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Picked a few oysters off the beach

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  1. #1
    Smf-retired-user-0043 started this thread.
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    Picked a few oysters off the beach

    Not as grand as it sounds, late last night when the tide was out I picked some oysters from the beach then had a late snack, I've been feeling horrible all day and I think the worse is yet to come.



    Just dry heaves, drank gallons of water and no show, If I do not die first I'm going to swear off of oysters for good.


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    jimicrk's Avatar
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    I guess if I had a choice I would pick dry heaves over ralphing up oysters. Yuck!

    I hope you feel better soon.

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    Mechanic688's Avatar
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    I feel for you buddy, hang in there. I can understand a bad case of the flu but to poison yourself with seafood snacks,,, wow.

    That's a real aw-$hit moment.
    P & M Recycling - Specializing in E-Waste Recycling.
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    Hey Man, watch this......

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  10. #7
    Smf-retired-user-0043 started this thread.
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    I've accepted the fact we live in a nasty world full of pollution, everything raised or grown on the west coast is radiated to some degree,

    I'm planning to die with my boots on.

    Now for a positive note, from the West Coast.

    B.C.'s orcas keep on booming with 8th calf - British Columbia - CBC News
    B.C.'s orcas keep on booming with 8th calf

    After years of population decline, the orca baby boom on the West Coast just won't stop, it appears.
    On Wednesday, the Centre for Whale Research confirmed the birth of the eighth calf this year in the endangered southern residents, boosting the population to 84.
    "1977 is the only previous year in the past 40 years in which as many baby killer whales were born into this community of whales, and there were nine in that year," said Michael Harris, the director of the Pacific Whale Watch Association in a statement.
    The calf was first spotted on Dec. 1 near San Juan Island in Washington state, but it wasn't until Wednesday that researchers were able to snap a photo in Haro Strait and confirm it was not one of the other calves born this year.
    The sex of the calf has not been determined, but it has been named J54. The mother is J28, a 22-year-old female which is also the mother of a female born in 2009, named J46, which still survives.
    Back to normal, but for how long?

    The latest birth actually puts the population back within its normal birth rate, according to Harris.
    "From calculations accounting for all reproductive age females, we estimate that typically up to nine babies could be produced each year, but there is usually a high rate of neonatal and perinatal mortality, and we have seen only three babies annually on average."
    Part of the decline in births in the past year has been blamed on dwindling salmon stocks, which make up most of the diet of the resident orcas.
    "In the years immediately following poor salmon years, we see fewer babies and higher mortality of all age cohorts," said Harris.
    Despite this year's population recovery, researchers still have concerns about their long term survival, in part because of global warming.
    "Warmer ocean waters are less productive, and rivers without continual water from snow melt (rains run off too quickly) and with warmer water are lethal to salmon," notes Harris.
    "Survival of all of the new calves and their mothers and relatives depends upon a future with plentiful salmon, especially Chinook salmon, in the eastern North Pacific Ocean ecosystem."
    Last edited by Smf-retired-user-0043; 12-17-2015 at 02:19 PM.


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