Because these buggers don't stand still and seem to materialize from multiple directions this is a little bit like trying to play a shell game.
Count them.
Count the whitetails...
Door County, Wisconsin, USA - Where the strong survive and the weak are killed and eaten.
Because these buggers don't stand still and seem to materialize from multiple directions this is a little bit like trying to play a shell game.
Count them.
Count the whitetails...
Written by Fats Domino and Dave Bartholomew this song was released on Imperial Records in 1955. Selling a million copies it was an immediate hit and rose to the Number One position on the Billboard R&B chart and Number Ten on the Pop chart. The song is ranked number 438 on Rolling Stone magazine's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time list. High praise, indeed.
The song gained additional popularity after Pat Boone covered it; appealing to a broader audience. The song was also covered by the Four Seasons in 1963, Hank Williams Jr. in 1971 and Cheap Trick in 1978.
The Cheap Trick cover charted at number 35 after its release on the 1978 Live album - Cheap Trick at Budokan. Remarkably, it was this group that made this song their own.
Ain't That a Shame...
I am told that it is meteorological spring here; where I live half-way between the equator and the North Pole.
In the Northern Hemisphere this is defined as the three-month period of March, April and May - commencing on March 1 and ending on May 31. It is used by meteorologists and climatologists to align seasons with annual temperature cycles and to simplify the collection of weather data instead of using the varying dates of the astronomical equinox like the rest of us nerdy stargazers do. But I digress.
What I know for sure is that when you score a 60F day you take your canine sidekick out for a run and let her explore the melting edges of the ice-covered pond and creek.
For sure it is Mud Season after all...
After a long hiatus these are showing-up on the trail cameras regularly.
What I do not know is where they go to hide?
Black Ash Swamp maybe?
Anyway, the turkey birds are on the move....