erik quanstrom <quans...@quanstro.net> wrote:
 |

 |on the dissertation "some
 |aspects of the ethoecology of richardson's ground squirrel" that the two
 |are directly related.

This becomes really interesting.  Squirrels.., these girls and
boys are really a kind of an occupying sort.  Almost addictive.
And emphatic.  That i can understand.  I've downloaded it.

Just a few weeks ago a disaster happened why i had a walk, a young
squirrel girl tried to hide behind a trunk and jumped off to
another tree once i started talking to her (i have seen such
hiding in a much, much better way before), but unfortunately not
taking into account the bending of the trunk at all, falling down
from four or five meters!  Luckily immediately stepping forward
and jumping on her target..  but damn, what a shock we both had.

 |
 |my bad.
 |;-)

If it were like that!!!
Afaik the american squirrel slowly dispels the (smaller) german
Eichhörnchen from the remains of the german forest!
And isn't it hard enough as it is???

Sorry for that unacademic point of view, i have a little "Arche"
in between the Autobahn and railroad tracks where i place some
food for birds, which attracts squirrels and mice too, and it is
ever so surprising how reflective and emphatic all the mentioned
species are.  (In an environment which practically has no more
healthy trees, but only dead and ill ones.)

 |seriously, the error is important.

Plan9 definetely requires will and desire in order to be used by
a normal end-user; but especially if something doesn't work right
out of the box.  Network configuration is really horrible for
fools like me, for example.  Someone should sit down and spend
a year working on that...  imho.

 |p.s. did you  go 3rd person on me?  that's so meta.

Me?  No.  After the first year, only ear tags were used for
permanent identification.

--steffen

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