no effect runs across the yard, pounced on her and took back off up a tree. One of those... "Damn, did you see THAT!" things.
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Report this Post05-23-2007 12:15 AM Click Here to See the Profile for Marvin McInnisClick Here to visit Marvin McInnis's HomePageSend a Private Message to Marvin McInnisDirect Link to This Post
Squirrel == Tree Rat

Interesting trivia: If you "trap and release" squirrels, do you realize that it has been documented that they will return up to 10 miles (16 km)? I always like to release them in a big field more than 10 miles from home, preferably within sight of a Red-Tailed Hawk.
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Report this Post05-23-2007 01:18 AM Click Here to See the Profile for FieroRumorClick Here to visit FieroRumor's HomePageSend a Private Message to FieroRumorDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by Marvin McInnis:

Squirrel == Tree Rat

Interesting trivia: If you "trap and release" squirrels, do you realize that it has been documented that they will return up to 10 miles (16 km)? I always like to release them in a big field more than 10 miles from home, preferably within sight of a Red-Tailed Hawk.


I used that "safe" trap once. Caught the bugger , and put him in my trunk, drove to the local lake, and opened it up, and it had escaped, and flew out like a rocket!

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Report this Post05-23-2007 09:12 AM Click Here to See the Profile for SynthesisSend a Private Message to SynthesisDirect Link to This Post
One of the little bastards made a kamikaze run this morning across the road. I think he knew I just invested money into my car, and was trying to take me out.

He ran under the car, I heard a thunk noise, and when I looked into the rearview, he was running off the side he came on.

I dunno if I killed him. Feel kinda bad if I did, but he deserved it.
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Report this Post05-23-2007 11:19 AM Click Here to See the Profile for connecticutFIEROSend a Private Message to connecticutFIERODirect Link to This Post
I hate squirrels. They destroy my garden every single year. It starts by digging holes in the soil all over my planters. Then they start digging the plants and trying to eat the roots. Later in the season they start taking bites out of whatever I grow, and NOT finishing it. Occasionaly they knock over my pots and they break on the patio. Grrrr!!!

If I had a house instead of a rental, I would sit out there every morning and pop the little bastages with my cheapo walmart BB gun.

[This message has been edited by connecticutFIERO (edited 05-23-2007).]

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Vonov
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Report this Post05-23-2007 12:24 PM Click Here to See the Profile for VonovSend a Private Message to VonovDirect Link to This Post
Get a Crosman G1 Xtreme.177 cal pellet gun; 1000fps muzzle velocity. Accurate, and puts 'em down.
Hmmmmmmmmmmm...
Can squirrels be turned into BACON??
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Jermz238
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Report this Post05-23-2007 02:59 PM Click Here to See the Profile for Jermz238Send a Private Message to Jermz238Direct Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by FieroRumor:

More fun to watch 'em slip slide off of THESE: ---> http://www.birdsforever.com/baffles.html


unbreakable? hmm... I shall build everything out of that material, then i can take over the world!
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jaskispyder
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Report this Post05-23-2007 03:23 PM Click Here to See the Profile for jaskispyderSend a Private Message to jaskispyderDirect Link to This Post
"The Twirl-a-Squirrel is a revolutionary electronic bird feeder baffle! A squirrel's weight on your feeder will activate the battery operated motor which gently twirls him off!! This great baffle can be used with all hanging feeders up to 10 pounds. Perfect when used with tubular bird feeders! This patented item is safe, will not harm birds or squirrels, is easy to use, durable and weather resistant. No assembly required, just hang this baffle between your feeder and hook. Operates on three standard "D" size batteries. The Twirl-a-Squirrel is made of durable PVC and is 6" in diameter by 5" tall."

What about the emotional harm done to the squirrels? I smell a lawsuit coming up!
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Marvin McInnis
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Report this Post05-24-2007 10:36 AM Click Here to See the Profile for Marvin McInnisClick Here to visit Marvin McInnis's HomePageSend a Private Message to Marvin McInnisDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by Vonov:

Get a Crosman G1 Xtreme.177 cal pellet gun; 1000fps muzzle velocity. Accurate, and puts 'em down.



