Roadkill Guilt
#31
I have a comma problem
Joined: Feb 2009
Location: Fox Lake, IL (from Carrickfergus NI)
Posts: 49,598
Re: Roadkill Guilt
When confronted by a deer on the road, hit your brakes and your horn. Don't mess around, don't swerve, hit your brakes for all you're worth and then your horn. If you do hit it, at least you won't be going as fast. If there are more than 1 deer the horn may keep the others from entering the equation. People are frequently killed because they don't think fast enough. I was going about 55mph when I totalled a car on a deer. If it had been jumping it would have come right through the windshield. The last close call I had was in Montana and I left a twin trail of smoke from my tires for 50 yds behind the car. I stopped just inches from the deer.
Then there are the massive lines of geese who decide to wander out into the middle of the road on a whim, slowing us all down for no good reason other than to piss us off, because that's how geese are, shifty little beady-eyed bastards.
#32
Re: Roadkill Guilt
Do BE women never experience "Roadkill Guilt"?
Interesting that only guys have replied so far.
Could it be women are responsible for roadkill but don't feel guilt?
Or maybe women are just more nimble drivers
speaking of roadkill.....This post is gonna land me in a heap of $h!t
Interesting that only guys have replied so far.
Could it be women are responsible for roadkill but don't feel guilt?
Or maybe women are just more nimble drivers
speaking of roadkill.....This post is gonna land me in a heap of $h!t
#34
I have a comma problem
Joined: Feb 2009
Location: Fox Lake, IL (from Carrickfergus NI)
Posts: 49,598
#36
I have a comma problem
Joined: Feb 2009
Location: Fox Lake, IL (from Carrickfergus NI)
Posts: 49,598
Re: Roadkill Guilt
#37
Re: Roadkill Guilt
Generally "no", I might make an exception for fresh venison.
I relative driving a commercial vehicle in the UK during WWII hit and killed a deer. That was a time of rationing of foods, especially expensive foods like meat, and a windfall of fresh venison made a very welcome supplement to the family diet.
I relative driving a commercial vehicle in the UK during WWII hit and killed a deer. That was a time of rationing of foods, especially expensive foods like meat, and a windfall of fresh venison made a very welcome supplement to the family diet.
#38
I have a comma problem
Joined: Feb 2009
Location: Fox Lake, IL (from Carrickfergus NI)
Posts: 49,598
Re: Roadkill Guilt
Generally "no", I might make an exception for fresh venison.
I relative driving a commercial vehicle in the UK during WWII hit and killed a deer. That was a time of rationing of foods, especially expensive foods like meat, and a windfall of fresh venison made a very welcome supplement to the family diet.
I relative driving a commercial vehicle in the UK during WWII hit and killed a deer. That was a time of rationing of foods, especially expensive foods like meat, and a windfall of fresh venison made a very welcome supplement to the family diet.
#39
Re: Roadkill Guilt
Did you ever see Bear Grylls trying to demonstrate eating roasted skunk? Apparently they taste like they smell, all the way through to the bone!
#40
I have a comma problem
Joined: Feb 2009
Location: Fox Lake, IL (from Carrickfergus NI)
Posts: 49,598
Re: Roadkill Guilt
In the US even venison is highly variable, I am reliably informed by a colleague who hunts. In the Midwest the deer often get fat pilfering corn, and taste pretty dämn good, whereas in the Carolinas most deer live in woodland and dense thickets eating whatever they can find - at best acorns and pignuts, some wild strawberries and other wild fruits, and apparently taste a lot more "gamey".
I've only had venison jerky though, and good (and made from Midwestern deer) as it was, it's really not the same thing.
He probably washed it down with a freshly poured cup of his own piss didn't he, dirty beggar.
#41
Re: Roadkill Guilt
He didn't make much progress with it at all, it tasted that bad. Given the wide variety of crap he was willing to eat. I think it speaks volumes that even he couldn't choke down skunk.
#42
I have a comma problem
Joined: Feb 2009
Location: Fox Lake, IL (from Carrickfergus NI)
Posts: 49,598
Re: Roadkill Guilt
But yeah, he's usually game to eat just about anything.
#43
Re: Roadkill Guilt
The cat got bored, the scorpion made its escape .... into the jamjar I supplied.
I took it a few hundred metres away and made a gift of it to my other neighbour (well, his land, he lives 80Km away...)
The cat was less than impressed.
#44
Re: Roadkill Guilt
I've eaten 3 or 4 roadkilled deer, back when you could get a permit to salvage them for dogfood (and times were hard). Hit the front end of a jackrabbit once and ate the back half (more work than it was worth, tbh), and picked a partridge out of the grill once and ate it (that was good). The criteria is: Is it fresh? (is it still hot or at least warm?) How badly damaged is it? (if the insides are smashed there will be a lot of tainted meat and if it's severely bruised it won't be good) Have any scavengers been at it? (that's what they live on, birds, mice, coyotes, foxes.. all may carry diseases). I found a deer once while I was bowhunting that got his antlers caught in a double tree and bolted, breaking his neck. There were birds in the tree above him, but nothing had been at him yet (eyes intact), however it was from the day or night before and he was cold. I saved the antlers and rolled him down the hill for the coyotes. The one I hit with my car was sloshing as I dragged it off the road and I wasn't going to open that up. It was gone the next day so I think a local farmer may have taken it for his dogs.
#45
I have a comma problem
Joined: Feb 2009
Location: Fox Lake, IL (from Carrickfergus NI)
Posts: 49,598
Re: Roadkill Guilt
I watched the neighbour's cat playing with a scorpion, bat, bat , bat - the scorpion, tail up tried to face in the direction it thought the next paw was coming from. I deduce scorpions don't score well on IQ tests.
The cat got bored, the scorpion made its escape .... into the jamjar I supplied.
I took it a few hundred metres away and made a gift of it to my other neighbour (well, his land, he lives 80Km away...)
The cat was less than impressed.
The cat got bored, the scorpion made its escape .... into the jamjar I supplied.
I took it a few hundred metres away and made a gift of it to my other neighbour (well, his land, he lives 80Km away...)
The cat was less than impressed.