Hundreds gather in a rainy afternoon in Portland Oregon to protest Malheur occupation. As a photographer who love to go out to our wonderful Wildlife refuges we can not allow a armed group to take our public land away.
Amen :thumbup: :thumbup: :thumbup:
BasqueLady wrote:
Hundreds gather in a rainy afternoon in Portland Oregon to protest Malheur occupation. As a photographer who love to go out to our wonderful Wildlife refuges we can not allow a armed group to take our public land away.
But an unarmed group would be OK?
fantom wrote:
But an unarmed group would be OK?
Armed, tired and emotional patriots, all liquored up? Anything could happen. What if the Lord tells Ammo...." NOW DUDE! DO IT NOW!
BasqueLady wrote:
Hundreds gather in a rainy afternoon in Portland Oregon to protest Malheur occupation. As a photographer who love to go out to our wonderful Wildlife refuges we can not allow a armed group to take our public land away.
Looks like a bunch of libtards wing nuts.
Texcaster wrote:
Armed, tired and emotional patriots, all liquored up? Anything could happen. What if the Lord tells Ammo...." NOW DUDE! DO IT NOW!
Wheres your proof that they are all liquored up? Pulling it out of your ass again like a good Democrap lackie.
BasqueLady wrote:
Hundreds gather in a rainy afternoon in Portland Oregon to protest Malheur occupation. As a photographer who love to go out to our wonderful Wildlife refuges we can not allow a armed group to take our public land away.
The ranchers have rights that predate the B*M... Does that matter?
Furthermore trespassing in Oregon is not enforced.
yhtomit wrote:
The ranchers have rights that predate the B*M... Does that matter?
Furthermore trespassing in Oregon is not enforced.
Malheur National Wildlife Refuge was established on August 18, 1908, by President Theodore Roosevelt as the Lake Malheur Reservation. Roosevelt set aside unclaimed government lands encompassed by Malheur, Mud and Harney Lakes as a preserve and breeding ground for native birds. The newly established Lake Malheur Reservation was the 19th of 51 wildlife refuges created by Roosevelt during his tenure as president. At the time, Malheur was the third refuge in Oregon and one of only six refuges west of the Mississippi.
In the late 1880s, plume h****rs decimated North American bird populations in pursuit of breeding feathers for the hat industry. H****rs targeted large flocks of colonial nesting birds and shorebirds, k*****g birds indiscriminately and orphaning chicks. Eventually, the large numbers of colonial nesting birds on Malheur Lake were discovered by plume h****rs. In 1908, wildlife photographers William L. Finley and Herman T. Bohlman discovered that most of the white herons (egrets) on Malheur Lake had been k**led in 1898 by plume h****rs. After 10 years, the white heron population still had not recovered. With backing from the Oregon Audubon Society, Finley and Bohlman proposed establishment of a bird reservation to protect birds, using Malheur, Mud and Harney lakes.
The refuge now encompasses 187,757 acres of wildlife habitat. The 65,000-acre Blitzen Valley was purchased in 1935 and added to the refuge to secure water rights for Malheur and Mud lakes. With the creation of the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) in 1933, the refuge was able to use this additional manpower to begin major improvements on the refuge in 1935. The CCC constructed most of the infrastructure in the Blitzen Valley, including the Center Patrol Road which travels through the center of the refuge. The 14,000-acre Double-O Unit was added to the refuge in 1942 and provides important shorebird habitat, as well as waterfowl nesting areas. Malheur Refuge is situated within the Harney Basin in southeastern Oregon. Located in the Northern Great Basin, this portion of the State is lightly populated, generally arid with cold winters, and characterized by wide open spaces.
The refuge constitutes a small percentage of the Northern Great Basins total acreage but is a tremendously important source of wildlife habitat relative to other portions of the Northern Great Basin. The refuge represents a crucial stop along the Pacific Flyway and offers resting, breeding and nesting habitat for hundreds of migratory birds and other wildlife. Many of the species migrating through or breeding here are highlighted as priority species in national bird conservation
Texcaster wrote:
Armed, tired and emotional patriots, all liquored up? Anything could happen. What if the Lord tells Ammo...." NOW DUDE! DO IT NOW!
They couldn't have picked a better state! Waco vs wacko!
BasqueLady wrote:
Malheur National Wildlife Refuge was established on August 18, 1908, by President Theodore Roosevelt as the Lake Malheur Reservation. Roosevelt set aside unclaimed government lands encompassed by Malheur, Mud and Harney Lakes as a preserve and breeding ground for native birds. The newly established Lake Malheur Reservation was the 19th of 51 wildlife refuges created by Roosevelt during his tenure as president. At the time, Malheur was the third refuge in Oregon and one of only six refuges west of the Mississippi.
In the late 1880s, plume h****rs decimated North American bird populations in pursuit of breeding feathers for the hat industry. H****rs targeted large flocks of colonial nesting birds and shorebirds, k*****g birds indiscriminately and orphaning chicks. Eventually, the large numbers of colonial nesting birds on Malheur Lake were discovered by plume h****rs. In 1908, wildlife photographers William L. Finley and Herman T. Bohlman discovered that most of the white herons (egrets) on Malheur Lake had been k**led in 1898 by plume h****rs. After 10 years, the white heron population still had not recovered. With backing from the Oregon Audubon Society, Finley and Bohlman proposed establishment of a bird reservation to protect birds, using Malheur, Mud and Harney lakes.
The refuge now encompasses 187,757 acres of wildlife habitat. The 65,000-acre Blitzen Valley was purchased in 1935 and added to the refuge to secure water rights for Malheur and Mud lakes. With the creation of the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) in 1933, the refuge was able to use this additional manpower to begin major improvements on the refuge in 1935. The CCC constructed most of the infrastructure in the Blitzen Valley, including the Center Patrol Road which travels through the center of the refuge. The 14,000-acre Double-O Unit was added to the refuge in 1942 and provides important shorebird habitat, as well as waterfowl nesting areas. Malheur Refuge is situated within the Harney Basin in southeastern Oregon. Located in the Northern Great Basin, this portion of the State is lightly populated, generally arid with cold winters, and characterized by wide open spaces.
The refuge constitutes a small percentage of the Northern Great Basins total acreage but is a tremendously important source of wildlife habitat relative to other portions of the Northern Great Basin. The refuge represents a crucial stop along the Pacific Flyway and offers resting, breeding and nesting habitat for hundreds of migratory birds and other wildlife. Many of the species migrating through or breeding here are highlighted as priority species in national bird conservation
Malheur National Wildlife Refuge was established o... (
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Now thanks to Ducks Unlimited and families like the Robertson's the legacy continues!
http://www.realitytea.com/2012/12/12/duck-dynastys-robertson-family-supports-conservation-efforts-in-louisiana/http://www.ducks.org/conservation
Spud picker Maybe you should join the the Bundy bunch. I have read they have alot of sex toys and body lube you would like. :thumbdown: :thumbdown: :thumbdown: :thumbdown: :thumbdown:
BasqueLady wrote:
Spud picker Maybe you should join the the Bundy bunch. I have read they have alot of sex toys and body lube you would like. :thumbdown: :thumbdown: :thumbdown: :thumbdown: :thumbdown:
They aren't my style! Your kinkiness has not been over looked however. I was able to find this picture of you and your little sex toy thom someone sent me! You may need a case of body lube yourself!
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