Rick wrote:North Dakota is just one piece of the puzzle and "...remains 23 percent above the long-term average."
johnc wrote:And the Bunkie ,LA area has now become a speck hot bed
DComeaux wrote:HA!...Is that fox?
Rick wrote:johnc wrote:And the Bunkie ,LA area has now become a speck hot bed
We'll be expecting heavy straps there, Darren.
Darren wrote:DComeaux wrote:HA!...Is that fox?
Presume to be the lil gray squirrels that are so prevalent in our yard. Who could blame them, they get free ears of corn a few times a week, the suckers we are. At least all of us, Harry, the cat, and the baby included, enjoy watching them from kitchen window.
Red this three times before I caught the "hood" part. Maybe I better buy glasses. Been going without for a good six months.Rick wrote:Had a boyfriend
BGcorey wrote:Pretty lil spots in the vicinity
It looks to me like a brackish marsh huh? Maybe a little fresher when we have seasons of high rain fall?
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Darren wrote:Log entry regular Johnny is in northern Indiana this week, 55 deg. this morning there.
Rick wrote:Darren wrote:Log entry regular Johnny is in northern Indiana this week, 55 deg. this morning there.
Hope he packed a winter coat.
SpinnerMan wrote:Rick wrote:Darren wrote:Log entry regular Johnny is in northern Indiana this week, 55 deg. this morning there.
Hope he packed a winter coat.
Why? That's a cool summer day. Normal low for the day never gets above 64 up here in the summer.
In July, 5 days got down into the 50's. 6 days so far in August with the low of 52.
That's still shorts weather.
Darren wrote:Though DComeaux's got this up already, wanted it here for my long-term recordkeeping all in one place. This breakdown by Delta also shows the pond counts broken out between US and Canada. Looks like despite the reported dry portions of the Dakotas, the US still made out OK, which is probably a significant contributor to BWT numbers.
For the primary species I see, gadwall and GW teal, we're looking good, despite a dip in green wings. The high BWT numbers are always welcome, as are the mighty shoveler, to which we give no quarter.
Bowie Outfitters has their big annual pre-season sale going on this week that's full of killer deals on jackets, fleece pullovers, gloves, etc. which are hard to buy on a 95 degree August day under a parking lot tent, but not if you let your mind wander to those cool mornings to (eventually) come. Its too hot to even try the stuff on! Trying to stay in teal mode but look forward to whipping out the gray duck dekes as well. Countdown rolls on to the next local offseason/preseason milestone, the Gueydan Duck Festival next week.
aunt betty wrote:There are days when it starts out raining at 39 degrees then the cold front hits and your shotgun ices up. Of course those are the days where we pound the ducks.
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