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On 21/12/24 04:43, Bobbie Sellers wrote:On 12/20/24 06:40, Tony Nance wrote:On 12/20/24 9:24 AM, Ted Nolan <tednolan> wrote:In article <6We9P.32715$Uup4.9647@fx10.iad>,
Scott Lurndal <slp53@pacbell.net> wrote:Titus G <noone@nowhere.com> writes:>On 20/12/24 15:55, Scott Dorsey wrote:>Robert Carnegie <rja.carnegie@gmail.com> wrote:>On 17/12/2024 16:57, Paul S Person wrote:>I haven't seen a bunny for a long time now. But once they were,>
if not
common, then not rare sights. Some of them white, others brown.
My sister lives in rural Scotland. She used to
see a rabbit, from time to time, being carried
cross-country in the jaws of the family cat.
I mean, probably several different rabbits.
Rabbits are evil animals that eat my vegetables. They eat my
oregano,
they even ate my feijoa seedling. They must die. Cats like this
should be supported.
>I think later, the household budget for pet food>
improved.
>
If you have the money, you can buy rabbit in
tin cans, to have later.
Years ago I dated someone with a crossbow who would hunt them in my
yard (as firearms are not legal to use within the city limits here).
I got kind of tired of lapin au moutarde but since then I have
learned
how to cook them szechuan style.
--scott
Rabbits are a massive problem in the dry Central Otago area of the
South
Island of New Zealand where they decimate crops and grass leaving
barren
soil. An introduced species with no natural predators, with large and
frequent litters, they have successfully defied attempts of
eradication.
Time to introduce the coyote to the rabbits?
That's a super-genius idea!
>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vl1uFDiDoQc
>Perfect!!Good luck with Coyotes but why does not the Dingo
>
make inroards into the lapin cuisine?
The Dingo would make no distinction between rabbit and lapin but resides
in Australia where it is no threat to the New Zealand bunny which has no
predators other than humans.
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