Posted by:
FR
at Tue Feb 17 09:22:24 2009 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by FR ]
Have you been paying attention, I have lived in Tenn, Fla, La, and I have not had a problem watching snakes. In fact, you have much greater concentrations of kings in the east, and more favorable weather.
If you think about it, the desert is mostly the hardest place to find numbers of snakes, due to its extreme heat and dryness.
That does force us to understand what they actually do. If we want to see anything, we have to learn what they are really doing.
Also, the excuses your making, I have heard so many times before. You know, the reason I don't see this and that is because yada yada yada yada. Sir, either find it or stop making theory when facts are available.
Of course, I do understand, what I think is only temporary. And surely it will improve and become more accurate as long as I keep studying them. But what I REPORT, is what I find. ITs not theory, its a report of actual events.
Bill wants us to get along, he says your smart. This I question. Smart is understanding the difference between theory and a factual report. Its fact that kings can and do live together in captivity. I and OTHERS have done it for decades. That you can't understand that is your personal problem. Its fact, that kings live in dense numbers in nature, anybody that has worked speckleds in march will surely understand that.
So tell me what you have seen. Cheers
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