LelandJ
Chicken Testicle Enthusiast
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I also learned that wolves are now sporadically appearing in the Netherlands as well.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/un-biodiversity-reports-1.4589698
If trends continue, there will be no "exploitable fish stocks" for commercial fishing by 2048.
...better eat your sushi, Thai shrimp and shark fin soup while it lasts.
The article says for Asians. Normal humans still have decades left to enjoy.
If you buy your school girl panties from vending machines, your access to fish will be limited.
Normal people don't have to worry.
I know "Orientals" is a somewhat dated and slightly non-PC term for East Asians, but I would be curious about the definition of "browns."
Just saw a piece on-line that rural Japan is being overrun by wild boar. In some cases villagers are being terrorized by these formidable creatures. Of course, Japan's terribly restrictive firearms laws no doubt exacerbate the problem.
My parents-in-law have a little holiday house up in the hills in Tochigi, about three hours north of Tokyo, Japan.
Like most places in Japan, children walk to school without adults - two or three will usually meet up at a street corner near their homes and they'll then walk to school together. However, during summer in rural Tochigi, the kids need to wear bells on their schoolbags, in the hope that the sound of the bells will scare away the brown bears.
There are lots of wild boar in the area, too. When you go out walking early in the morning, you will often seen little, porcine hoof prints across freshly ploughed fields and you can see where the boar use their tusks to root amongst the soil and vegetation for food. I like to go walking in the woods but my mother-in-law keeps telling me not to go as she's afraid that I'll be attacked by a boar (or a bear, if it's in summer).
My parents-in-law have a little holiday house up in the hills in Tochigi, about three hours north of Tokyo, Japan.
Like most places in Japan, children walk to school without adults - two or three will usually meet up at a street corner near their homes and they'll then walk to school together. However, during summer in rural Tochigi, the kids need to wear bells on their schoolbags, in the hope that the sound of the bells will scare away the brown bears.
There are lots of wild boar in the area, too. When you go out walking early in the morning, you will often seen little, porcine hoof prints across freshly ploughed fields and you can see where the boar use their tusks to root amongst the soil and vegetation for food. I like to go walking in the woods but my mother-in-law keeps telling me not to go as she's afraid that I'll be attacked by a boar (or a bear, if it's in summer).
My parents-in-law have a little holiday house up in the hills in Tochigi, about three hours north of Tokyo, Japan.
Like most places in Japan, children walk to school without adults - two or three will usually meet up at a street corner near their homes and they'll then walk to school together. However, during summer in rural Tochigi, the kids need to wear bells on their schoolbags, in the hope that the sound of the bells will scare away the brown bears.
There are lots of wild boar in the area, too. When you go out walking early in the morning, you will often seen little, porcine hoof prints across freshly ploughed fields and you can see where the boar use their tusks to root amongst the soil and vegetation for food. I like to go walking in the woods but my mother-in-law keeps telling me not to go as she's afraid that I'll be attacked by a boar (or a bear, if it's in summer).
Surely you mean black bears. There are not supposed to be any brown bears on Honshu. There are brown bears on Hokkaido. On Honshu and Shikoku there are Asian black bears.
^The coyotes' conquest of eastern North America has been a recent phenomenon, well within my lifetime. When I was a young 'un, they were still pretty much an animal of the West.
^Secular apocalypticism! Whether it's one year or six years, I at least will have had the satisfaction of having attained a reasonably good old age. While I've had my share of ups and downs, I've had a pretty good life...so far anyway. If I should live through the die off of the vast majority of humanity, it will certainly be fascinating to have observed the whole business, come what dangers and hardships there may.