You Really Otter Watch This: Snowstorm Frolics in Baltimore
Are they actually going to vote on something real?
Otters are fascinating creatures. (In all candor I find a lot of creatures fascinating.) They are quick, bright, curious. When I was a young man, at my parent's place on Bear Creek in Allamakee County, Iowa, we generally had a pair along the creek; we'd seem them raising their babies through the summers, and they had a slide of mud that went down the hill across from the house and ended up in the creek. They never seemed to get tired of that, and the parents would teach their babies the joys of tummy-sledding. They were absent from northeast Iowa in my earlier years, but thanks to some reintroduction efforts and, mostly just due to wandering individuals moving into their old habitat from Minnesota and Wisconsin (this was back when some good things still came out of Minnesota) they were re-established by the time I was in high school.
Are they actually going to vote on something real?
Otters are fascinating creatures. (In all candor I find a lot of creatures fascinating.) They are quick, bright, curious. When I was a young man, at my parent's place on Bear Creek in Allamakee County, Iowa, we generally had a pair along the creek; we'd seem them raising their babies through the summers, and they had a slide of mud that went down the hill across from the house and ended up in the creek. They never seemed to get tired of that, and the parents would teach their babies the joys of tummy-sledding. They were absent from northeast Iowa in my earlier years, but thanks to some reintroduction efforts and, mostly just due to wandering individuals moving into their old habitat from Minnesota and Wisconsin (this was back when some good things still came out of Minnesota) they were re-established by the time I was in high school.
You Really Otter Watch This: Snowstorm Frolics in Baltimore
Are they actually going to vote on something real?
Otters are fascinating creatures. (In all candor I find a lot of creatures fascinating.) They are quick, bright, curious. When I was a young man, at my parent's place on Bear Creek in Allamakee County, Iowa, we generally had a pair along the creek; we'd seem them raising their babies through the summers, and they had a slide of mud that went down the hill across from the house and ended up in the creek. They never seemed to get tired of that, and the parents would teach their babies the joys of tummy-sledding. They were absent from northeast Iowa in my earlier years, but thanks to some reintroduction efforts and, mostly just due to wandering individuals moving into their old habitat from Minnesota and Wisconsin (this was back when some good things still came out of Minnesota) they were re-established by the time I was in high school.
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