@Gimby Maybe the true apex predator move is to get another apex predator to take care of your every need and shower you with affection without having to do anything
They probably are ... I mean, if we ignore the rumours that large birds of prey can fly off with a house kitty or two.
Here is an interesting topic, I think - I like to chase after people to give talks at meetup that I have founded. I think this is when my hunter instinct kicks in. But my friend think it is more of a gatherer behaviour.
First you need to find your targets (knowledgeable people who likes to give public talks), then you strike.
yeah but I don't get it though. I go out into nature and I pick up a couple of sticks and hammer on them with a stone but no matter how hard I try, they don't turn into a structure.
It couldn't be - I mean if you sink your teeth into deer's flesh, it's meat ... if you manage to sink your teeth into the deer's flesh in the first place ...
But if you can not let your teeth to catch up with the deer, well. You know the whole time space complexity thing. :x
@TelKitty Does it count that I once saw a largish hawk come falling out of the sky not five meters from me to break the neck of a house cat? (But didn't fly off with it.) Never seen it before, or since, and there are lots of hawks circling overhead and lots of cats and kittens around. But this particular neighbor's farm cat had been doing poorly for a long time. Apparently the hawk knew something wasn't right with it and took care of what the owners shoul have had done.
@CindyMeister It's not surprising that the hawk has observed the cat for sometime time. Hawks are territorial, so adult hawks should know their territory and all its long term residents (except those that are very small in size).
@Magisch This cat (full-grown, so I find the term "kitty" not really fitting) was suffering. It was in so much pain it could hardly walk. The hawk did it a favor - quick and clean - the cat probably didn't even have time to realize what was happening. Trying to capture it to take it to a vet to be put down would have caused it much more pain and stress.
@TelKitty Of course, it's the small ones (mice) it would like to know better... :-) But the denizens the hawks around here have trouble with are the crows. Those can really make a hawk's life miserable!
Every other advert is 300px wide and fits nicely in the side bar, e.g.:
The image used in the Daimler advert is 728px wide:
This causes it to overflow out of the side bar, necessitating a horizontal scroll bar on my (1920px wide) monitor:
Is this expected?
This is on Firefox...
@NickA Watching them is wonderful, especially when there's a strong wind :-) There's enough natural habitat here, with enough prey, that we have a number of them in the area. Also owls and falcons. Considering the mouse population this summer, the more the merrier, I say! Foxes are also welcome <g>
@NickA No, I wouldn't want to touch one! Not only are foxes starting to invade our cities - also wild pigs! (More in Germany than in Switzerland, but I suspect it's only a matter of time...)
A colleague was telling me just this morning, that it's almost impossible to keep a vegetable garden in the German cities, anymore. The wild pigs, as a co-ordinated group, will push down any fence, whether electrified or very solidly built. Hunters aren't allowed to shoot them, because it could endanger people. And shooting at night using night-sight isn't allowed because only the military may use such devices. Talk about a Catch-22...
@CindyMeister No, they are the 'original' residents. We bought the farm recently. They can jump over or duck under the fence. Their ancestors probably lived there for hundreds if not thousands of years.
@TelKitty So, no farming, just electricity production? Yeah, I guess Australia has enough land and sunshine to make that feasible. In Switzerland I think you'd have to put them on the mountain sides... You'd sell the electricity to the cities, then?
@CindyMeister Locals use pallets to build 'fences' around small vegetation/young trees, you know, the cheap way. There are currently two water tanks + large water containers with water inside. Also collecting condensation from the roof. But if extra water is needed for farming, we would enlarge the collection area on the roof or build a small dam.
If the calculation is right, solar panels would generate 10%-15% return. Depreciation on the panels is 5%. So it's 5%-10% net gain on solar panel investment. Land in good area generally increase in value as time goes by. So positive cash flow + positive capital gain.
In the same vein (not intentional), keeping someone's blood pumping around their body when they're not breathing is an awful lot of work. But I'm sure if they survive, they'd argue it's worth it.
@TelKitty Hah! No, my knowledge of poultry is very limited. One summer during my ag years at the university I helped out at a small truck farm. One of my chores was taking care of the animals in the petting zoo. After the owner saw me literally fighting with the rooster the chicken coop was no longer on my "to-do" list :-)
Had to keep cleaning up the duck pen, though, which stank to high heaven. The pigs were much neater. The goats were a pain because they were always making holes to climb through, then needed to be rounded up. Ponies, calves, deer - all no problem.
@Magisch Like the cats here, when the sun is shining on the asphalt in winter...
Reminds me of the car (VW?) adverts on TV a couple of years ago. A British sheep farmer gets a lamb that has "mountain sheep" horns right from the start and is immensly sure of himself. All kinds of funny scenes, the last of which: This little ram stands with the herd in the middle of the road and won't move over... until this make of car pulls up and can over-intimidate him. I laugh every time I see that.
@TelKitty I'm surprised you saw it before you ran over it... Good show :-) If it didn't bite you, I guess there's no reason you shouldn't.
My neighbor has chickens - produces eggs to sell in her shop. They're protected by a very high, mesh fence and they're put into their coop every night. Rooster or no. The foxes and martins here are aggressive and inventive.
@Gimby Some forty years ago, my late husband and I went on a trail ride that ended at a farm where they had geese. We were a bit slow unsaddling and everyone else had moved on to the house, when three geese showed up. I turned around, and my husband was standing on the top rail of the fence, the geese below him with wings spread and hissing. I could not believe my eyes! I walked towards the geese, mimicking what they were doing, and off they went.
When I asked my husband - who grew up in a farming village - what on earth was the matter, he said the geese of a neighbor down the street terrorized him when he was a child.
Half a month has almost passed since the experiment ended and I know Shog left a couple of comments on the post since it ended but it was mentioned that the results would be compiled over the following week yet we've heard nothing at all.
Can we get an update regarding it?
This question was m...
@Makoto It was originally the emoji, but thinking about it, I don't wave to be friendly, I wave just to acknowledge that I have indeed seen someone, or to say goodbye while they're driving or something, it's the saying goodbye that's friendly, waving is kinda weird