I prefer a .22 rifle firing CB longs, with a low-power scope sighted in at about 75 feet. The CBs are subsonic, so it doesn't disturb the neighbors (who approve anyway). One shot, one kill.
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IEatRice
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Report this Post05-24-2007 11:23 AM Click Here to See the Profile for IEatRiceSend a Private Message to IEatRiceDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by Marvin McInnis:
I prefer a .22 rifle firing CB longs, with a low-power scope sighted in at about 75 feet. The CBs are subsonic, so it doesn't disturb the neighbors (who approve anyway). One shot, one kill.


And you can get it at Walmart for less then $100
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Synthesis
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Report this Post05-24-2007 11:37 AM Click Here to See the Profile for SynthesisSend a Private Message to SynthesisDirect Link to This Post
An old story I posted on here... The Battle of the Century

It has come down to this. I'm currently the high bidder on eBay, for coyote urine.

Someone in Kansas outbid me on the red fox whiz.

Bobcat tinkle has no bids. I've got it bookmarked.

I've never seen a coyote in my life, but suddenly I'm desperately bidding $20.50 for 16 ounces of his No. 1. And it's even in "a convenient spray bottle."

Blame my wife, and Father's Day. Maybe Home Depot too, but I'm afraid that someday I might need an orange extension cord, so I'm leaving them out of this.

For Father's Day, my wife bought me a "Squirrel Proof" bird feeder and 25 pounds of something called "oiled sunflower seeds." It had a cardinal -- feathered, not St. Louis -- on the bag.

The squirrels have been having a free banquet in my backyard ever since.

It only took me two 25-pound bags of Home Depot bird seed to figure this out. How in the world were six-ounce birds eating three pounds of seed a day? And still flying?

Then I saw it. Perched on my state-of-the-art, just-for-birds feeder, a squirrel, casually eating away, knocking down some of the $10.99 seed to a couple of his friends on the ground.

Not being an "Animal Planet" kind of guy, I had no idea squirrels ate bird seed. I figured, if anything, they ate squirrel seeds. And some nuts.

Of course, I remember the nursery tales of squirrels storing nuts and seeds for winter -- I just had no idea they got their food from squirrel-proof bird feeders. Mother Goose left that part out.



So the battle began. Me against the squirrels. And like any guy on a me-vs.-them mission, I started out full-bore, giving it everything I had.

I dialed up Google.

Rodents got no chance when you have broadband.

Type in squirrels ... bird feeder .. problems ... wait .003 seconds. Up comes my answer, with 307,812 hits.

Squirrels it seems, don't need broadband.

SQUIRREL DEFENSE FUND: $21.98 (50 pounds of seed, gone)
Two hours later, and a few more pounds of seed lost to the squirrels in the backyard, I find that of the 307,812 pieces of insightful Gooooooooogle advice boils down to this:

"Shoot them."

The squirrels, not Google.

I sense PETA problems.

While searching eBay for "NWT Squirrel Gun," I'm thinking two things: I don't actually want to harm the squirrels, I just want them to go eat in my neighbor's garden; and my wife will never let me buy this "Buy-It-Now New in Box Spring Loaded BB."

Back to Google, with no need yet for PETA to picket my backyard -- although the crowds might help keep the squirrels away.

Click on ADVANCED SEARCH, type in: squirrels, problems, bird feeder, minus gun, bullets, kill, animal rights.

Up pops ... pepper.

Google is now telling me I can get rid of the squirrels with a condiment.

All I've got to do is to get the squirrels to sneeze, and they'll leave. I can do that.

But it has to be cayenne pepper. Squirrels know pepper? Down the stairs, spin the Lazy Susan, stop at this bottle of pepper that's red. Off with the top, I look in, and being a guy, I sniff.

This is bad. It's not about squirrels sneezing, it's about lighting them up. Since my wife has never actually heard me spin the Susan before, she's now in the kitchen, and through my watering eyes and running nose, I put the now empty bottle of fire-pepper down and say to her, "I need your Stop & Shop card."

Experience tells her that this is not going to be good.

