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How to turn $6 to $16000 in few days of web crawling

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Upscale
Posted: Wed Jun 13, 2007 9:46 am
Guest
"Clive Sherriff" <clive.sherriff@ntlworld.com> wrote in message
Quote:

It is the similarity of markings, size, body build etc that
prompt the original question on how much, if at all, ac
cats markings can change.

I'd say it's completely possible up to a point. A cat being on it's own out
in less than desirable weather conditions would grow a thicker coat and with
that might come some colour or marking change. Of course, you know now what
you have to do to prevent these questions from occurring again? Take the cat
and have it microchipped.
 
Shadow Walker
Posted: Mon Jun 25, 2007 12:59 pm
Guest
Some things can change depending on age of the cat an older cat is less
likely to change but a cat in there teens would get more white and some
paterns would fade. A young adult cat can have some small spots get bigger
and some vanish completley. While you are wondering if this is your cat
think about this. It very well could be your cat but he is so tramtised it
could take him months to come around to his normal self. You really should
have him microchipped, vetted again to make sure that even if he isen't your
cat that he won't be sick later on with some deadly disease and have him
tested to make sure he isent already totoing something in his blood. You
would also do better to get him nuetured as well help prevent his wanderin
off and producing unwanted babies.


"Clive Sherriff" <clive.sherriff@ntlworld.com> wrote in message
news:vdwbi.4568$P57.4323@newsfe4-gui.ntli.net...
Quote:
In January my 3 year old Ginger and White cat, Tynes, went
missing following some snow. I'd advertised for his return but
got only vauge sighting in response.

Two weeks ago ( beginning of June) however I was contacted about
such a cat breaking into houses through catflaps and stealing
food, about a mile from my house on the other side of the
village.

After a lot of trouble we have now last night trapped the cat
(who has aquired a PhD in Escapology and Entrapment Avoidance)
and it shows almost identical markings to my cat confirmed by
photographs, though is rather thin. At first I was sure it was
Tynes.

But not quite now - in that some of this cats white fur areas are
just slightly larger, and a couople of small ginger spots on his
face have dissapeared. All my cat's other distinctive marks are
there ( Broad chubby face, off centre white nose streak, Ginger
spot on left leg, a thin white band over scruff of the neck etc
etc)

Otherwise, build, size, eye colour, ears etc etc are the same.
Though very hard to catch in the neighbour's houses, he has
apparently settled into my house, almost as if he knows it. ( he
has not been allowed out yet) He has probably been living rough
as he is very dirty and rather thin now.

THE QUESTION TO THE GROUP IS ======

After a winter moult, or perhaps poor diet during the
last few months, how likely is it for a cat's "definitive" colour
pattern to change in these subtle ways?

Is this Tynes ? -- or do I need to rename him ???

Tynes

With apologies for posting this to a few other Cat groups too).

 
Ted
Posted: Mon Aug 06, 2007 7:17 pm
Guest
On Aug 6, 12:05 pm, gringogirl <sumarli...@yahoo.com> wrote:
Quote:
To the willfully malicious Mexican with two toddlers and three Jack
Russell Terriers at Hazeldale dog park August 5, 2007,

You disgust me! Your existence blights the human race. You are a key
reason people want illegal Mexicans deported.

The negligence you displayed with your children and dogs was
incredibly shocking. You thought it was funny when your puppy almost
hanged itself while being tied up to a picnic table in an off leash
fenced in dog park while you ignored it. Even more shocking was when
you lifted the puppy up to your toddler daughter and let her
repeatedly hit the puppy in the face! At one point, while you were
watching your daughter, she stepped on the puppy's neck pinning it
down to yell at it!

What do you think you are teaching your children? How do you think the
dog is going to react? When the child beats on the dog, the dog
doesn't understand it and will likely bite the child in fear and
defense -- then you beat the dog. Are you that stupid of a human or do
you not have a single scruple in your head? I think it is the later
because when I confronted you, you pretended not to speak English,
however only ten minutes before you spoke to me in English!

I feel so badly for your kids and the dogs. You are lucky I could not
find the police before you left. Maybe I should have bought the dogs
from you right on the spot, then reported you to child services.

You deserve to be hung by a leash in a field full of people who will
ignore your cries for help.

