
(Were there peeing frogs or toads in that garden, too?

chanilover wrote:I just Googled copperhead snakes - those are some serious snakes you guys have got out there! I found a snake in the garden once when I was a kid, it was some green thing, not very big. It didn't do much, just looked at me and slithered off.
We have those here too, don't know how the hell a reptile survives winter... anyways, they're pretty neat. I never had any wildlife to worry about killing me (grew up in the country) other than MAYBE if the coyotes got very hungry, or a cougar wandered over from the mountains.Eyes High wrote:chanilover wrote:I just Googled copperhead snakes - those are some serious snakes you guys have got out there! I found a snake in the garden once when I was a kid, it was some green thing, not very big. It didn't do much, just looked at me and slithered off.
Sounds like a garden snake. I use to catch those as a kid. My momma would get so mad at me.![]()
From what I have Australia has the worst snakes in the world. Don't know if they have the most, just the most who are deadly. Schu? HBJ?
Haven't noticed him active on Facebook the last few times I've logged in, either. The last I heard, he had auditioned for Caiaphas in Jesus Christ Superstar, but I don't know if he got it or not.Hunchback Jack wrote:(Where IS Schu? Haven't seen him around)
Oooh, sound like a snakey after me own heart!The brown snake's a bit different though; if you're close to it and it sees you moving, it'll come after you. They're stroppy by nature.
Well yes, but I don't see how a cold blooded animal pulls that off, I would think it would be unable to maintain it's body heat just sleeping, would probably freeze solid. Maybe they tunnel down below the frost level... hmmm.SandChigger wrote:
(They hibernate, Thang, what else?)
Yes, that is my wonder about how they survive, because those anti-freeze creatures were all frogs (or at least amphibians) IIRC, and not reptiles. So how would a snake do it? Burrowing below the frost is the only way I can think of to avoid freezing.SandChigger wrote:Where's that biologist fellow when you need him?
IANAB, but I think If something (plant or animal) freezes solid, the water inside its cells expands and ruptures the cell membranes, destroying them. When the whatever unfreezes, it's usually dead because of massive tissue damage. But they've discovered that some animals (frogs or toads, I think it was; don't know for snakes) synthesize a substance that acts like antifreeze and keeps the cells from rupturing. Or something like that. Saw it on Discovery.
But you're also right I think: they burrow down deep enough to be below the frost line.
Aye, but then you're no snake, are you?A Thing of Eternity wrote:Burrowing below the frost is the only way I can think of to avoid freezing.
I've just firmed up plans for this one - figgered that over the next four years, with all the NationalBattles for the Armory 2010
3 Day Event - October 29th, 30th and 31st - Tallassee, Alabama
This annual event is a family oriented event that you don't want to miss out on. Visit this site often for updates for the 13th Annual Battle For The Armory in October 2010.
Historic Gibson's View Plantation provides expansive open fields well suited to cavalry, with camping areas that have piped water and shower facilities. Modern camping available with water, but no hook-ups. If the Lord provides water, we will provide hay for cavalry horses. We will make every effort to have hay available if possible. As always firewood will be plentiful and there will be ample powder rations to the first 10 full-scale guns registered before Oct.10th.
Battles for the Armory is sponsored by the "Tallassee Armory Guards" SCV Camp 1921 and is hosted by the 53rd Alabama Cavalry. Proceeds from this event go towards various WBTS historic preservation projects with our main emphasis on the Confederate Armory Project here in Tallassee, last standing Confederate Armory in the South.
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The more time I spend around "hardcore re-enactors", the more they remind me of supermodels ...![]()
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Whooppee! Freak's taken me to VegasSandRider wrote:send me your measurements -
lie to your wife ...
tell her you're going to Vegas with two strippers and a midget ...
So, a Yankee.merkin muffley wrote:I'm from Gettysburg, the High Water Mark. I grew up a five minute dictahike from Pickett's Charge, on the Confederate line.
A spankee! whooppee!Freakzilla wrote: So, a yankee.
I'm a Yankee stripper serving under Fighting Joe HookerBijaz wrote:A spankee! whooppee!Freakzilla wrote: So, a yankee.
Viva las vergas!
hooker
"prostitute," often traced to the disreputable morals of the Army of the Potomac (American Civil War) under the tenure of Gen. "Fighting Joe" Hooker (1863), and the word probably was popularized by this association at that time. But it is said to have been in use in North Carolina c.1845 ("If he comes by way of Norfolk he will find any number of pretty Hookers in the Brick row not far from French's hotel."). One theory traces it to Corlear's Hook, a disreputable section of New York City. Perhaps related to hooker "thief, pickpocket" (1567), but most likely an allusion to prostitutes hooking or snaring clients. Hook in the figurative sense of "that by which anyone is attracted or caught" is recorded from 1430; and hook (v.) in the figurative sense of "catch hold of and draw in" is attested from 1577; in reference to "fishing" for a husband or a wife, it was in common use from c.1800. All of which makes the modern sense seem a natural step. The family name Hooker (attested from c.975 C.E.) would mean "maker of hooks," or else refer to an agricultural laborer who used a hook (cf. O.E. weodhoc "weed-hook").
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2010 Douglas Harper
Q From Vince Baughan, UK: In a biography of General U S Grant, there was mention of a charismatic American Civil War general called ‘Fighting Joe’ Hooker, and his female camp followers, known as Hooker’s women, or Hookers, for short. Do you know, is this the origin of the word Hooker for a lady of negotiable affections, or is it folk etymology?
General ‘Fighting Joe’ Hooker.
It wasn’t him, honest.
A This is a persistent story in the USA, but it’s untrue.
General Hooker was a real person, though one who wasn’t universally popular — one biographer calls him “a conniver and carouser” — because he was quarrelsome, deeply disrespectful of his superiors, a womaniser, a drunkard, and (worst of all) an unsuccessful soldier. Hooker’s headquarters were described as a combination of bar and brothel into which no decent woman could go. It is also said that his men were an undisciplined lot who often frequented prostitutes (a red-light area of Washington is supposed to have briefly been called Hooker’s division for this reason). So it’s not surprising that hooker is often assumed to derive from his short-lived command.
However, there’s a fatal flaw: the word is recorded several times before the Civil War. It’s listed in the second edition of John Bartlett’s Dictionary of Americanisms of 1859 and another example is known from North Carolina in 1845. An even earlier instance was turned up by George Thompson of New York University in The New York Transcript of 25 September 1835, which contains a whimsical report of a police court hearing in which a woman of no reputation at all is called a hooker because she “hangs around the hook”.
This obscure reference is to Corlear’s Hook, an area of New York. Bartlett suggests the same origin for the term, based on “the number of houses of ill-fame frequented by sailors” in the area. Though this origin sounds plausible, it may well be that John Bartlett and others who made this connection were falling victim to an earlier version of folk etymology.
There is some evidence to suggest that it really comes from a much older British low slang term for a specialist thief who snatches items using a hook. In 1592, in a book on low-life called The Art of Conny Catching (conny or cony, the old word for a rabbit, was then a cant term for a mark or sucker), Robert Greene says that such thieves, “pull out of a window any loose linen cloth, apparel, or else any other household stuff”. The implication is that the hooker catches her clients by similar, albeit less tangible, methods.
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