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Post subject: Re: So what's in the pantry this weekend?
Posted: Sun Jan 30, 2011 10:24 am
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i was packin my bags (gear bags) until i read that last sentence. :cry:

i would love to try some moose. is there any place up there reasonably priced that ships?

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Post subject: Re: So what's in the pantry this weekend?
Posted: Sun Jan 30, 2011 11:26 am
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ripitup555 wrote:
Lasagne, chips & garlic bread, yes garlic bread it's the future
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NE0i0dlwCqA
ps anyone seen the points catalogue yet


We should ask Andy about the 2011 edition. I've heard it's out soon.


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Post subject: Re: So what's in the pantry this weekend?
Posted: Sun Jan 30, 2011 11:35 am
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The_Nutter wrote:
ripitup555 wrote:
Lasagne, chips & garlic bread, yes garlic bread it's the future
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NE0i0dlwCqA
ps anyone seen the points catalogue yet


We should ask Andy about the 2011 edition. I've heard it's out soon.

Pending Greatness... :wink:

Oh Yeah, On the menu tonight is Roast Chicken cooked on one of these t'ings...

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When I look in the oven and see it standing up in there it always reminds me of that scene from Withnail And I

Enjoy! :D

Andy

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Post subject: Re: So what's in the pantry this weekend?
Posted: Sun Jan 30, 2011 11:41 am
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guitslinger wrote:
We have a couple of beautiful big Newfoundland moose steaks(we have so many moose- vehicle collisions here that moose are referred to as NL Speed Bumps)in the oven smothered in onions and garlic and red wine.That will be served with asparagus with Hollandaise Sauce and roast garlic whipped potatoes-disgusting I know.BTW way Voodoo Blues you're welcome to come if you can get here by 6:30.


That would be quite a chassis elevation to consider a moose a speed bump :shock:
Poor Bullwinkle :(

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Post subject: Re: So what's in the pantry this weekend?
Posted: Sun Jan 30, 2011 3:59 pm
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Hi Way Cool unfortunately the sale of moose meat is highly regulated especially when it comes to export.If you like I'll try to get info on it but I dare say the only type you'd be able to export from here would be canned or bottled-which is still quite good anyway. The moose here are just the right height that when hit with the average passenger car the stomach of the moose hits the roof peeling it back and in many cases decapitating or causing severe head trauma to those in the front seats.There is now a class action suit going to the courts naming the government as a defendant as it was the government that imported a breeding stock of moose in the early 20th century and now there are dozens of moose-vehicle collisions every year and a large number of fatalities or permanant disabilities.
The wolf was endemic to Newfoundland until the 1920's but were killed off to help the moose population survive and now as we usually see when humans try to change nature we're paying for these mistakes.There are a lot of people now calling for the reintroduction of the wolf here to help cull the moose population but due to the unfounded hysteria that goes along with wolves that's not likely to be acted upon.

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Post subject: Re: So what's in the pantry this weekend?
Posted: Sun Jan 30, 2011 4:22 pm
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i would have never guessed that moose would be a problem. not to be funny ok, but how do people hit something as big as a VW bus w/o seeing it ahead of time?

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Post subject: Re: So what's in the pantry this weekend?
Posted: Sun Jan 30, 2011 5:00 pm
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Post subject: Re: So what's in the pantry this weekend?
Posted: Sun Jan 30, 2011 5:06 pm
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guitslinger wrote:
Hi Way Cool unfortunately the sale of moose meat is highly regulated especially when it comes to export.If you like I'll try to get info on it but I dare say the only type you'd be able to export from here would be canned or bottled-which is still quite good anyway. The moose here are just the right height that when hit with the average passenger car the stomach of the moose hits the roof peeling it back and in many cases decapitating or causing severe head trauma to those in the front seats.There is now a class action suit going to the courts naming the government as a defendant as it was the government that imported a breeding stock of moose in the early 20th century and now there are dozens of moose-vehicle collisions every year and a large number of fatalities or permanant disabilities.
The wolf was endemic to Newfoundland until the 1920's but were killed off to help the moose population survive and now as we usually see when humans try to change nature we're paying for these mistakes.There are a lot of people now calling for the reintroduction of the wolf here to help cull the moose population but due to the unfounded hysteria that goes along with wolves that's not likely to be acted upon.



