tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6458583403983721143.post6210062823435035605..comments2023-12-01T22:04:13.783-08:00Comments on 86 and Holding: Wildlife AdventuresEdith Lankhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05893006691276767073noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6458583403983721143.post-57824314798549338702014-07-30T12:25:03.634-07:002014-07-30T12:25:03.634-07:00(1) I like the remark about the mother deer teachi...(1) I like the remark about the mother deer teaching the Bambis to eat the hostas. Of course, your deer in Brighton are probably a bit more genteel and refined than our urban Syracuse deer. Ours seem to eat hostas from birth.<br /><br />(2) Kudos to Nathan on his Wegmans course. (Wegmans seems to be the one Upstate institution that invariably draws Manhattanites' awe and respect; my friend Meg asks to be taken there on every visit.) And, no, CMS, there is no apostrophe in Wegmans. It's like Harrods that way.<br /><br />(3) Your rabbit is an Eastern Cottontail. Undoubtedly cute, but rabbits probably did more damage to my vegetable garden in the early spring than deer did. (I've got motion-activated sprinklers for the deer, but rabbits can get under those.) If Nathan follows CMS's suggestion and learns a rabbit recipe at Wegmans, I volunteer to sample some.<br /><br />A. Mariehttp://janeaustensyr.blogspot.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6458583403983721143.post-54514696806188504822014-07-28T09:41:02.852-07:002014-07-28T09:41:02.852-07:00Looks like a Peter Cottontail to me. Do you suppo...Looks like a Peter Cottontail to me. Do you suppose Nathan will learn to cook rabbit at Wegman's? Does Wegmans have an apostrophe? CMSAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com