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<blockquote data-quote="Hugnot" data-source="post: 2282459" data-attributes="member: 115658"><p>Know your quarry & focus on its vulnerabilities. Enjoy a productive pursuit while helping mankind</p><p></p><p>The rodents have been carriers of fleas that carried plague from 1346 up to recent history, killing hundreds of million humans. Our planet is in danger of being overrun by hordes of filthy fecund rodents & their associated diseases. I was forced to have a plague inoculation before going to Viet Nam where I saw many rats. Prairie dogs harbor plague & their fleas will abandon dead & cooling rodent bodies to find new homes on warm human bodies. Rodents gnaw away at crops & stored grains and leave disgusting deposits. Then there is the Hanta virus.</p><p></p><p>All this goes thru my mind while loading up ammo & preparing for another rodent shoot. Spraying pant legs with insect repellant is a good idea and washing hands upon touching fence gates or any other ground contact item. Spray boots with mild solution of bleach and tread on wet bleach solution soaked mat before getting into vehicle - decontaminate gear when done. Know enough about your quarry (enemy) - in this case the rodent. I don't see how the nice badgers can eat the rodents. The man in the video appears to have been offered a prairie dog lunch & is declining the invite. In WWI anthrax was spread by badger hair shaving brushes used for shaving to ensure good gas masks sealing for chem. warfare.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Hugnot, post: 2282459, member: 115658"] Know your quarry & focus on its vulnerabilities. Enjoy a productive pursuit while helping mankind The rodents have been carriers of fleas that carried plague from 1346 up to recent history, killing hundreds of million humans. Our planet is in danger of being overrun by hordes of filthy fecund rodents & their associated diseases. I was forced to have a plague inoculation before going to Viet Nam where I saw many rats. Prairie dogs harbor plague & their fleas will abandon dead & cooling rodent bodies to find new homes on warm human bodies. Rodents gnaw away at crops & stored grains and leave disgusting deposits. Then there is the Hanta virus. All this goes thru my mind while loading up ammo & preparing for another rodent shoot. Spraying pant legs with insect repellant is a good idea and washing hands upon touching fence gates or any other ground contact item. Spray boots with mild solution of bleach and tread on wet bleach solution soaked mat before getting into vehicle - decontaminate gear when done. Know enough about your quarry (enemy) - in this case the rodent. I don't see how the nice badgers can eat the rodents. The man in the video appears to have been offered a prairie dog lunch & is declining the invite. In WWI anthrax was spread by badger hair shaving brushes used for shaving to ensure good gas masks sealing for chem. warfare. [/QUOTE]
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