Is that a European or African swallow?
But seriously folks, someone please call PETA.
1 posted on
02/14/2007 9:18:44 AM PST by
Pharmboy
To: Pharmboy
Maybe they can eat those "mafia warblers," which force even smaller songbirds to raise their young.
To: Pharmboy
Bats eat birds? Does this explain Batman and Robin being ambiguously gay duo?
3 posted on
02/14/2007 9:25:42 AM PST by
Screamname
(Guinness world records reports that the record for youngest living person is constantly being broken)
To: Pharmboy
.."it waz da bat I tell ya"
5 posted on
02/14/2007 9:28:32 AM PST by
Doogle
(USAF.68-73..8th TFW Ubon Thailand..never store a threat you should have eliminated)
To: Pharmboy
"They said giant noctule bats, large bats with an 18-inch (45-centimetre) wingspan"
The reporter must have one of those Penthouse rulers.
7 posted on
02/14/2007 9:35:55 AM PST by
Old Professer
(The critic writes with rapier pen, dips it twice, and writes again.)
To: Pharmboy
8 posted on
02/14/2007 9:41:24 AM PST by
JRios1968
(Tagline wanted...inquire within)
To: Pharmboy
"Birds are YUMMY!"
9 posted on
02/14/2007 9:43:30 AM PST by
SIDENET
(No votes for RINOs.)
To: Pharmboy
...mmmm, protein...
10 posted on
02/14/2007 9:45:49 AM PST by
Ladysmith
((NRA, SAS) "These lefties are terminally inebriated on dishonesty." The Nuge)
To: Pharmboy
"Every year, approximately five billion passerines (songbirds) cross the Mediterranean basin during their autumn migrations," the Ibanez team wrote in their report. I don't believe this. You would have feral cat packs running loose all over the place looking for a cheap meal of birds and bats. That's not happening.
I saw bats in Spain and they usually nest near farms. Far above or far away from anything that moves that's even close to their size. They can ruin crops. There are exterminators for bat nests. Especially if you see them buzzing a nest when the sun is at high noon. That is typically rabies from a bad little mouse tapas dinner.
16 posted on
02/14/2007 6:19:50 PM PST by
BobS
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