In the spice section, wife waiting in the minivan, I'm doing food-aisle math. I've got 25 pounds of premium seed, and cayenne comes in tiny little cans.

I buy 12.

In the backyard, my wife Barb hands me a white plastic Home Depot bucket and then, inexplicably, hurries inside.

In goes the seed, in comes the cayenne. Since the cans are small, and I have two hands, I do four cans at a time.

Unlike my kitchen, my deck has a breeze. Barb, I guess, sensed this.

I'm in a cloud of cayenne ... the sunflower seeds are still mostly black. I need walls, but Barb has already locked the door.

In the garage, sneezing, I mix in seven cans, holding one out for an emergency. Seeds and hands are now turning red. Mix, sneeze, mix, sneeze, back out to the feeder.

The sunflower seeds are now the same color as the Cardinal on the bag. Google and chat rooms have told me birds can neither smell nor taste this stuff. Sounds right to me -- on a diet of worms, I'm not sure I would want those senses to be highly evolved either.

Up goes the bird feeder with red seed. For good measure, I sprinkle the entire branch leading to the tree with the one leftover emergency can.

Birch trees look good in red.

Back on the deck, crouched behind the Char-Broil grill, I wait. Let the sneezing begin.

A tap on the window. My wife is pointing toward the white and red birch. Peering around the propane tank, I watch three bounding squirrels approach.

Knowing I've beaten the rodents with the business part of a burrito, I look back at my wife, proud hunter I am. She's laughing.

Not good.

One squirrel is on the branch, two are hanging from the feeder. Not a sneeze to be heard.

To my horror, squirrels like it hot.

SQUIRREL DEFENSE FUND: $45.98 (add 12 cans of pepper)
ADVANCED SEARCH 2: Same as before minus pepper, spicy, burn, sneeze.

Up comes ... soap.

I'm thinking, great, now I've got to wash them. I read on.

People, who actually use the word varmint in a sentence, say soap works. Slivers of it.

From what I'm reading, squirrels think we stink. Especially so when we put on the soap that's supposed to make us NOT stink. Dial will do it for my squirrel problem.

The family is asleep. I make bathroom raids.



Unfortunately, we must not stink too much. Every bar of soap is brand new. Not a sliver in sight. Sneaking back into my wife's bathroom, I see, in all its pink glory, a half-filled bottle of Estee Lauder BEAUTIFUL bath lotion.

Lotion ... soap ... same thing. And it has an easy pour spout.

Down the stairs, out the door, to the bird feeder. At dawn, I walk around the tree, using the easy pour spout to make a big, smelly circle of BEAUTIFUL. I rub some on the branch; the cayenne pepper helps it stick.

Back on the deck, I wait. In time, bearing coffee and the morning paper, my wife joins me. Leaving out some of the key details, I tell her that the squirrels are mine.

And here they come. Four today. Bounding toward what must be a circle of stink to them.

And right through it. Two up the tree, two running around on the ground. Four very sexy-sexy smelling Estee Lauder squirrels eating my bird seed.

SQUIRREL DEFENSE FUND: $90.98 (add in $45 replacement bottle of wife's favorite shower lotion)
ADVANCED SEARCH: Same as above minus Eau de, perfume, Macy's.

Duh ... put something between them, the tree, and the food. Block the squirrel-through lane.

This I get. "Barb, I need your Home Depot card."

An hour later, I'm back with a huge, gray, plastic dome-like thing that conveniently fits between the squirrels and their dinner. And it's guaranteed to keep them hungry.

Since this is serious, I skim the directions. This goes here, that goes there, and the squirrels go flying off. Breaking only one key plastic part, I mount it above the bird feeder. I'm so sure it'll work, I even add a little seed. Come and get it, squirrel boys.

Back on the deck, smelling of peppery perfume, I wait.

And for not long.

Two squirrels up, one squirrel down. I get the sinking feeling they've seen this before. The squirrels are now triple-teaming me.

Suddenly, the dome tips, left, right, big dip, and then, sliding down the squirrel-proof dome, comes a squirrel.

One paw grabs the squirrel-proof feeder cage, swings around, and the squirrel clamps on with all four legs. Hanging upside down, he starts dishing out the seed.

I need a bigger baffle.

And it's sitting on my neighbor's front yard -- a big, plastic, replacement-window home remodeling sign. Hey the windows are in, they don't need the sign.

And even better, they're at the Cape.

So in my best, neighborly head-down-scanning-the-lawn-for-dog-poop walk, I walk over, lean on the sign, look, rest, and then calmly walk away with the home improvement sign in my hand. Slick.

In my backyard, I stick a screwdriver through it, and then hang it over the squirrel-proof dome, which hangs over the squirrel-proof bird feeder.


But it only covers one side. Back out front, I scan the street for more baffles. Nothing. All the other neighbors must have good windows.

Inside, looking up replacement windows in the yellow pages, I spot another baffle. It's in the sink.

A pizza pan. And the sauce will make it slippery. I bang the screwdriver through it, up it goes. Rube Goldberg vs. the squirrels.

This has to work. Between the rodents and the seed: a squirrel-proof bird feeder, a squirrel-proof dome, a borrowed home improvement sign, and a pizza pan with sauce and burnt pepperoni.

And it did. Twice. One slips down the replacement-window baffle, one down the cheese-and-pepperoni slide.

A squirrel heads back up the trunk, out the limb, paw out -- catching the squirrel-proof bird feeder in one paw, the other foot on the squirrel-proof dome, steady, eat.

Four pounds of junk in the tree only to discover I have the Wallendas of squirrels in my backyard.

SQUIRREL DEFENSE FUND: $130.97 (add $30 for squirrel-proof dome/feeder slide, $9.99 new pizza pan)
Paradise by the Google light, I hit delete, and go to bed. I dream of squirrels. Sunday morning, I sneak downstairs to make coffee and amends for the cayenne pepper/Estee Lauder experiment.

Almost to the coffee pot, one quick glance out the kitchen window. At exactly the same time, two squirrels on the squirrel proof feeder, look up together, and look right at me.

Please, not before the coffee and the sip of coke to wash down the vitamin. What little control I have hasn't perked yet.

So I'm out the back door in a 53-year-old shot. In one coordinated reach I grab the "Barb, come on, it's just 15 rocks" pile that I happened to leave on the patio table and hurl it at the bird feeder.

Having not thrown a fastball since the Carter administration, the mechanics were not quite right. The pile of rocks whistled 8 feet above the squirrels, rocketed straight through the red/white birch tree and crashed, loudly, into my neighbor Pete's garage. Loud enough, in fact, that the squirrels stopped eating for a minute, and turned in the direction of the echoing semi-attached garage.

I have gone out my kitchen door thousands of times, and other than squirrels, there's never been a living creature around. Never.

Until, this morning. Today, of all days, is the day my neighbor's youngest daughter, Sarah, goes off to college. Early morning send-off. Just 11 feet away is the whole family, wishing Sarah well. Maybe a dozen or so people, relatives from afar, mom, dad, grandmas.



Smiling at the soon-to-be college student, I look down to remember that I've come to say goodbye dressed only in blue boxer shorts. And white ankle socks.

Period.

From the crowd's point of view, they can't see the squirrels, or the squirrel-proof bird feeder. All they saw was a half-naked middle-aged white guy bolt out of his house and attack Pete's garage.

Sarah, if you are now in counseling at Marist, I'm truly sorry.

But there were squirrels there.

Walking back up the stairs to hide, I hear only stunned silence next door. Midway up, my son Jimmy shouts, "Dad ... the squirrels are back."

SQUIRREL DEFENSE FUND: $164.31 (add one-dish flower garden $25.00, six-pack of Corona $7.99, one lime 35¢, for Sarah's parents)
ADVANCED SEARCH: Everything above minus rocks, pitching control, garage vinyl siding, therapy.

And there it is again, SHOOT THEM.

Closing the window to block out the noise of the sign, pizza pan and squirrel proof dome slamming into the squirrel-proof bird feeder as the squirrels climb on board, I click the "shoot them" link.

Fat squirrels and hungry birds made me do it.

