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Friday, May 29, 2015

Is there a petition to save these beautiful beings?

Another Great question
Is there a petition people could sign to try to save these beautiful beings?

Yes my friend and I will see if I can dig it up however, this is Florida and the petitions has been circling for about 5 years now and will do no good because MONEY TALKS and humans refuse to listen to our animals while they TALK!

This is the problem in a nut shell!




The officials keep saying that the bear populations is growing


Florida moving ahead with plans to kill 200 bears in hunting

Florida Fish and Wildlife Hunters, many of them are hunters, are a group of
 'Boldface Hypocrite'
because they are allowing the public to believe that there is still hope for our beloved Black Bears and all this time the money is in the pockets and they and many more hunters are
loading their weapons and getting the paperwork set for the June 24th
 
 "DONE DEAL!"

The officials keep saying that the bear populations is growing out of control?

Truth is no one really knows how many bears are in Florida.

Because, you see, at least 85% of our beloved Black Bears are not even involved with "Dumpster Diving!"

It is only in the area where humans are still not protecting their trash!
Commission should vote no on bear hunt


In one month, June 24, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission will vote on a proposal to open a trophy hunt on Florida’s unique subspecies of black bears. They were removed from the list of threatened species just three years ago. The trouble is, the Commission does not have enough information to make this decision, and is going against the wishes of many Floridians.

The last statewide count of Florida black bears was 13 years ago, when state biologists estimated that we had 2,000 to 3,000 surviving bears. Without having a handle on how many bears actually exist today, how can the Commission justify allowing hunters to kill 200 bears a year?

Sunday, May 10, 2015

Saturday, April 11, 2015

5' lizards are eating Florida's cats


If you are so dead set on hunting in Florida, leave our bears alone and hunt for real killers, something that could and would eat your child!

Ah, Florida:

the home of sun, sand, and cat-eating lizards.


5-Foot, Cat-Eating Lizard Infesting Florida —

 Snacking On Owls, Dachshunds And Yes, Cats


African lizards, which are about five feet long, are prowling the state, looking for something tasty to eat

and apparently they’ve been known to eat cats.

One man believes the Lizard is to blame for the disappearance of his Dachshund puppies, and someone else noted that recently, there have been a quite a lot less feral cats running around, the Sun Sentinel reported.

Called the Nile Monitor, the creature doesn’t just eat cats.

It’s from Sub-Saharan Africa and can grow up to eight feet certainly big enough for the job.

In their native land, they have been known to eat smaller animals, and Florida residents in Cape Coral have blamed it for their murdered pets as well.

A cousin of the Komodo dragon, the Nile Monitor is a threat to small mammals, reptiles, fish, owls and tortoises.

Officials are trying to mitigate that threat with an aggressive campaign to rid the Sunshine state of the prowling, five-foot lizard.

Thursday, April 9, 2015

Black Bears in Florida have no pockets!


Bear Hunting in the Bears backyard?

Watch and see?

Our Black Bears in Florida have no pockets!

The hunters in and around Florida have deep, deep, deep, pockets and many of Florida officials are hunters!


Care to guess who is going to win the vote?

We already know that there will be a hunt, we do not know for how long this hunt will go on?

The Florida Fish and Game Commission will meet in Tallahassee April 14-16. Among the items on the agenda for action on April 15 is a proposal to establish a hunting season for black bears, starting in the fall of 2015.

In response to growing concerns about a rising number of black bear attacks in the state in recent years, the commission instructed its staff to bring forth a proposal that would establish hunting as a management tool for controlling the population. The resulting proposal, which will be presented to the commission on April 15, would establish a seven-day hunting season with harvest objectives established based on regional bear management units. The first season would occur October 24-30. The commission would not restrict the number of permits sold, but would instead utilize a quota system and each bear management unit’s season would be subject to strict harvest objectives.


Remember this posting after next week when the Fish and Wild votes on hunting our Black Bears!

OK I answered today's comments so far, if you had a strange answer it was, in part, because I answered anyone that wrote on the post that you wrote on to save time, my body is still upset with me because of the accident no matter who was at fault!