|
Quoted:
From the Arkansas Game website: As a non-game animal, the armadillo is protected by the Arkansas Wildlife Code. If you have problems with armadillos, call your county wildlife officer, and ask for help.
Nice job. I think OPs had a heart attack. Or is playing possum. |
|
Quoted:
Quoted:
From the Arkansas Game website: As a non-game animal, the armadillo is protected by the Arkansas Wildlife Code. If you have problems with armadillos, call your county wildlife officer, and ask for help.
Nice job. Arock? Yeah, that's me. Fuck all those laws and stuff right? Cuz that's what's good for gun owners. |
|
Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
From the Arkansas Game website: As a non-game animal, the armadillo is protected by the Arkansas Wildlife Code. If you have problems with armadillos, call your county wildlife officer, and ask for help.
Nice job. Arock? Yeah, that's me. Fuck all those laws and stuff right? Cuz that's what's good for gun owners. He actually ran under my car.
|
|
Quoted:
From the Arkansas Game website: As a non-game animal, the armadillo is protected by the Arkansas Wildlife Code. If you have problems with armadillos, call your county wildlife officer, and ask for help.
Nice job. So Arkansas as a stupid wildlife code, your point? |
Don't those things carry leprosy?
“The important thing is that people should be discouraged from consuming armadillo flesh or handling it,” Dr. Truman said.
|
|
They are susceptible to it. Not necessarily carriers: The armadillo is one of the few mammals besides man susceptible to leprosy, and in recent years, researchers looking for better treatments and a vaccine for the disease have used armadillos as laboratory animals.
|
|
Quoted:
From the Arkansas Game website: As a non-game animal, the armadillo is protected by the Arkansas Wildlife Code. If you have problems with armadillos, call your county wildlife officer, and ask for help.
Nice job. Dude, he lives in ARizona, so I don't know where this whole ArKansas thing came from. And besides, that's clearly a fish; until I get my eyeglasses, I can't tell much more than that. My understanding is that armadillos are not native to the US. I don't understand how the Arkansas Wildlife Code can declare them protected. If I saw a panda bear in my yard, I'd shoot it; the nearest stalk of bamboo is over a half mile away, and since they are notoriously lazy animals, I'm pretty sure I'm just doing him a favor. I never thought to check to see if they are considered a protected species in VA. |
|
Quoted:
Quoted:
From the Arkansas Game website: As a non-game animal, the armadillo is protected by the Arkansas Wildlife Code. If you have problems with armadillos, call your county wildlife officer, and ask for help.
Nice job. Dude, he lives in ARizona, so I don't know where this whole ArKansas thing came from. And besides, that's clearly a fish; until I get my eyeglasses, I can't tell much more than that. My understanding is that armadillos are not native to the US. I don't understand how the Arkansas Wildlife Code can declare them protected. If I saw a panda bear in my yard, I'd shoot it; the nearest stalk of bamboo is over a half mile away, and since they are notoriously lazy animals, I'm pretty sure I'm just doing him a favor. I never thought to check to see if they are considered a protected species in VA.
x3 http://www.stateabbreviations.us/ |
|
Beaver, coyote, muskrat, nutria, opossum, raccoon, squirrel, striped skunk and nongame wildlife other than migratory birds and endangered species that are causing damage to personal property may be taken during daylight hours or trapped the entire year .
Link Was it causing damage? Was it taken during the day? |
|
Quoted:
Quoted:
Dude, you live in New England, that's not even a fucking state. Where did you get New England from? NE? lol Thank God. Someone else from Arizona. Can you please set the condescending yankee from New England straight on this whole abbreviation thing? I suppose the next thing he's going to say is that the Nebraska Territory is finally a state. Look, we have a dead fish in someone's yard, and then someone else mentions, out of the blue mind you, that it's somehow illegal to kill invasive species in Arkansas. Just wait 'til they declare feral hogs "protected". |
|
An interesting experiment would be to take an isolated area, wall it off, and then let the armadillos, nutria, feral hogs, ailanthus, kudzu, johnson grass, emerald ashbore, et cetera, all battle it out. It might give us some interesting insight as to what the world is going to look like in a few thousand years.
As you can tell, I'm not a big fan of invasive species. If a Monacan Indian takes me out, I'm not sure I'd really have it in me to begrudge him. |