I close the door -- just me, Dell and semi-automatics. Typing as quiet as I can, I dial up eBay, and type in GUN.

I'm in luck -- only 107,343 hits come up. I lock the door.

Type in BBs and "Don't actually want to kill the damn thing," and now only 36,011 hits. Next, I type in SQUIRREL. And there before me, 371 hits.

Someone beat me to this.

Dozens and dozens of guns that don't hurt. All of which say, "Don't use this to shoot squirrels." Perfect.

I bid. Next day at 2 a.m, I win, outbidding a guy in Ohio for some sort of spring-loaded, 10-shot, P-338 thing that "looks like the real thing."

I won it for 99¢, with only $10.00 shipping and 3-5 days of waiting.

My weapon comes USPS, in a padded envelope. It's plastic. It shoots plastic BBs. My bullets are orange.

I leave positive feedback anyway.

My wife does not.

She's not happy I've got a gun in the house. Plastic or not, orange BBs or not. "You better not be thinking of shooting those squirrels," she says. My son is on the couch, laughing.

In the weeks of my backyard battle, an unforeseen event happened. My family named the invaders. The squirrels have names.

No longer rodents, they are now Curly, Larry, and Thurman Thomas (my son, a Bills fan, picked that one).

Suddenly, they're family. And I'm about to put them in my plastic sights.

Walking up the stairs, I hear my son ask, "Was dad a geek in high school?"

The answer favored Curly, Larry and Thurman Thomas.

Late that night, I load my plastic BBs into my plastic pistol, yank on the button a few times, pick the 10-BB clip off the floor, and leave it locked and loaded, next to the Krispy Kremes.

Breakfast bullets.

Next morning, completely dressed, making coffee, I watch as Curly, Larry and Thurman Thomas bound toward the tree.

I pick up my gun, wipe off the donut glaze, and begin the hunt, after finding my slippers and reading glasses.

Out the front door -- Curly is wise now to the creak of the back door. Slowly I creep around the front of my house, a John Wayne song about the green berets is playing in my head.

Yeah, it's early morning, I'm sneaking around the side of my house with a gun in my hand. Chances are, the neighbors don't know it's a 99¢ plus $10.00 shipping, plastic with plastic orange BBs pistol. If they see me, they will only know it "looks like the real thing."

I've got to do this before my quintessential New England small-town volunteer SWAT team gets here.

From behind the purple morning glories, I pounce. Curly, on the squirrel-proof bird feeder, looks up, seeds in mouth. Larry, the chubby one on the ground with seeds in both paws, sits up. Thurman Thomas is doing the 40 to a nearby tree.

With reading glasses in the mums, I see Larry perfectly. I aim the black fuzzy thing in my hand in his direction.

I fire.

Plastic click. In a blaze of orange, the plastic BB soars out of the plastic barrel. Larry has stopped chewing.

John Wayne stops singing, and is replaced by my mother's voice screaming in my head, "You GEEK, you just shot LARRY."

And then, after 10 feet of light speed, the orange plastic BB falls straight to the ground. Larry, 15 feet from the dangerous projectile, drops his seed.

On all fours, Larry, now joined by Curly, bounds up to my bullet, and sniffs it. Thurman Thomas leaves the tree.

Somehow, instead of them running from me, they now think I'm feeding them. To squirrels, orange plastic BBs are seeds.

SQUIRREL DEFENSE FUND: $175.30 ($10 for postage, 99¢ for plastic gun now being throwing at squirrels)
ADVANCE SEARCH: Everything above plus nothing is working.

And, I'm told, I need to buy pee.

Urine.

No. 1.

It's descended to this. Scrolling down, I see that even if I could whiz in a cup and get it past my family and outside, it's not the right kind of pee.

Somehow I need to get a coyote, red fox or bobcat to pee right where I need them to -- on a tree limb and under the feeder.

Coyote, fox, bobcat ... and I'm allergic to dogs and cats. Can these wild animals pee on command? I can't.

Billy in 'Bama saves me. On a critter-ridder site, he says you can actually buy pee ... in my local Ag store. Billy's never been to Connecticut.

