![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_biggrin.gif)
A story that warms my heart. But of course we didn't hear about it in the news.
http://disinter.wordpress.com/?s=wyoming+sheriff
Johnny
I've seen that stuff you build. Can't believe you'd try to pawn it off on the brethren here.Malamute wrote:Hey, I'm here to help anyone that wants to move to Wyoming. I'm just finishing a house for sale.
Custom quality, log sided frame house on 5 acres, in a rural area near the mountains.
....and I'll help you unload your stuff when you move in.
See Johnny, thats the problem, all the good folk are leaving, and the kooks from CA are moving here because their state sucks, but they don't realize it sucked because of their fruitbat politics. CO needs more good conservative/libertarians to move in before it becomes uninhabitable an I have to move north. BTW, it just started snowing here at the new place, and I mean like 15 minutes ago with quarter size flakes, and there is already an inch on the ground. Thank you Algore for Global warming.Blackhawk wrote:Frank,
You two can't fool us. We know yall are in cahoots together.![]()
I'll be glad when the wife graduates this May. I'm itching to get back up north and see some real mountains. I left Montrose CO in '92 and I've heard its double since then. I was watching Nugents show the other day and there was his wife going thru a cooking setup with a resturant in Montrose. Things like that make me long for the hills again.
Johnny
Blackhawk wrote:I'll be glad when the wife graduates this May. I'm itching to get back up north and see some real mountains. I left Montrose CO in '92 and I've heard its double since then. I was watching Nugents show the other day and there was his wife going thru a cooking setup with a resturant in Montrose. Things like that make me long for the hills again.
Actually, since I moved from Breckenridge I haven't seen many magpies. At my other place we get a lot of doves, bluebirds, finches, crows, ravens, hawks, eagles, and some very secretive owls whos droppings I have found and I've heard them hooting, but in all the years there I have yet to catch more than a shadow going by on dark nights. If you can go by the droppings, they are very large.Blackhawk wrote:Snowing in mid April! I was mid 70's here today. I thought only Magpies lived in that country
Johnny
Blackhawk wrote:I forgot that a good friend of mine lived in Shavanaw (sp?) Valley. He lived next to a farmer that had a bunch of land. He last name was Secuf? Or Se something. He used to let us hunt his land and give us crack shells to run the deer off. Course we wound up having a war with each other with the cracker shells.To be young again...
Paul,AmBraCol wrote:Blackhawk wrote:I forgot that a good friend of mine lived in Shavanaw (sp?) Valley. He lived next to a farmer that had a bunch of land. He last name was Secuf? Or Se something. He used to let us hunt his land and give us crack shells to run the deer off. Course we wound up having a war with each other with the cracker shells.To be young again...
Seacat would be my guess. A good friend of mine. He always wants to know when I'm coming back to shoot some more prairie dogs.And the spelling is Shavano (SHAV uh nah) valley. Still have a passel of relatives farming down there - in spite of the encroaching subdivisions moving in all over the area...
Blackhawk wrote:Yes sir that would be him. I was thinking last night after posting this and I believe his name was Ron Seacat but I may be mistaken. My friends were Clyde & Eric Brown in the late 80's. I believe the house they rented was Mr. Seacats. It sat right out front of the property by the road. Funny sometimes how small the world can be.
Looks like this.Malamute wrote:" Malamute, What town is your cabin near."
It's just out of Cody, hard up against the Beartooth Mts. Small unincorporated community of about 300 people.