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Is it just me...

Started by nastygunz, October 27, 2019, 05:40:28 AM

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nastygunz

....or do these acorns look like booby's?  :innocentwhistle:

slagmaker

Don't bring shame to our sport.

He died for dipshits too.

Okanagan

You two remind me of the fellow taking the Rorschach test.  Everything he saw...



nastygunz


JohnP

Quote from: Okanagan on October 27, 2019, 09:48:23 AM
You two remind me of the fellow taking the Rorschach test.  Everything he saw...


Looked like .................ACORNS
When they come for mine they better bring theirs

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nastygunz

I now call them hootercorns.

Coyotes-R-Us

Is that what acorns look like?
Never seen them in person.
Kida looks like fake boobs.
old is the new young


Todd Rahm

I don’t know. I kind of feel kind Marty Feldmans starting at me?

nastygunz

 I can kind of see those big old bug out Marty Feldman eyes  :yoyo:

nastygunz

R U serious  about never having seen acorns before?


Quote from: Coyotes-R-Us on November 03, 2019, 04:53:58 PM
Is that what acorns look like?
Never seen them in person.
Kida looks like fake boobs.


Coyotes-R-Us

 :naughty:
I live in Montana...
NO NUT TREES HERE.
I have seen them in pictures only.
old is the new young

remrogers

There are scrub oaks in Colorado, Wyoming, and Oregon. Hard to believe you don't have them In Montana.

nastygunz

 Acorns are the food source that runs the show in these parts. You find good acorn crop and you'll find deer and turkeys and bear. And squirrel of course :yoyo:

JohnP

Our oak trees are covered in them.  Should be a great deer season for those who drew a late Dec deer tag.
When they come for mine they better bring theirs

nastygunz

Pretty interesting:

"Bur Oak - Montana Field Guide
Bur oak is Montana's only native oak. In MT bur oak is restricted to the extreme southeastern corner of the state in Powder River and Carter counties(Vanderhorst et al."

We are covered with them in New England lots of them and some real monsters.