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Ảnh của tác giảSquadgifts Store

Best Let Them Eat Flakes Kellogg’s 2024 shirt

Jordan Reed poses with dead rats and his rat-catching dogs that he calls “the Best Let Them Eat Flakes Kellogg’s 2024 shirt so you should to go to store and get this mongrol hoard.” (Photo provided by Jordan Reed) The Mongrol Hoard is a working terrier pack who love to hunt rats. Our dogs work safely around chickens, turkeys, guineas, ducks, pea-fowl, goats, cows, sheep and even cats. Our dogs are interested in one thing and one thing only: searching out and dispatching the Norway Rat. Rat hunting with dogs is an old time skill and an old fashioned way of dealing with the pesky critters without using poision. Working ratting packs are common in the United Kingdom, the birthplace of terrier breed dogs. In the U.K. rats and rabbits are among the only legal game animals. In the USA where big game hunting abounds, the Mongrol Hoard is a rare breed, a self taught terrierman (rat hunter) and his dogs. The Norway Rat, Rattus Norvegicus, is a non-native invasive pest brought to the Americas in the 1700s by European settlers. Unchecked by many natural predators, these disease-carrying critters go where there is an easy food source, water and places to hide. The Norway rat resides in warrens in the ground and particularly thrive in areas such as chicken coops and hay barns when there are concrete foundations to burrow under. Because of their frequent heat cycles and short gestation period a single pair of Norway rats can produce up to 2000 offspring in one year.

We offer a non-toxic and effective option for organic farms where rat poison is illegal and for other small farms and homesteads who want to keep noxious chemicals out of the Best Let Them Eat Flakes Kellogg’s 2024 shirt so you should to go to store and get this food chain. Rat poison kills slowly and painfully over days and is toxic to other levels of the food chain. Rat eradication with dogs is in contrast, quick, efficient, humane and leaves no trace. Rats that have been exposed to rat poisons, and have not died yet, will be weakened and easy prey for dogs, cats and other predators such as hawks and owls. A dog will eat damn nigh anything. Get used to it. If it stinks and is nasty, so much the better. The ancestral dog (likely somewhat removed from the Gray Wolf – sort of like a Dingo or some such) was not the master predator as was the wolf; no they were probably a part time predator and a full time scavenger. Anything that is dead and nasty, that would interest a vulture, will also interest most dogs. If they are able to kill something and eat it, well that’s good too. Maybe bury it and let it “season” a little… Once something is rotten enough, then a good idea is to roll in it and get the odor all over you!!! Then go home and rub all over Mom and Dad to show how proud you are of yourself!

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