Visitor from Pennsylvania here
Someone needs to come get this visitor from PA. Just showed up at shop.
I think he's a little early, hungry, and too far south. First one I have seen around here in Alabama. Maybe he likes Pontiacs. Ha. |
...thought you were talking aboout me
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Ha, no you are transplanted now. As long as you like Pontiacs, your OK with me.
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Awwwwwww that’s Pontiac Pete. :D
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No it's Gus he works for the PA Lottery.
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Can I ask what brand of animal it is , don't have them downunder
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Groundhog
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That there is a big ole Groundhog. Quite common in the eastern and north eastern USA.
When I was a kid, my Aunt and Uncle owned about 120 acres outside of Frederick, MD. what they didn't live on, they leased to a local cattle farmer. My cousins and I would walk the property and kill as many Groundhogs as we could find, and fill in their holes to keep the cattle from stepping in them and breaking a leg, which cost the cattle farmer a loss in profit if they weren't fully fattened up yet. We''d find a hole and my cousin Scott would get his scoped rifle out and we'd sit off of it 50-75 yards or so, and when Scott gave the word we'd whistle, and those hogs would pop up out of their holes out of curiosity and BANG !!! Nothing but chunks from the shoulders up. To a threesome of 12-14 year old boys, this was the height of summertime entertainment in the country. |
Gopher ; comes out for food. like a small groundhog.
Geoundhog; hibernates. Biggie sized in PA |
I have a pair on my property.
The only ones i have ever seen in real life. Maybe lil bit larger than Preston posted. But maybe not PA size. They have sort of big bushy tails, and waddle when they 'run'. Like a really fat kid in gym class giving it their best - kind of run. |
The ones pictured are not from PA. The fur is way different on our groundhogs. As mentioned that’s a gopher, smaller and a more corse fur coat.
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X2 you definitely need to feed them some lead
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Have wondered how you have adjusted to Alabama... |
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My paternal grandfather would call that “dinner”.
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Called Ground hogs, Woodchucks, and Whistle pigs as Brian stated cause they do stand up on hind legs when you do.
They borrow under brush piles, around large tree root systems, and sheds, etc. That's a small one compared to round here. And yes they good on a bbq spit... |
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I heard people used to eat them. My Uncle said he used to kill them and take to a older guy who loved to eat them.
As long as we have chicken, I,LL pass on groundhog. |
I had one the size of a dog on my property and I battled him for five years. Had a tunnel that went all the way from the side of the hill on my property, across the road to a drainage ditch 20 yards away. Tried smoking him out, tried building my burning pile on top of his hole, tried my old stash of M80's .. half of which didn't detonate. Then, hated to do it but when MOAB on him, gasoline down the hole, pushed the fumes through with a few gentle blasts with a leaf blower ... lit it off ... never saw him again.
He was huge, but I never saw him when I had a gun in my hand and didn't really have time to wait for him, he was very shy. |
BTW ... I have some beautiful bushes in my front yard that I've been growing for 25 years. Yew I think. Anyway, last winter the deer stripped them bare ... they almost didn't recover this spring, they are still kind of sparse. Just saw the wife off to work this morning and noticed they are at it again. They won't survive another stripping. I heard Bobbex deer repellent is good. I also happen to have 10 lbs of powdered sulfur in the shop ... wonder if that would work? Or ... can I cover them with a tarp?
Going to start letting the dogs go out front to do their business for a week or to, see if that helps. |
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