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Super Member
I say we should ban the car as they kill so many people. None of these deaths would occur if we banned people from doing everything.
I rode for years, usually without a helmet. Guess I was lucky. But really wonder what good a helmet would do in a major accident. One time a bumble bee hit the gap between the helmet and my head. It buzzed around inside the helmet and nearly caused me to lose control.
Cheers,
Mike
Those dangerous cows remind me of dealing with roosters. Kill the one attacking you, and then it's the next one in line the next day. We at a lot of chicken for about two weeks once they matured and we could tell who where the layers and who where the but heads!!!
Here in TX, I would think that the snakes get quite a few people every year, but the only thing I have heard in the news that kills people are the bees.
Eddie
Eddie, I think I've posted this before, but when I was a kid, we always had a flock of hens for the eggs and at least one big rooster, usually a White Leghorn. And when I was about 12 or so, we had one that would attack me every time I went out and he had a good set of spurs. Dad thought it was funny, since it wasn't him being attacked, but he told me that you know when he jumps at you, he brings those feet up to get his spurs forward so just grab him by both feet and dip him in the cow's water trough. So the next day I did that, dipped him in the water and threw him and he hit the ground running. But the next day here he came again. So that time when I dipped him in the water, I held him under and watched the bubbles for awhile. And when I did finally take him out of the water and threw him as far as I could, he just landed in a heap and laid there. Sure scared me because I knew Dad would be furious if I'd killed his rooster. But after a few seconds that old rooster started flopping around like a chicken with it's head cut off, then he finally got on his feet and staggered off. So he fully recovered, but from that time on, he gave me a wide berth and was quick to get out of the way when he saw me coming.