Location: Beaverton

---------------------------------------------------------------------------­-----
 
Guest
Posted: Sat Sep 15, 2007 1:05 pm
http://www.fergusfallsjournal.com/news/2007/sep/13/donkey-rescued/

Donkey rescued from well
By Jeff Hage The Daily Journal (Minn.)
Published Thursday, September 13, 2007

TOWN OF MAINE — Bryan Nelson had to look twice Thursday when he
looked down his abandoned well.

“A donkey was the last thing I expected to see,” Nelson said.

A donkey belonging to Warren Gundberg fell into the abandoned well
sometime Thursday morning, prompting the Underwood Fire Department
to embark on a dramatic rescue mission that included pulling away
earth with a Bobcat tractor and dismantling the well block by block
in order to free the animal.

Underwood firefighters didn’t know what to expect when they arrived
on scene.

“The call came in as a ‘donkey down a well’,” said Underwood Fire
Chief Bruce Huseth.

“We’ve had lots of cow rescues from ice and lagoons, but never a
donkey,” Huseth said.

When firefighters saw the donkey they knew they just couldn’t pull
it from the well so they went to work clearing the earth around the
well and taking it apart piece by piece.

Once the west wall of the well was dismantled, firefighters put a
harness on the donkey and guided it out on a rope. Other then
bruises, the donkey appeared fine.

Nelson was planning to someday fill the well, so the fact that
fighters were able to dismantle it worked out for the best, Huseth
said.

“Whatever it takes,” Nelson said as he watched his well come down.

“I love animals and I’m just glad it’s OK,” he said.

Nelson said it appeared that the donkey wandered from the Gundberg
farm and fell through some boards that were covering the top of the
well.

“I came out the door and noticed a hole in the boards. By the time I
got over to it my dogs had gotten there and they were kind of
freaking out,” Nelson said.

That’s when Nelson looked down the well.

“It was a big surprise,” he said.

Nelson went down to the Gundberg’s about a mile away and asked if
they were missing a donkey.

“When they said ‘yes’ I told them it was in my well,” Nelson said.

Nelson and the Gundberg’s don’t have any experience in rescuing
donkeys from a well, so they called the humane society, a
veterinarian and then the sheriff’s department trying to find a
rescue net.

“None of them had one, so we got a tractor and were going to try and
pull him out but decided to call the rescue squad instead,” he said.

Gundberg was thrilled his donkey escaped the episode unharmed except
for the fact that it lost some fur from rubbing up against the
concrete walls of the well.

Minutes after the rescue, Gundberg was walking the donkey on the
makeshift rope leash that had been used to pull the animal to
safety.

The donkey was even eating from grass from the Nelson yard.

Gunderg has two donkeys named Amos and Andy. He didn’t know which of
the donkeys had fallen in the well.

“This was the first time he’s ever left home,” Gundberg said. “We
were feeding them (Wednesday) when they got out.”

“One went one way, one went another way,” he said.

Gundberg didn’t know where the donkey was until Nelson came knocking
on his door, but he had a feeling Thursday afternoon that the animal
might not stray far from home again.

“I bet you’ll think twice about doing that again,” Gundberg said to
the donkey. “If you would have stayed home you wouldn’t be in this
trouble.”

Photos of the rescue at
http://spotted.fergusfallsjournal.com/pages/gallery.php?gallery=53
 
Guest
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 1:32 am
On Thu, 24 Apr 2008 06:49:09 -0700 (PDT), Loveanimals <howtohelpanimals@yahoo.com> wrote:


.. . .
"We submit that we would like for the county to switch to
the humane method of lethal injection which is approved
by MAJOR ANIMAL WELFARE ORGANIZATIONS
throughout the country! Your opinion matters! Our
commissioners are the only ones who can stop this slow
and agonizing death of the companion animals that end
up in our shelter."
.. . .

At least you people have a suggestion as to a solution,
unlike the eliminationists who hide under the gross misnomer
"animal rights" usually do not in cases like this. Good luck!

>More alerts - please help: http://www.freewebs.com/howtohelpanimals
 
Guest
Posted: Sun Apr 27, 2008 1:15 am
On Thu, 24 Apr 2008 13:12:52 -0700, Rudy Canoza <pipes@thedismalscience.not> wrote:

Quote:
You don't care about animal welfare, you don't care about the animals
"getting to experience life" - *ALL* you care about, you stupid
talentless lying Goober, is getting products from them. That's it.

Why do you eliminationists believe that consumers of
animal products can't appreciate lives of possitive value
for the animals they consume, Goo? Why can't you do it,
Goob?
 
 
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