A few towns over though, we do have a Weed & Feed/Ice Cream Parlor Store. It's built to look like a barn, As CT-style. Load up the minivan, Barb and we're off to buy coyote urine.

And maybe some ice cream.

Hay bales in the parking lot, plastic flowers in plastic pots, wood floors, a painting of a horse ... we're in the country and we hear Musak.

It also smells like dog food, cat food, horse stuff, and Double Chocolate Peppermint Rocky Dough Swirl. And the store is filled with big guys, with big belt buckles. And John Deere hats.

Standing there in Comfort Waist for donut eater cargo shorts, and a fake Hawaiian shirt with colorful flowers, I don't feel so good. I pass on the taste of Triple Berry Latte Chunk Freeze sample offered from Sam. I need boots in this store.

Walking with my wife on our eighth circuit of the store, I'm praying, "Please let me find the urine aisle by myself ... don't make me ask." Aisle P only has pet food.

I need to ask. "Ah, sir," I say, to a guy with a Deere hat and Craftsman buckle, "Do you sell coyote urine?" Please dear Lord, let it be right behind this guy.

It's not. Pulling on his Agway Feed T-shirt, he bellows across the store, "HEY, BOSS, DO WE SELL COYOTE PISS? THIS GUY HERE NEEDS SOME."

Barb, jumping in to save me, says, "We have a squirrel problem, we just need to buy some pee."

"BOSS, THEY HAVE A SQUIRREL PROBLEM. THEY NEED PISS FOR THE SQUIRRELS."

Over at the Ice Cream Parlor, Sam has stopped serving. Looking right at me, I know she's thinking that the guy in the Gap Hawaiian shirt needs to buy pee!

From the horse-feed section, the boss finally answers, "WE DON'T SELL PISS. JUST TELL HIM TO SHOOT THEM."

Holding open the door for Barb as she walks quickly through the trucks to the minivan, the feed sales associate leans over to me as I'm trying to leave, and in a whisper says to me:

"Use a 22."

Leaving the parking lot, I hear, "Don't even think of it." Barb wasn't talking about ice cream.

On Froogle, you can buy pee. Froogle gods prefer to call it "urine." "Whiz" just pulled up cheese spread. "Piss" got a report sent to Microsoft.

Coyote, red fox, bobcats, and something that makes deer horny. Having enough animal issues, I went with coyote pee. In a box.

On eBay, you can bid on coyote pee in a bottle, $11 plus shipping. Since I know the mailman, I went the urine-in-a-box route. With small-town mail, better the box than the bottle.

Three-to-five days insured. Coyote urine in the mailbox. Into the kitchen, on the island, open the envelope, take out the box, rip open the top, and ... OH MY GOD ...

To Barb's horror, I've just brought the Bronx Zoo into her kitchen, and it's on her new countertop.

We are downwind of the backside of the world. Coyote smelly. It's the gym lost-and-found room in August, it's a pack of wet dogs, it's getting skunked. I've opened up a box of the powdered smell of the Middle Ages.

Even a teenage boy, a species known to create and relish smells, has left the room.

This is Hall-of-Fame stink.

And the directions say I need to squeeze the packets to release the "bouquet."

My eyes are watering, my nose is running, and the STUFF ISN'T EVEN TURNED ON.

I'm beginning to hate birds.

Outside, my son's batting glove on the one hand I can afford to lose, I squeeze. And the smell gets worse.

I've now set the pee alive. It's the fish-market dumpster, the child-care poopy pail, the monkey house with the windows closed.

And I need to tie it to the tree branch.

With a twist tie. I have the smell of hell, in a baggy.

Curly, Larry and Thurman Thomas, your sinuses are about to be cleaned.

Coyotes are a squirrel's worst nightmare, second only to all-weather tires. One sniff of coyote pee, and they will be off my tree. That's what the package says.

And it worked. For 48 hours, no squirrels, or neighbors for that matter. Just birds -- a woodpecker, doves, and finally, a cardinal, just like on the bag.

I order a book on birds of Connecticut, and one for birds of Massachusetts, in case they get lost. I buy binoculars, and to see them even better, a gazebo. Screened.

