The horse and mule are the last of the residence of what is left of my pasture, after an attempt to help a guy out. He over grazed the pasture to the point where I doubt if it will ever recover. It took a letter from my attorney to get him to remove the cattle,after he removed the cattle I gave him thirty days to get the horse, jack and mule out, 90 days passed and the are still here. Called him last night told him I had called the SPCA about them, the are almost out of water due to the lack of rain, now its wait and see.
The "weeds" were taken in my yard and at the nature reserve.
Nice set. Ain't it amazing how people take advantage and abuse kindness.
kpmac wrote:
Nice set. Ain't it amazing how people take advantage and abuse kindness.
Lol no good deed goes unpunished!
Your eye for the unusual plant shot is great.
olemikey
Loc: 6 mile creek, Spacecoast Florida
Nice captures Manglesphoto - Good deeds are often punished by the jerks who receive them. Shame the guy is an idiot. My uncle (in Ohio) often lent out his pastures to other farmers for grazing, but they were good farmers, and all worked together to help each other. I spent a few summers there while growing up, and helped him around the farm, bailing hay, feeding (cows, pigs, chickens, turkeys and such) picking veggies from his 2 acre garden, walking his little trout stream, fishing and frogging his pond, etc. - great memories! With the exception of electricity, he (and family) was one of the few folks I ever knew that were almost entirely self-sufficient.
Give them an inch... Excellent series, and hope the pastureland recovers. Nature's pretty good about that sort of thing. Look at Chernobyl. It looks quite normal, outside of the three-headed deer.
olemikey wrote:
Nice captures Manglesphoto - Good deeds are often punished by the jerks who receive them. Shame the guy is an idiot. My uncle (in Ohio) often lent out his pastures to other farmers for grazing, but they were good farmers, and all worked together to help each other. I spent a few summers there while growing up, and helped him around the farm, bailing hay, feeding (cows, pigs, chickens, turkeys and such) picking veggies from his 2 acre garden, walking his little trout stream, fishing and frogging his pond, etc. - great memories! With the exception of electricity, he (and family) was one of the few folks I ever knew that were almost entirely self-sufficient.
Nice captures Manglesphoto - Good deeds are often ... (
show quote)
Thank you very much Olemikey
Treepusher wrote:
Give them an inch... Excellent series, and hope the pastureland recovers. Nature's pretty good about that sort of thing. Look at Chernobyl. It looks quite normal, outside of the three-headed deer.
Thank you very much Treepusher
All beautifully photographed!
danniepolley wrote:
Nice set
Thank you very much Dannie
Sirius_one wrote:
All beautifully photographed!
Thank you very much Sirius
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