From: krusty kritter on
If I never saw an eagle fly.

Taking advantage of a sunny break in the endless series of winter
rainstorms, I took a little putt through the Beautiful Land of rolling
Sierra foothills.

The grass is green and lush. Black and white cows graze contentedly,
just like in the commercials.

The yellow mustard flowers are blooming, as are the orange fiddlenecks
and white snowflowers that appear to be a frosting of late snow on the
meadows.

Pausing at the eponymous Eagle Ridge on the way to the Indian
reservation, I scanned the sky for the great raptors but there were
none in sight.

However, upon completing my loop and turning home I arrived at the
city limits sign which officially proclaims the population of Cowpoop
to be the sum total of its elevation (500 feet) and the number of
resident humans as 962.

That's where my raptor quest ended...

A pair of golden eagles has built their aerie at the edge of town in a
tall tree overlooking a goat pen in the Mexican shanty town by the
bridge which crosses the river.

And the nesting eagles yelped like puppy dogs at each other from the
tall tree.

While a vulture soars tipsily with dihedral wings, an eagle looks
like a surfboard flying sideways, it holds its wings flat.

Several crows were trying to mob the eagle and make it go away, but
the golden eagle family is there to stay.

More rain clouds blew in from the west and covered the sun, so I rode
home before the downpour started.

Sig file!

He climbed cathedral mountains, he saw silver clouds below
He saw everything as far as you can see
And they say that he got crazy once, and he tried to touch the sun
And he lost a friend but kept his memory

Now he walks in quiet solitude the forests and the streams
Seeking grace in every step he takes
His sight has turned inside himself to try and understand
The serenity of a clear blue mountain lake
From: Road Glidin' Don on
On Mar 4, 7:01 am, krusty kritter <breoganmacbr...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:

> More rain clouds blew in from the west and covered the sun, so I rode
> home before the downpour started.

Didn't want to get your car dirty?



From: climber on
On Mar 4, 7:01 am, krusty kritter <breoganmacbr...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
> If I never saw an eagle fly.
>
> Taking advantage of a sunny break in the endless series of winter
> rainstorms, I took a little putt through the Beautiful Land of rolling
> Sierra foothills.
>
> The grass is green and lush. Black and white cows graze contentedly,
> just like in the commercials.
>
> The yellow mustard flowers are blooming, as are the orange fiddlenecks
> and white snowflowers that appear to be a frosting of late snow on the
> meadows.
>
> Pausing at the eponymous Eagle Ridge on the way to the Indian
> reservation, I scanned the sky for the great raptors but there were
> none in sight.
>
> However, upon completing my loop and turning home I arrived at the
> city limits sign which officially proclaims the population of Cowpoop
> to be the sum total of its elevation (500 feet) and the number of
> resident humans as 962.
>
> That's where my raptor quest ended...
>
> A pair of golden eagles has built their aerie at the edge of town in a
> tall tree overlooking a goat pen in the Mexican shanty town by the
> bridge which crosses the river.
>
> And the nesting eagles yelped like puppy dogs at each other from the
> tall tree.
>
> While a vulture soars tipsily  with dihedral wings, an eagle looks
> like a surfboard flying sideways, it holds its wings flat.
>
> Several crows were trying to mob the eagle and make it go away, but
> the golden eagle family is there to stay.
>
> More rain clouds blew in from the west and covered the sun, so I rode
> home before the downpour started.
>
> Sig file!
>
> He climbed cathedral mountains, he saw silver clouds below
> He saw everything as far as you can see
> And they say that he got crazy once, and he tried to touch the sun
> And he lost a friend but kept his memory
>
> Now he walks in quiet solitude the forests and the streams
> Seeking grace in every step he takes
> His sight has turned inside himself to try and understand
> The serenity of a clear blue mountain lake

The breeding rate of "Mestizo Parasitois Rodenta" will quickly destroy
the environment. There are several nice camping/picnic areas near
here that are destroyed each weekend by the filthy hispanic rodents.
We go with trash bags Monday to pickup filthy diapers, tampons, and
bottles, mostly Corona beer. Death to the scum invaders and their
employers and advocates.

climber
From: krusty kritter on
On Mar 4, 10:41 am, climber <coledenk...(a)gmail.com> wrote:

> The breeding rate of "Mestizo Parasitois Rodenta" will quickly destroy
> the environment. There are several nice camping/picnic areas near
> here that are destroyed each weekend by the filthy hispanic rodents.
> We go with trash bags Monday to pickup filthy diapers, tampons, and
> bottles, mostly Corona beer. Death to the scum invaders and their
> employers and advocates.

Local Whites have been complaining about what Mexicans do when it
snows and they take their whole monstrous tribe to the Sierra Nevada
or the Tehachapi range to "play" in the snow.

The snowplay areas wind up getting trashed and the Mexicans also feel
that they must "mark" their territory with spray cans, even if that
"territory" is just the seat of a stinking porta-potty.

Rants and Raves message boards all over California are filled with
angry messages about how Mexicans are trashing the state.

The local Mexican population is about 60% in this little town and
there the Mexican population of the county is 50%.

I'm getting out of here as soon as I find a better place.

I'm doing a survey, county by county, to find the place with the
smallest percentage of Mexican population here in California, since I
don't want to move back to Vermont or New Hampshire and put up with
snow in the winter.

One interesting fact of note:

When you read the census demographics for just about any state other
than the American southwest, you'll find that Germans are the proudest
people in the USA, followed by the Irish, then the English when it
comes to telling the government where their ancestors came from.

Rednecks will never say that they are Scots-Irish, they will always
say that they are just "Americans."
From: climber on
On Mar 4, 2:05 pm, krusty kritter <breoganmacbr...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
> On Mar 4, 10:41 am, climber <coledenk...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > The breeding rate of "Mestizo Parasitois Rodenta" will quickly destroy
> > the environment. There are several nice camping/picnic areas near
> > here that are destroyed each weekend by the filthy hispanic rodents.
> > We go with trash bags Monday to pickup filthy diapers, tampons, and
> > bottles, mostly Corona beer. Death to the scum invaders and their
> > employers and advocates.
>
> Local Whites have been complaining about what Mexicans do when it
> snows and they take their whole monstrous tribe to the Sierra Nevada
> or the Tehachapi range to "play" in the snow.
>
> The snowplay areas wind up getting trashed and the Mexicans also feel
> that they must "mark" their territory with spray cans, even if that
> "territory" is just the seat of a stinking porta-potty.
>
> Rants and Raves message boards all over California are filled with
> angry messages about how Mexicans are trashing the state.
>
> The local Mexican population is about 60% in this little town and
> there the Mexican population of the county is 50%.
>
> I'm getting out of here as soon as I find a better place.
>
> I'm doing a survey, county by county, to find the place with the
> smallest percentage of Mexican population here in California, since I
> don't want to move back to Vermont or New Hampshire and put up with
> snow in the winter.
>
> One interesting fact of note:
>
> When you read the census demographics for just about any state other
> than the American southwest, you'll find that Germans are the proudest
> people in the USA, followed by the Irish, then the English when it
> comes to telling the government where their ancestors came from.
>
> Rednecks will never say that they are Scots-Irish, they will always
> say that they are just "Americans."

RE: Places: go to city-data.com, look at numbers or Prescott and
Payson, maybe Sierra Vista, Tombstone(just
for kicks.

climber

climber

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