It's not as if a moose crosses the road with the quickness of a cheetah.
HEELLOO.... Slow Down.
Last winter I came up on an Acura who had hit a deer, ( the Acura was totaled and so was the deer ). I stopped and the occupants were ok, shaken up but unharmed, they said it just came out of nowhere :?: :?: .
This particular spot is a long radius right hand turn, with visibility from 5 to 600 feet away as it goes around a large field. I have driven that road 100's of times and you can always see what is in the field off to your right, that is unless you have decided to not look where you are going..furthermore it was winter and snow everywhere...
I don't understand why people refuse to apply simple logic concerning backroads and the laws of physics.
At around dusk, or early nightfall or sunrise, you have to slow down, otherwise it is just a matter of time before a collision with something possibly bigger than a squirrel or cat happens. :roll:

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Post subject: Re: So what's in the pantry this weekend?
Posted: Sun Jan 30, 2011 5:13 pm
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most of what was in the pantry is now in my tummy :lol:

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Post subject: Re: So what's in the pantry this weekend?
Posted: Sun Jan 30, 2011 9:25 pm
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Although moose may appear big and clumsy they have extremely long legs and are surprisingly fast when even at what seems to be a leisurely pace for them.In many areas of NL the brush and trees grow quite literally up to the roadside,this combined with our quite often foggy conditions and lack of lighted highways makes even the safest of drivers suseptible to run-ins with these big herbivores.I was driving home one foggy night when a moose jumped out from the brush onto the road missing my side mirror by millimeters and as it was a pea-souper I was only going about 20MPH.A lot of people automatically blame speed but a lot of times it's the speed of the moose not the car that causes the crash.
The Dept. of Highways has started cutting back brush in some problem areas but they'd have to clear just about every road in the province as moose are getting as plentiful as mice.

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Post subject: Re: So what's in the pantry this weekend?
Posted: Sun Jan 30, 2011 10:15 pm
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guitslinger wrote:
Although moose may appear big and clumsy they have extremely long legs and are surprisingly fast when even at what seems to be a leisurely pace for them.In many areas of NL the brush and trees grow quite literally up to the roadside,this combined with our quite often foggy conditions and lack of lighted highways makes even the safest of drivers suseptible to run-ins with these big herbivores.I was driving home one foggy night when a moose jumped out from the brush onto the road missing my side mirror by millimeters and as it was a pea-souper I was only going about 20MPH.A lot of people automatically blame speed but a lot of times it's the speed of the moose not the car that causes the crash.
The Dept. of Highways has started cutting back brush in some problem areas but they'd have to clear just about every road in the province as moose are getting as plentiful as mice.


Thank You for that clarification.

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Post subject: Re: So what's in the pantry this weekend?
Posted: Mon Jan 31, 2011 5:16 am
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guitslinger wrote:
Although moose may appear big and clumsy they have extremely long legs and are surprisingly fast when even at what seems to be a leisurely pace for them.In many areas of NL the brush and trees grow quite literally up to the roadside,this combined with our quite often foggy conditions and lack of lighted highways makes even the safest of drivers suseptible to run-ins with these big herbivores.I was driving home one foggy night when a moose jumped out from the brush onto the road missing my side mirror by millimeters and as it was a pea-souper I was only going about 20MPH.A lot of people automatically blame speed but a lot of times it's the speed of the moose not the car that causes the crash.
The Dept. of Highways has started cutting back brush in some problem areas but they'd have to clear just about every road in the province as moose are getting as plentiful as mice.


Kamikaze-Moose?
THE MOOSE-EMPIRE STRIKES BACK

:lol:


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Post subject: Re: So what's in the pantry this weekend?
Posted: Mon Jan 31, 2011 2:09 pm
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well I'm currently on my Low Carb diet (workin' off all the Christmas/New Year's food so I can look good for the college ladies :wink: :D

So mostly my fridge is filled with eggs, meat, chesse, burgers, and all that other delicious food that is on the Atkins Diet

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