Ah, yes, of course. The gypsies, they gave you your soul. The gypsies are filthy people. Ptui! We shall speak of them no more.

Ilona Costa Bianchi ,'The Girl in Question'


Natter 33 1/3  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


Allyson - Feb 23, 2005 1:13:40 pm PST #556 of 10002
Wait, is this real-world child support, where the money goes to buy food for the kids, or MRA fantasyland child support where the women just buy Ferraris and cocaine? -Jessica

What was different here?

It was in a forest. It's not an instantaneous sleep. The animal had been roaming the forest since February 1st and was spotted near a home. Getting shot would have resulted in a spike in adrenaline. Tigers run fast, anyway. Under the thick cover, the animal could have escaped, hid, and recovered before being found. That was the reasoning given, at any rate.


§ ita § - Feb 23, 2005 1:17:19 pm PST #557 of 10002
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Those larger animals were probably not near schools and freeways.

I'd be surprised if shooting a semi-tranked tiger before it got that far was that hard, but I don't do big game, so I'm just guessing. It's also possible my scale is off -- but I figure if you can trank a rhino, you can trank the much smaller tiger.

Or kill it if it then gets frisky.

::fumbles for pith helmet::

Under the thick cover, the animal could have escaped, hid, and recovered before being found

Thick cover? I need to look at the pics again. I didn't know we had any of that here.


lori - Feb 23, 2005 1:18:45 pm PST #558 of 10002

But like Allyson said, it was in a forest, or at least dense underbrush - not so easy to be shot at like them rhinos in the savannah.


§ ita § - Feb 23, 2005 1:21:29 pm PST #559 of 10002
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

But like Allyson said, it was in a forest

Not in the pictures.


lori - Feb 23, 2005 1:25:23 pm PST #560 of 10002

Dense underbrush. You try walking through chapparal. A SoCal forest would actually have been easier to track him through.


§ ita § - Feb 23, 2005 1:30:58 pm PST #561 of 10002
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Dense underbrush, sure. Forest, nope. Especially not around there, which was burnt during the wildfires. It's all new growth.

I've never tried walking through chapparal (nor typing it) -- I'm assuming it's easier for the tiger to do, then.

As I said -- my naivete is such that if you can tranq a two ton rhino and not get trampled, 600lbs of tiger -- ah, well. It's dead now anyway.

You canNOT believe the tiger commentary that's going on here. My face aches with the laughing.

"It's a miracle of nature! And they killed it!"

"Trackers? I look out my bedroom window, see a tiger, and I'm a tracker?"

"Reach civilisation? In Simi? Not happening."

"Near the library? No need to worry about casualties -- the library's deserted."

"It's ORANGE. What took them so long?"


Sheryl - Feb 23, 2005 1:32:24 pm PST #562 of 10002
Fandom means never having to say "But where would I wear that?"

Timelies all!

Happy Birthday Lysana!

Didn't get to see Veronica Mars last night because it was pre-empted for basketball. As far as I can tell, this ep isn't airing any other time this week. Feh.


Lee - Feb 23, 2005 1:33:03 pm PST #563 of 10002
The feeling you get when your brain finally lets your heart get in its pants.

Thanks Kat!


lori - Feb 23, 2005 1:36:13 pm PST #564 of 10002

There's better tiger hunt pictures here. Chapparal is usually tough brushy undergrowth, sometimes described as too short to go under and too tall to climb over. But if you are tiger-height, and also tiger-strong, it's just right.

Dude, six-inch pawprints, in the playground. So cool.


Allyson - Feb 23, 2005 1:37:13 pm PST #565 of 10002
Wait, is this real-world child support, where the money goes to buy food for the kids, or MRA fantasyland child support where the women just buy Ferraris and cocaine? -Jessica

"It's a miracle of nature! And they killed it!"

Until it eats your head.

It's like those fuckos who refuse to spay and neuter so that their kids can witness the miracle of birth.

I worked with a woman who ran a shelter who was overwhelmed during kitten season and had to recommend euthanasia to just such a person. She told her, "Now your kids can witness the miracle of death, and learn from your irresponsibility."