Run, Rabbit, Run

Someone must have put a package of Viagra in the briar patch. Bunnies are everywhere this year. Talking about the Eastern cottontail. Everytime you look out the window, there are bunnies. It's a plague. Even the fat, lazy, neutered, elderly cat was able to catch four or five of them this spring. They don't really do any harm. They're not bothering any of the old lady's flowers. The only crops they've ever attacked were certain types of lettuce and I stopped growing lettuce many years ago.

Reply to
Way Back Jack
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Do rabbits really need Viagra?

--S.

Reply to
Suzanne D.

Only if their arteries are closing.

Bill

Reply to
Bill who putters

Bunnies

The cute little bastards are methodically working their way through my asters and balloon flowers. And my fancy orange coneflower has dissappeared!

Should have broken out the Liquid Fence a little earlier.

Reply to
Pat Kiewicz

are everywhere this year. =A0

Coyotes kept our Alabama local population down for many years but this year I'm seeing cottontails all over the place. Guess they're breeding faster than the coyotes can catch them.

Reply to
KC

Coyotes kept our Alabama local population down for many years but this year I'm seeing cottontails all over the place. Guess they're breeding faster than the coyotes can catch them.

That's a fact, I have seen more rabbits and young squirrels this year than I can ever remember.

basilisk

in the middle of AL

Reply to
basilisk

Probably due to Al Gore messing with the weather.

KC also in the middle of AL

Reply to
KC

Probably due to Al Gore messing with the weather.

KC also in the middle of AL

I'm about 20 miles south of Tuscaloosa, glad to hear there are neighbors about.

basilisk

Reply to
basilisk

The lower end has had it rough from hurricanes for years, starting with frederick in '78. It's hard to imagine the past beauty of the lower end looking at it now. It is still a nice place to visit.

basilisk

Reply to
basilisk

Used to vacation in Baldwin county every year until the hurricane took out the state park pier. Steve

Reply to
Steve Peek

Coyotes kept our Alabama local population down for many years but this year I'm seeing cottontails all over the place. Guess they're breeding faster than the coyotes can catch them. _________________

I've often been criticized for allowing my female cat to have kittens now and then, by people who are concerned that domestic cats are a danger to the local wildlife. I hear stories about how cats sometimes kill rabbits, and how terrible this is for the poor little rabbits. I think there are certain cases where a couple of hungry outdoor cats could actually help, and this situation would be one of them.

--S.

Reply to
Suzanne D.

I'm about 50 miles south of you.

KC

Reply to
KC

I agree. But wildlife follows a food chain, and the cat that catches a rabbit is itself a favorite catch for the coyote. I believe it all balances out in the end unless man intervenes and tips the scale.

KC

Reply to
KC

I'm sure the animal shelter is full of cats that would love to chase rabbits.

Reply to
Billy

They ought to set some of them loose in the gardens.

--S.

Reply to
Suzanne D.

I agree. But wildlife follows a food chain, and the cat that catches a rabbit is itself a favorite catch for the coyote. I believe it all balances out in the end unless man intervenes and tips the scale. _________________

Yeah. That's why we take care of our pets, but accept that sometimes they will not have the same lifespan as pets who are inside all their lives. With freedom comes reality.

--S.

Reply to
Suzanne D.

As has been proven by every human/animal intervention. From deer to trout, if we put our hands on it, "it" fails. What an astoundingly conceited species we are.

Reply to
Steve

How do you know what I put my hands on? That was supposed to be classified! :-p

Reply to
Lilah Morgan

On Thu, 04 Jun 2009 20:59:01 -0700, Steve spuked forth:

"I'd like to share a revelation that I've had during my time here. It came to me when I tried to classify your species and I realized that you're not actually mammals. Every mammal on this planet instinctively develops a natural equilibrium with the surrounding environment but you humans do not. You move to an area and you multiply and multiply until every natural resource is consumed and the only way you can survive is to spread to another area. There is another organism on this planet that follows the same pattern. Do you know what it is? A virus. Human beings are a disease, a cancer of this planet."

Agent Smith

Reply to
Charlie

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