Nope.Do the deer eat Redbud?
Well, technically they will eat young plants and fresh spring growth, but around here, there is too many other delicacies for them to bother.
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Nope.Do the deer eat Redbud?
Our redbud are on their way out. Dogwood is in full bloom. I like your deer cages around your tulips. A place I worked, would have a contract agency plant tulips every year and then rip them out and toss them after they bloomed. Two years, back to back, I grabbed some of the discards and planted a fifty foot row. Deer clipped them off both years and I finally gave up.Nope.
Well, technically they will eat young plants and fresh spring growth, but around here, there is too many other delicacies for them to bother.
Like the look of that fish! Of course, I always wonder how they taste. Too bad your week was below average! ChuckFishing last week was below parr. They'd had easterly winds for over 2 weeks and cooler temps. The wind was sufficient to disrupt the tides, blowing the water off the flats. That meant the lows were really low and the highs never occurred. Bonefish are notoriously sissy fish when it comes to changes in their environment, so most of them had moved off to deeper water. We saw huge muds in 5 - 6 feet of water. We did manage a fish or two or three each day, the last couple days being better than the rest due to less wind and warmer temps I did hook one nice cuda but it came unbuckled after the first jump. We don't specifically target cudas, but I always keep a rod rigged with a needlefish fly on a wire string just in case we stumble onto a nice fish. So I didn't take many photos. Here's one of one of our group with Sidney Thomas. Sid's one of the best bonefish guides in the Bahamas in my opinion and has taught me tons about bonefish and flats fishing in general.
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That fish looks artificial……….Fishing last week was below parr. They'd had easterly winds for over 2 weeks and cooler temps. The wind was sufficient to disrupt the tides, blowing the water off the flats. That meant the lows were really low and the highs never occurred. Bonefish are notoriously sissy fish when it comes to changes in their environment, so most of them had moved off to deeper water. We saw huge muds in 5 - 6 feet of water. We did manage a fish or two or three each day, the last couple days being better than the rest due to less wind and warmer temps I did hook one nice cuda but it came unbuckled after the first jump. We don't specifically target cudas, but I always keep a rod rigged with a needlefish fly on a wire string just in case we stumble onto a nice fish. So I didn't take many photos. Here's one of one of our group with Sidney Thomas. Sid's one of the best bonefish guides in the Bahamas in my opinion and has taught me tons about bonefish and flats fishing in general.
View attachment 287711