Don't get me going on government "experts". Michigan DNR did that on the southern Michigan and northern Indiana border about 10 years ago and denied, denied, denied until they were forced to admit it. Those cats keep about a 50 mile radius that they like to make their own, and anything in it, particularly small animals, livestock. People were catching them on video and turning it over to TV stations, tails as long as their bodies. DNR was saying wild house cats on the loose that easily grew to be three or four feet long and that much more of tail. People encountering them directly in their yards, up in trees. The one that finally got them to admit it was when a horse up around Berrien Springs, MI. got mauled on its back, neck, and head so bad that it had to be put down. News crew was out there when a DNR guy was telling the upset farmers that the horse was taken down by a pack of wild dogs. One of the farmers took the "expert" up to the carcass and showed him that the claw marks each had five nails, then schooled the "expert" that cats have five nails, dogs have four and an unusable dew claw. It was only after that incident that DNR admitted that they released three to keep down the deer. They're all GPS chipped, so don't be getting no ideas about taking one out, UNLESS you plan to load its carcass up in the bed of the pickup, drive down the road and dump it in a river. You don't want to get caught with one.
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Today's Featured Article - When Push Comes to Shove - by Dave Patterson. When I was a “kid” (still am to a deree) about two I guess, my parents couldn’t find me one day. They were horrified (we lived by the railroad), my mother thought the worst: "He’s been run over by a train, he’s gone forever!" Where did they find me? Perched up on the seat of the tractor. I’d probably plowed about 3000 acres (in my head anyway) by the time they found me. This is where my love for tractors started and has only gotten worse in my tender 50 yrs on this “green planet”. I’m par
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