Pages: 1 ... 814 815 816 [817] 818 819 820 ... 2721   Go Down
Print
Author Topic: Trivial things you don't understand/mildly annoy you  (Read 6193171 times)
Reg Smeeton
Walking Encyclopaedia

Offline Offline

Posts: 34913





Ignore
« Reply #12240 on: Friday, June 14, 2013, 08:31:18 »

Can anyone tell me what animal I saw in Big Bend National Park, Texas? I thought it was a pair of stags, but having googled them, they're nowhere near big/tall enough for what we saw. Same antlers and stuff that stags have, but the body was on top of 6-foot muscly legs. These things were massive, and I didn't realise anything like them even existed. It was pitch black, around midnight, and we thought we'd seen some kind of mystical creature.

Elk?
Logged
DMR

« Reply #12241 on: Friday, June 14, 2013, 08:34:05 »

Caribou
Logged
sonicyouth

Offline Offline

Posts: 22352





Ignore
« Reply #12242 on: Friday, June 14, 2013, 09:08:58 »

Steroids?

Caribou

aka reindeer, Texas is a bit far south for their range.

According to this elk are extremely rare in Big Bend although seems to be dated from 1997. This article implies that elk are more widespread.

Either way, it's probably an elk you saw.
Logged
DMR

« Reply #12243 on: Friday, June 14, 2013, 09:27:55 »

I dont know I just googled antlered animals like Reg did
Logged
sonicyouth

Offline Offline

Posts: 22352





Ignore
« Reply #12244 on: Friday, June 14, 2013, 09:29:23 »

You should try reindeer sausage. It's great.
Logged
4D
That was definately my last game, honest

Offline Offline

Posts: 23531


I can't bear it 🙄




Ignore
« Reply #12245 on: Friday, June 14, 2013, 09:31:00 »

I've seen elk in Canada, a large deer built like a brick shithouse.
Logged
Reg Smeeton
Walking Encyclopaedia

Offline Offline

Posts: 34913





Ignore
« Reply #12246 on: Friday, June 14, 2013, 09:32:55 »

Steroids?

aka reindeer, Texas is a bit far south for their range.

According to this elk are extremely rare in Big Bend although seems to be dated from 1997. This article implies that elk are more widespread.

Either way, it's probably an elk you saw.

I thought you might now be the TEF expert on rangiferine ungulates.
Logged
sonicyouth

Offline Offline

Posts: 22352





Ignore
« Reply #12247 on: Friday, June 14, 2013, 09:35:07 »

I thought you might now be the TEF expert on rangiferine ungulates.
Was there one before?

I haven't seen one yet, only eaten them. Steaks, roast, kebabs, smoked sausage - all delicious.

Mostly I'm improving my birding skills.
Logged
Reg Smeeton
Walking Encyclopaedia

Offline Offline

Posts: 34913





Ignore
« Reply #12248 on: Friday, June 14, 2013, 09:35:46 »

I dont know I just googled antlered animals like Reg did

Do you work for GCHQ? Strangely, one of the plus points about getting older, is that you do tend to acquire knowledge...one of the downsides is that you then forget it.
Logged
Reg Smeeton
Walking Encyclopaedia

Offline Offline

Posts: 34913





Ignore
« Reply #12249 on: Friday, June 14, 2013, 09:41:26 »

Was there one before?

I haven't seen one yet, only eaten them. Steaks, roast, kebabs, smoked sausage - all delicious.

Mostly I'm improving my birding skills.

Don't mind a bit of venison myself...but I'd imagine free range reindeer to be a bit more flavoursome.

Good work on the birding...what have you seen?
Logged
sonicyouth

Offline Offline

Posts: 22352





Ignore
« Reply #12250 on: Friday, June 14, 2013, 09:53:32 »

I'd only tried venison once or twice before and found it a bit tough. Reindeer is very tender by comparison and extremely rich in taste.

I don't keep a list but my latest 'tick' is a hobby, which I spotted along the A40 between Carterton and Witney. At home we have a few birds as regular garden visitors that I'd hardly seen back in the UK, namely garden warbler and fieldfare that are nesting en masse in trees behind the house, get great views just sat on the veranda on a sunny day. There are some excellent wetlands around but have been flooded recently following the snow melt so haven't yet explored them properly
Logged
Peter Venkman
Past glories motivate us when times are bleak.

Offline Offline

Posts: 64756


Perfection is not attainable



« Reply #12251 on: Friday, June 14, 2013, 09:56:46 »

I'd only tried venison once or twice before and found it a bit tough. Reindeer is very tender by comparison and extremely rich in taste.
I am surprised at that, I love Venison and have never had a tough piece of it, quite the opposite in fact and find it also very rich in flavour.

Reindeer from Ikea is not bad but I do prefer venison TBH.
Logged

From the station at Colchester
To the cells of Warrington
From the services at Leicester
To the slums of Northampton

We travel over England
And one day Europe too

Cos we all follow the Swindon
We're the famous Town End crew.
Reg Smeeton
Walking Encyclopaedia

Offline Offline

Posts: 34913





Ignore
« Reply #12252 on: Friday, June 14, 2013, 10:09:00 »

I'd only tried venison once or twice before and found it a bit tough. Reindeer is very tender by comparison and extremely rich in taste.

I don't keep a list but my latest 'tick' is a hobby, which I spotted along the A40 between Carterton and Witney. At home we have a few birds as regular garden visitors that I'd hardly seen back in the UK, namely garden warbler and fieldfare that are nesting en masse in trees behind the house, get great views just sat on the veranda on a sunny day. There are some excellent wetlands around but have been flooded recently following the snow melt so haven't yet explored them properly

I like fieldfares...must be quite a sight.  You get them coming to Blighty when it's too cold in Scandinavia, redwing then same.
Logged
Chubbs

Offline Offline

Posts: 10517





Ignore
« Reply #12253 on: Friday, June 14, 2013, 10:16:04 »

Don't mind a bit of venison myself...but I'd imagine free range reindeer to be a bit more flavoursome.

Good work on the birding...what have you seen?

Got given a 1.5kg haunch of venison from my father in law, cant wait to cook it this weekend.
Logged
Chubbs

Offline Offline

Posts: 10517





Ignore
« Reply #12254 on: Friday, June 14, 2013, 10:20:43 »

I'd only tried venison once or twice before and found it a bit tough. Reindeer is very tender by comparison and extremely rich in taste.

I don't keep a list but my latest 'tick' is a hobby, which I spotted along the A40 between Carterton and Witney. At home we have a few birds as regular garden visitors that I'd hardly seen back in the UK, namely garden warbler and fieldfare that are nesting en masse in trees behind the house, get great views just sat on the veranda on a sunny day. There are some excellent wetlands around but have been flooded recently following the snow melt so haven't yet explored them properly
I'd only tried venison once or twice before and found it a bit tough. Reindeer is very tender by comparison and extremely rich in taste.

I don't keep a list but my latest 'tick' is a hobby, which I spotted along the A40 between Carterton and Witney. At home we have a few birds as regular garden visitors that I'd hardly seen back in the UK, namely garden warbler and fieldfare that are nesting en masse in trees behind the house, get great views just sat on the veranda on a sunny day. There are some excellent wetlands around but have been flooded recently following the snow melt so haven't yet explored them properly

if it was tough, it was over cooked, you HAVE to cook venison rare (medium rare at a push)
Logged
Pages: 1 ... 814 815 816 [817] 818 819 820 ... 2721   Go Up
Print
Jump to: