Andy’s new video passion is baby squirrel videos. I suspect it isn’t because he finds them cute…!
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Oops! I didn’t consider that possibility! Of course, you sometimes post alternative recipes using kosher ingredients. (I personally wouldn’t knowingly eat squirrel. I had rabbits as pets when I was kid, so rabbits aren’t “edible” in that sense, either.)
I see what you mean! I’ve met people who happily ate beef but wouldn’t think of slaughtering their own cow whom they perceived a pet.
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Nebraska used to have “The Beef State” on its licence plates and many children are involved in 4H projects where they raise, pamper, show, then sell animals that are essentially pets at the end of the process…!
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I can imagine how it makes them feel.
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Now it is on a vanity plate that features a scene of cattle grazing in the Sandhills.
The topics that appear on them. Not all are “strange”.
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Ah, yes.
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Five hundred people signing an application for a given design seems like a small entry price. I imagine that reflects the minimum size of a roll of the decal material used on the blanks or some such thing. The regular plate celebrating the 150th anniversary of Nebraska statehood shows what happens when a governor has the final say on the design. By coincidence, however, my license plate number, one that has been in the family since the early 1930s, is 65-A150. (65 – county I live in; A = added in front of the number for the first 999 plate numbers issued in the county; 150 = the family number that indicates I have the 150th plate number issued for the county. Originally, the plate would have read 65-150. The addition of the alphanumeric scheme came about when the state ran out of numbers for some larger counties and they had to use the scheme most states already use. All that said, even with a nasty regular plate, I had a sesquicentennial-like number for the Nebraska sesquicentennial! With a plate frame on and the numbers printed over the design, you can’t really tell the significance of the plate without a close examination. The plate we had prior to this travesty was quite handsome, and featured a meadowlark and goldenrod, the state bird and flower.
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This is fascinating; I never paid attention to those details.
Hungry look is a dead giveaway!
Yes, I told him you probably has some yummy recipes for sparrow stew and squirrel jubilee if he wants me to ask you! LOL!
Do not! Squirrels are not kosher animals. Neither are rabbits, incidentally, so rabbit stew is also not my thing.
Oops! I didn’t consider that possibility! Of course, you sometimes post alternative recipes using kosher ingredients. (I personally wouldn’t knowingly eat squirrel. I had rabbits as pets when I was kid, so rabbits aren’t “edible” in that sense, either.)
I see what you mean! I’ve met people who happily ate beef but wouldn’t think of slaughtering their own cow whom they perceived a pet.
Nebraska used to have “The Beef State” on its licence plates and many children are involved in 4H projects where they raise, pamper, show, then sell animals that are essentially pets at the end of the process…!
I can imagine how it makes them feel.
Now it is on a vanity plate that features a scene of cattle grazing in the Sandhills.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandhills_(Nebraska)
http://www.nebraskacattlemen.org/thebeefstatelicenseplate.aspx
How interesting – thank you for the links, Doug.
Strange business, these specialty plates!
Why strange?
The topics that appear on them. Not all are “strange”.
Ah, yes.
Five hundred people signing an application for a given design seems like a small entry price. I imagine that reflects the minimum size of a roll of the decal material used on the blanks or some such thing. The regular plate celebrating the 150th anniversary of Nebraska statehood shows what happens when a governor has the final say on the design. By coincidence, however, my license plate number, one that has been in the family since the early 1930s, is 65-A150. (65 – county I live in; A = added in front of the number for the first 999 plate numbers issued in the county; 150 = the family number that indicates I have the 150th plate number issued for the county. Originally, the plate would have read 65-150. The addition of the alphanumeric scheme came about when the state ran out of numbers for some larger counties and they had to use the scheme most states already use. All that said, even with a nasty regular plate, I had a sesquicentennial-like number for the Nebraska sesquicentennial! With a plate frame on and the numbers printed over the design, you can’t really tell the significance of the plate without a close examination. The plate we had prior to this travesty was quite handsome, and featured a meadowlark and goldenrod, the state bird and flower.
This is fascinating; I never paid attention to those details.
Does he have a recipe book nearby? 🙂
He tells me he prefers the paleo diet, but doesn’t have time to mess with recipes: He eats them raw (in his fantasies…).
My first clue: He kept licking his lips…
dood….we suzpect sew two !!!!!!!! 🙂 ♥♥
oh I bet he would love them… to pieces LOL… I prefer movies with bigger foodables like Moby Dick or Fury ;O)))
LOL! I have no doubt of that! Why would a proper doggy mess with a n=mouse or a tweety bird?!
So Andy is thinking “Yum !” ?
Could be. Could be!