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This seems to have spawned a life of its own so I will tell you what happened.
During one dry summer, after a cook-out, I threw some watermelon rinds (with some fesh still on) into the woods across the street from my house.
A couple-few days later I was out in the same woods with my daughter's dog and on our way out we came across the watermelon rinds. Most were eaten side down, so I flipped one over just to look. It looked all moldy. I flipped another one over and it had "mold" on it to. But one piece didn't have anything but rind- it was eaten side up.
I took the dog home and grabbed two different powers of magnifying glass and went back to the watermelon rinds.
The "mold" wasn't mold. Ticks were all over the rind- I dropped it like a hot potato.
My thinking is that they were after the water or even better they were looking for a place that animals may gather- ie around discarded food.
Did I ever say, imply or think that ticks prefer watermelon to animals? No.
However I did put orange rinds out and nothing happnd so I would infer they prefer watermelon rinds to orange rinds.
I will repeat the process as soon as we have a dry spell -> 2-4 weeks without rain and with hot temps (80+) may do it
You've been caught in a lie (again)
ReplyDeletehttp://www.antievolution.org/cgi-bin/ikonboard/ikonboard.cgi?act=ST;f=14;t=6647;st=2580#entry190107
You are the most dishonest fuck.
Cheers!
What lie?
ReplyDeleteI didn't provide any details at ARN, so what?
BTW putting watermelon rinds in the woods isn't littering as they are biodegradable.
An I do have some pretty cool equipment.
IOW RichTard you are such a willfully ignorant fuck you will believe anything someone tells you as long as it goes against me.
Too bad guntherclit doesn't have anything to support its claims...