Roadkill been involved????? If you know you will understand….
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
To enter, all you need to do is add an image of yourself at the range below! Subscribers get more entries, check out the plans below for a better chance of winning!
Join the contest SubscribeRoadkill been involved????? If you know you will understand….
No ideaRoadkill been involved????? If you know you will understand….
That’s no Cougar, that’s a fucking sabertooth tiger!
Some good metal there....just get out the torch.
Simulated. Not real.
There were about 3x more than this map shows and the lines were different. There was a herd of 500 that roamed from Red River county in Texas up to Kiamichi until the early 1880s. The entire herd was wiped out North of Bonham around then. The Red River bottom had stray herds up until 1900. Several large ranches in and around Caprock Canyon had from 10-40 head and there were lots of 2-4 roamer groups all the way up into Utah. Same goes for parts of Montana and North Dakota. There are still stray small herds roaming around to this day.
Only two herds in the US have no maternal cattle genes.
One interesting fact is that many of the fords across the rivers in Texas and Oklahoma are old buffalo crossings.
Another is that the Commanche were a trading empire and their main exports were buffalo products (leather and jerky) and horses. They were the ones to build the market and demand for Buffalo robes and leather and were the primary driver for the herds' destruction in Texas and Oklahoma. They sold stuff to buy guns and powder - so killing off the Buffalo, denying access to hunting grounds, interdicting the markets, bringing in competitors which drove down prices, and burning their villages - dried up their funds.
The area between Dallas and Caddo Lake was a DMZ between the Cherokee/Caddo and the Comanches. It had little surface water in the Summer and was very hard to cross when wet or dry so it became a wildlife park of sorts. It had Elk, Wolves and Jaguars up until the 1880s. The area was also found to grow cotton very very well and so it got settled fast after the Civil War and the Railroad came and that ended it.
One other fact is that eared cattle became very numerous across Texas from Waco south. Up until the early 1900s just about any good kid could make a good living rousing them up and driving them to market.
No, don’t take a torch to it, that’s an early cherry picker before the incorporated hydraulics. The upright shaft with the turn wheel on is threaded into the upper anchor. Turning the wheel, raises and lowers lift arm. Hadn’t seen one of those in years. Very reliable if used with common sense and not overloaded. Would love to have it!
Good idea if you are in a tourism slump.
I shoot .40S&W, and use Glock pistols to do it...doing my part to be happy while making the haters miserable.