Showing 41 - 50 of 53 posts found matching keyword: great deer uprising of 2010

Don't be alarmed, but the following picture was taken about a half mile from the Newnan city limits:

Talking turkey!

Those are wild turkeys. (One of the turkeys has been circled for you city folk who can't recognize turkeys with their feathers still intact.) They've been seen in the area near Country Club Road off and on for weeks. Technically, it is legal for the wild turkeys to loiter on this street corner, as it is outside of the city limits. Just because these turkeys are within their rights doesn't make them welcome, however.

These turkeys are less than a mile from the entry to the Newnan Country Club, "Newnan's only truly private country club." No Country Club patron wants those dirty turkeys loitering within sight of their immaculate tennis courts. Isn't eliminating that sort of unwanted element the very reason the Country Club is a members-only institution?

There's a reason we have a national holiday once a year in which all Americans are required to eat turkey, and this is it: to keep our wealthiest, most socially-exclusive citizens safe from the poultry underclasses that would lazily litter their lawns with their droppings. It's time for the county government to talk turkey and do something about this fowl situation. Government should work for the people, not these jive turkeys!

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I was taking my poodles for a walk in the early evening twilight when I saw something I had never seen before in the woods just off the road. Thinking quickly, I grabbed my cell phone and snapped this amazing picture:

It's the most famous cryptozoological monster ever: the Belt Road Booger!

Can you believe my horror at seeing that here, in the city? My heart was racing! After looking into the depth of my soul with its piercing gaze of doom, it disappeared into the woods, and I rushed home to document the incident for the world.

Although, come to look at it, that's not a very good image. My cell phone camera photo is grainy in the low light. Hold on, I'll use my l33t computer skills to digitally enhance the image:

I'll just digitally enhance the satellite image to reveal the brand of jeans he is wearing.

See? How am I supposed to sleep at night knowing that those, those... creatures could be lurking just outside my fence? This was supposed to be a nice neighborhood. Who let those things in here?

If years of watching horror movies have taught me nothing, it's that no one believes anything until you show them a good picture. Anyone can manipulate digital images these days. I'd better take my description of the beast to a professional sketch artist:

It's sucking my will to live!

That looks like... ah! Deer! The deer are invading my neighborhood! Won't somebody do something! Somebody, please, think of the poodles!

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Grooming a poodle outdoors on an unusually warm January afternoon yesterday, I heard the unmistakable siren's call of an ice cream truck in my neighborhood. That sort of thing isn't surprising in Newnan. I hear ice cream trucks all summer long. Just not in January. Never in January.

What kind of ice cream truck would bother operating in the coldest month of the year, even if there was a surprisingly pleasant break in an otherwise bitter winter? What ice cream truck operator would have such a poor business model, bothering to incur the cost of gas and product for one day in January? Could there be some motivation other than profit? I wonder....

Spider-Man® Bar is made out of maltodextrin!

No! Drop that Spider-Man® Bar!

It's just those damn dirty deer and their latest tactic in the Great Deer Uprising of 2010: luring kids into eating delicious frozen snacks all year long! Popsicle® brand Spider-Man® Bars are both delicious and vegetarian. If Newnan's youth become addicted, their families won't need to hunt deer for sustenance anymore. It's so insidiously clever, it just might work!

You may have won this round, deer, but you haven't heard the last of humanity. We'll be back. For more delicious Spider-Man® Bars! Yum!

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Crafty Georgia hunters have already solved the problem of wildlife that has learned to shoot. The best way not to get shot with your own gun by your prey? Don't go near your own gun. The Augusta Chronicle reports:

Someone actually built an Internet-controlled network of Web cameras and shotguns aimed into a food plot on a Georgia Power Co. right-of-way last fall. ... According to a Nov. 19 bulletin from the Georgia Information Sharing & Analysis Center, "three shotguns were set up on a platform and linked to a Web-accessible camera system that allows the guns to be fired via an Internet connection."

Of course, if you're not around your gun, how are you going to stop the wildlife from just taking it and using it against you? While at first thought, this may sound like a fine plan, but it has 2 major drawbacks.

  1. All this is really doing is helping wildlife avoid a 5-day waiting period at their local gun shop, and
  2. Having guns connected to keyboards really helps hoofed animals bypass trigger guards.

Smile, you're on candid web camera.

So keep your guns where you can reach them, hunters. You're going to need them.

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While the ongoing Great Deer Uprising of 2010 has been very deadly with casualties mounting on both sides, at least there is one thing that the deer still can't do: shoot us. Hopefully they also can't use the internet, as Reuters News Service has just reported:

A wounded fox shot its would-be killer in [Grodno] Belarus by pulling the trigger on the hunter's gun as the pair scuffled after the man tried to finish the animal off with the butt of the rifle. The unnamed hunter, who had approached the fox after wounding it from a distance, was in hospital with a leg wound, while the fox made its escape.

Should these European foxes ever manage to contact American deer, I fear that hunters everywhere could find themselves in the crosshairs. Orange vests will turn red with spilled blood as deer couple their newfound knowledge with America's relatively lax gun control laws.

Let us all do our parts to keep these two parties apart lest we find that our forests filled with the smell of gunpowder and spine-curdling cries of "Remember Bambi's Mom!"

