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~Star~Crash~ All & Everything

Jenn

Active member
Here's a picture of my feral cat thats been living here for about five years. You might be able to see her one ear has a straight clip in it. Someone told me vets do that with feral cats to indicate they have been spayed or neutered. Not sure how accurate that information is. Anyway here she is (Buffy) having a snack, and hiding under the Japanese Maple pretending shes a lion or something, who knows.
 

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Drumskinz

Well-known member
hash to Roz was 70%… which is very very good …calculating the amount of Roz to be extracted per pound of dry material is anywhere between five and 20%.. first full wash scheduled for tomorrow :canabis:
Cool on yer first full wash...excellent return on Hash to Rosin...watched a video the other day from nugsmasher's youtube channel making live rosin and the got 30 grams out of 38 grams in which is 78%...that vanilla looking stuff can make ya mouth water a bit
 

Lester Beans

Frequent Flyer
Veteran
I had a Opossum who threw things at me all the time. We had 3 of them raised from extreme young. Mother was hit in road and they were exposed, eyes closed, pink little things. I cut them out brought them in and we nursed them. 2 males and one female.

Fast forward, we released the smaller male as he was fierce and a hunter. Incredible speed and I'm confident he did just fine outdoors.

The other two quickly became domesticated, well as much as an opossum can lol, and we didn't have any confidence in them surviving in the wild.

They had great long lives, 5 years plus, living under our couch, using the litter box and scaring the shit out of visitors.

Especially the large male Paco. He would sit on the couch like a human and eat French fries lengthwise whilst having a wack with his back paw (opposable thumbs in all) My wife's friend is still scarred for life from that visual 😂😂😂

The are very picky eaters. If they weren't in the mood for something I gave them, they would hurl it at me. It was funny and I enjoyed their antics. They needed variety so lots of fruit and vegetables. Crickets, earthworms, etc. we would release 3 dozen crickets on the kitchen floor and they would have themcaught and eaten in under 15 sec. They can only see about 6" but in that six inches they can see hyper well. Man are they fast when catching crickets.

Anyway I miss our opossums and was fun to go down memory lane. Sorry for the long winded story.

Have a great day everyone!!
 

flower~power

~Star~Crash~
ICMag Donor
Veteran
I had a Opossum who threw things at me all the time. We had 3 of them raised from extreme young. Mother was hit in road and they were exposed, eyes closed, pink little things. I cut them out brought them in and we nursed them. 2 males and one female.

Fast forward, we released the smaller male as he was fierce and a hunter. Incredible speed and I'm confident he did just fine outdoors.

The other two quickly became domesticated, well as much as an opossum can lol, and we didn't have any confidence in them surviving in the wild.

They had great long lives, 5 years plus, living under our couch, using the litter box and scaring the shit out of visitors.

Especially the large male Paco. He would sit on the couch like a human and eat French fries lengthwise whilst having a wack with his back paw (opposable thumbs in all) My wife's friend is still scarred for life from that visual 😂😂😂

The are very picky eaters. If they weren't in the mood for something I gave them, they would hurl it at me. It was funny and I enjoyed their antics. They needed variety so lots of fruit and vegetables. Crickets, earthworms, etc. we would release 3 dozen crickets on the kitchen floor and they would have themcaught and eaten in under 15 sec. They can only see about 6" but in that six inches they can see hyper well. Man are they fast when catching crickets.

Anyway I miss our opossums and was fun to go down memory lane. Sorry for the long winded story.

Have a great day everyone!!
Cool story 😊 … how did you learn to care for them when they were young?
 

bigtacofarmer

Well-known member
Veteran
We raised a baby racoon until it was around 6 months old. Amazing intelligence. That thing learned where everything in the house was immediately. Was trying to open the refrigerator at around 8 weeks. We had considered keeping him longer but he started to try to stand up for himself if we try to stop him from doing anything. Such as chew the cords behind the television or destroying kids belongings. He was great friends with the dog and kids but ultimately he was turning into a jerk. So I took him into the woods with a few days of dog food and a banana and took off while he wasn't looking. He would follow us anywhere.

His name was squirrel
 

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