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April 10, 2007: Hooked elk
http://cellar.org/2007/hookedelk1.jpg
xoB sends this set along, including a story that he notes doesn't jibe with what the pictures show -- and so I'll only put up the images, no use passing along misinformation. http://cellar.org/2007/hookedelk2.jpg Obviously, though, these two are lucky; they've been found by humans. If they weren't found, they'd just waste away and die. http://cellar.org/2007/hookedelk3.jpg So it's a good animal pic not on a Friday, but what the hey; enjoy. http://cellar.org/2007/hookedelk4.jpg |
The humans that found them are probably planning on how to make a coat rack and a chandelier out of them.
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Sitting ducks? How about standing deer.
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I want elk, had Pheasant yesterday.
Good thing with living with conservatives....you get fed well. |
so....they just stood around and looked at the pretty elk? where are the heroic actions? the sawing and mauling? the elk must have been that way for some time....they seem down right calm about it. i want to see the pics of them after they disentangled them. or did they just kill them and eat them?
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Time to get out that Swiss Army knife with the saw blade on it.
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Let alone two of them. |
Too true. Those antlers are valuable and could be very useful.
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could have ended worse
Boingboing recently had a post about a pair of elk horns in the Smithsonian's collection. The original owners got locked together and died.
http://www.boingboing.net/2007/04/09...k_lock_ho.html |
How would they unhook them without getting stabbed by or trampled by the elk?
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The only safe time to nuzzle an elk.
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I have done it with white-tail, far easier, which is NOT saying much... still VERY dangerous.
Actually, they are not stupid, and elk (we had some on the ranch as "pets") are very smart, once they figure out that you are helping they just go limp. There is a moment, at the end, where they get-up and go, well you just gotta' hope you are out of the way or lucky. You religious types should pray first, there is no time during. Finding one trapped in a fence or hooked in a tree is far worse, they do not settle nearly as quickly or easily. Don't know why. It is a misconception that hunters have no compassion for the animals they hunt. |
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