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The Great Deer Uprising continues into 2011, and things are getting serious. It appears that the entirety of Coweta County has become a war zone.

According to the Times-Herald, in the wee hours of Wednesday, January 5, a Lieutenant in the Coweta County sheriff's office lost control of his car on Andrew Bailey Road. Coweta County Sheriff Mike Yeager told the press that "speed does not seem to be a factor in this." Instead, the blame was placed where it belonged: on a deer.

The assault by the unidentified deer on the on the Sherrif's Lieutenant took place a little more than 2 miles outside the Newnan city limits in a lawless, suburban wilderness. Unlike within the Newnan city limits, wild animals remain legal in unincorporated Coweta County. Look for the county to close that loophole as soon as possible to prevent future deer terrorism.

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Battle lines are being drawn between the pro- and anti-deer contingents. Like any conflict resulting in a loss of life, the bleeding hearts protest intellectively as the warmongers march. Fortunately, the Fourth Estate is present to chronicle the affair for posterity. The following snippets were taken directly from editions of the Newnan Times-Herald last week.

I am concerned for the safety of deer. I was traveling from Atlanta to LaGrange on Nov. 14 around 10 a.m. I could not believe how many dead deer I saw dismembered along the highway from Newnan to LaGrange. I wished I had my camera to film the sight. The highway lanes were a bloody mess. I know the county makes enough money to build fences or walls to keep the adult deer and their babies safe. -- " Animal lover concerned about deer," December 4, 2010

That is what it sounds like when doves cry. The response from the opposition hawks was, like life itself, straightforward and brutal. There will be no quarter for the deer!

Yes, it is disconcerting to see dead dear along the highways, as a previous letter stated, but we are viewing the unintended consequences of community growth and building high-speed highways through the habitats of all kinds of wild critters. It is cost-prohibitive to erect fences or walls to protect them. Even if governments had the money, I'm sure they would spend it on more worthwhile causes. -- "Deer die from loss of habitat," December 11, 2010

In other words, who are deer to stand in the way of the steel wheels of progress? Let the heathen savages be beaten back; they have no right to the land of their forefathers! Manifest Destiny yields to no one, man or cervine.

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Dateline: USA, today:

As deer hunting season gets underway around the country, trauma surgeons in Ohio have a message for hunters: It's not the guns but the trees that will get you. A 10-year survey of hunting-related injuries at two major trauma centers in Ohio found that falling out of trees is how the majority of deer hunters are injured.

It seems that some doctors can't see the deer for the forest. Those aren't "accidents." I read A Separate Peace. Grown men don't just fall out of trees. They're pushed.

I hadn't realized that the battlefields of the Great Deer Uprising of 2010 were so far spread as Ohio. Or that the Uprising has already been a decade in the making. Is it really possible that we're at the 10-year anniversary of the Great Deer Uprising of 2000 with no end in sight? Oh, the inhumanity!

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This week I was forced to swerve my car because the driver in front of me had was braking to avoid two deer. No, this was not on the highway as you might expect, but in a Food Lion parking lot. It can't be a coincidence that deer would be invading our shopping centers as we gear up for the merchandising bonanza that is Halloween. That's right: deer are out for your candy. And they'll take it any way they can get it.

This is a real, unretouched photo found on foxnews.com credited to the Associated Press. Seriously.

This insidious menace is only the latest escalation in the Great Deer Uprising of 2010. Unable to enter the city of Newnan legally, the deer are now resorting to a crafty ruse in order to sneak into town under cover of darkness and steal the candy that our children earned the hard way: by going door to door and extorting it under threat of violence!

I cannot tell a lie. I did not photoshop this image that I found on the website of the Boston Globe that was credited to George Rizer. No sir, I did not.

If we let the deer get away with this, we'll only be letting the terrorists win! (Terrorist deer, that is. Make no mistake, terrorist children should still encouraged: it's the American way!) So this year, check under that mask when a cute ne'er-do-well comes banging on your door. There's a chance you'll find that he just may not be human. Far worse than zombies or vampires, he could be a deer in disguise!

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They're back! Just when you thought it was safe to return to the roads, the deer are striking back as the Great Deer Uprising of 2010 continues.

At 8:27PM on Tuesday night, a deer struck a motorist, sending the car out of control across traffic, ultimately resulting in the death of the driver. It's no coincidence that the car the deer chose to strike was an Oldsmobile Intrigue. Reports The Times-Herald:

[A] witness in a separate vehicle saw [the] vehicle strike the deer and lose control. The first Coweta County firefighter to arrive at the scene also saw the deer lying injured beside the road before the animal recovered and ran off.
...
"There is no doubt she struck the deer," [Georgia State Patrol Sgt. Lance] Greene said. "That's what caused her to lose control."

It ran off! The saboteur is still on the loose!

The attack took place just outside of the city limits where deer are legally allowed to congregate beyond the jurisdiction of the Newnan city ordinance prohibiting wild animals (see February 12, 2010 for details). As a result, no charges will be filed in the case, according to Sgt. Greene. Those clever bastards! They are using our own laws (and cars) against us!

Will this reign of deer terror never end?

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To be continued...

 

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