I am a birdwatcher. Happy Father's Day, three months late.

"Dad, they're back." My gut tells me, it's not the neighbors.

In my 12-months-interest-free gazebo, binoculars on high, I see Larry, sitting on the coyote pee pouch, eating seed. Curly and Thurman Thomas are on the ground, hoarding seed.

They've figured out coyotes don't live in trees.

SQUIRREL DEFENSE FUND: $5,337.29 (two bird books $12, binoculars $24.95, Gazebo, screened, $5,125.00)
ADVANCED SEARCH: All of the above plus Motion Detection Ultrasonic Directional Squirrel Sound Blaster, Desert Storm gas fired semiautomatic laser sighted BB pistol and they win.

Don Barone is a feature producer for ESPN. Squirrel or human, you can reach him at Don.Barone@espn.com.
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Synthesis
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Report this Post05-24-2007 11:39 AM Click Here to See the Profile for SynthesisSend a Private Message to SynthesisDirect Link to This Post

Synthesis

12207 posts
Member since Feb 2002
Avengador1 was kind enough to post this in this thread...
I never dreamed slowly cruising on my motorcycle through a residential
neighborhood could be so incredibly dangerous! Little did I suspect...
I was on Brice Street - a very nice neighborhood with perfect lawns and slow traffic.

As I passed an oncoming car, a brown furry missile shot out from under it
and tumbled to a stop immediately in front of me. It was a squirrel, and must
have been trying to run across the road when it encountered the car.

I really was not going very fast, but there was no time to brake or avoid it - it was
that close. I hate to run over animals, and I really hate it on a motorcycle, but a squirrel should
pose no danger to me. I barely had time to brace for the impact. Animal lovers, never fear.

Squirrels, I discovered, can take care of themselves! Inches before impact, the squirrel
flipped to his feet. He was standing on his hind legs and facing my oncoming Valkyrie
with steadfast resolve in his little beady eyes. His mouth opened, and at the last possible
second, he screamed and leapt!

I am pretty sure the scream was squirrel for, "Bonzai!" or maybe, "Die you gravy-sucking,
heathen scum!" The leap was nothing short of spectacular ... as he shot straight up,
flew over my windshield, and impacted me squarely in the chest. Instantly, he set upon
me. If I did not know better, I would have sworn he brought 20 of his little buddies along for
the attack. Snarling, hissing, and tearing at my clothes, he was a frenzy of activity.
As I was dressed only in a light t-shirt, summer riding gloves, and jeans this was a bit of
a cause for concern.

This furry little tornado was doing some damage! Picture a large man on a huge black
and chrome cruiser, dressed in jeans, a t-shirt, and leather gloves, puttering at maybe 25 mph
down a quiet residential street, and in the fight of his life with a squirrel. And losing...
I grabbed for him with my left hand. After a few misses, I finally managed to snag his tail.
With all my strength, I flung the evil rodent off to the left of the bike, almost running into the
right curb as I recoiled from the throw.

That should have done it. The matter should have ended right there. It really should have.
The squirrel could have sailed into one of the pristinely kept yards and gone on about his
business, and I could have headed home. No one would have been the wiser. But this was
no ordinary squirrel. This was not even an ordinary pissed-off squirrel. This was an EVIL
MUTANT ATTACK SQUIRREL OF DEATH! Somehow he caught my gloved finger with
one of his little hands and, with the force of the throw, swung around and with a resounding
thump and an amazing impact, he landed squarely on my back and resumed his rather
anti-social and extremely distracting activities. He also managed to take my left glove with him!

The situation was not improved. Not improved at all. His attacks were continuing, and now
I could not reach him. I was startled to say the least. The combination of the force of the
throw, only having one hand (the throttle hand) on the handlebars, and my jerking
back unfortunately put a healthy twist through my right hand and into the throttle.

A healthy twist on the throttle of a Valkyrie can only have one result.Torque.
This is what the Valkyrie is made for, and she is very, very good at it. The engine roared
and the front wheel left the pavement. The squirrel screamed in anger. The Valkyrie
screamed in ecstasy. I screamed in ... well ... I just plain screamed.

Now picture a large man on a huge black and chrome cruiser, dressed in jeans,
a slightly squirrel-torn-t-shirt, wearing only one leather glove, and roaring at maybe
50 mph and rapidly accelerating down a quiet residential street on one wheel and
with a demonic squirrel on his back. The man and the squirrel are both screaming
bloody murder. With the sudden acceleration I was forced to put my other hand back on
the handlebars and try to get control of the bike. This was leaving the mutant squirrel
to his own devices, but I really did not want to crash into somebody's tree, house, or
parked car.

Also, I had not yet figured out how to release the throttle .... my brain was just simply
overloaded. I did manage to mash the back brake, but it had little effect against the
massive power of the big cruiser. About this time the squirrel decided that I was not
paying sufficient attention to this very serious battle (maybe he is an evil mutant NAZI
attack squirrel of death), and he came around my neck and got INSIDE my full-face
helmet with me. As the faceplate closed partway, he began hissing in my face.
I am quite sure my screaming changed intensity. It had little effect on the squirrel, however.

The RPMs on The Dragon maxed out (since I was not bothering with shifting at the
moment) so her front end started to drop.

Now picture a large man on a huge black and chrome cruiser, dressed in jeans, a
very raggedly-torn t-shirt, wearing only one leather glove, roaring at probably 80 mph,
still on one wheel, with a large puffy squirrel's tail sticking out of the mostly closed full-face
helmet. By now the screams are probably getting a little hoarse. Finally I got the upper
hand ... I managed to grab his tail again, pulled him out of my helmet, and slung him to
the left as hard as I could. This time it worked ... sort-of. Spectacularly sort-of ... so to speak.

Picture a new scene. You are a cop. You and your partner have pulled off on a quiet
residential street and parked with your windows down to do some paperwork.

Suddenly a large man on a huge black and chrome cruiser, dressed in jeans, a torn
t-shirt flapping in the breeze, and wearing only one leather glove, moving at probably
80 mph on one wheel, and screaming bloody murder roars by and with all his strength
throws a live squirrel grenade directly into your police car.

I heard screams. They weren't mine... I managed to get the big motorcycle under control
and dropped the front wheel to the ground. I then used maximum braking and skidded to
a stop in a cloud of tire smoke at the stop sign of a busy cross street. I would have returned
to fess up (and to get my glove back). I really would have. Really.

Except for two things. First, the cops did not seem interested or the slightest bit concerned
about me at the moment. When I looked back, the doors on both sides of the patrol car were
flung wide open. The cop from the passenger side was on his back, doing a crab walk into
somebody's front yard, quickly moving away from the car. The cop who had been in the
driver's seat was standing in the street and was aiming a riot shotgun at his own police car.
So the cops were not interested in me. They often insist to "let the professionals handle it"
anyway. That was one thing.

The other? Well, I could clearly see shredded and flying pieces of foam and upholstery
from the back seat. But I could also swear I saw the squirrel in the back window, shaking
his little fist at me, shooting me the finger ... That is one dangerous squirrel. And now he
has a patrol car. A somewhat shredded patrol car ... but it was all his. I took a deep breath,
turned on my turn-signal, made a gentle right turn off of Brice Street, and sedately left the
neighborhood. I decided it was best to just buy myself a new pair of gloves. And some Band-Aids.

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Report this Post05-24-2007 11:48 AM Click Here to See the Profile for FastkxSend a Private Message to FastkxDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by Cliff Pennock:


Not to start anything, but why? It's a bit strange you would put food out there to help "wild" animals, then shoot them if they come and get it. I'm pretty sure the squirrels couldn't read your "no wings - no service" sign.


Well we put bird seed out for the birds. The squirrels have already chewed through two other bird feeders so we had to get some that have a metal grate on the outside. We put food out on the ground for the squirrels but they eat that all up then want more and try to get it out of the bird feeders. I have tried to put these disks on the posts of our deck so the squirrels couldn't get up there but that didn't work. My goal is not to kill the squirrels just shock them.

[This message has been edited by Fastkx (edited 05-24-2007).]

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