IMPORTANT NOTE: In the future Dr. Beauregard will continue to fan the fires of awareness about the threat to all critters presented by the proliferation of drones, but starting next Tuesday we will be switching to a new story as the Pudding Players bring us a tale of mystery, crime and weirdness when we meet The Crimson Freep with his partner Fusty The Cheese, and their villainous foes, The Nuttster and Birdseed.
6 Comments
And that’s no Bull!
Sorry, someone just had to say it. 😉
Thanks Bill. Everyone loves a parade but position in the procession is everything. A good rule of thumb is never follow livestock.
Keep a few feet back fellas!
The operative word is “feet” as in watch your step 🙂 Thanks David.
He’s shoveling the bull, it’s your turn next, Bucksnort! (Btw that’s a fab name!)
Mark, the name actually comes from a place I used to drive past when going from Memphis to Nashville. Bucksnort is a small unincorporated community in Hickman County, Tennessee. It is located near Exit 152 on Interstate 40, a few miles east of the Tennessee River.
Bucksnort, a term for a sound well known to deer hunters since pioneer days, is the name given to multiple pre-Civil War towns and communities across Tennessee as well as in Fayette County, Marshall County and Bullock County, Alabama; Prentiss County and Tate County, Mississippi; and Craighead County and Dallas County, Arkansas.
BugPudding is both fun and educational 🙂