Transcript detail

Loading...

Public transcript context with linked callsigns, related nets, and analysis metadata.

Back to transcripts
-Node
-Created
-Confidence
-AI Passes
-Analysis Steps

Transcript

Public transcript text

Thank you, Kevin. You know, I forgot to pass it to the, I get into what I'm talking about so much and then I forget that I'm not supposed to give it back to net control because of the unique way you handle it. Well, it's not that unique because Russell does it the same way, you know, he likes it a certain way, not exactly like that. So maybe that's a bad example. Anyways, let's see, when I'm done, I got to pass it to Dee. Let's see if I remember because what I got to say, you know, there's all kinds of critters around here. Some are beneficial and some, you know, are very undesirable and occasionally they'll try to get inside. Now, I've had a snake before. I got this what they call a solarium. It's off to the side of the bathroom on sliding glass doors and then it's not really large, it's about the size of a closet but, you know, the sun comes in and, you know, it has a screen on the top so basically it should keep everything out. And then you have, in order to get out onto the patio, you got to open the door. And I got a doggy door so that, like if I leave the sliding glass door open, the dogs can go out on the patio through the bathroom. Anyways, I looked up what kind of snake it was and it was, you know, one of those beneficial kinds. So, you know, I definitely got my grabber and took it outside. I didn't want it, you know, making my solarium its home because, you know, snakes bite anyway. You know, I wouldn't be reaching around one of my plants and get bit even if it wasn't poisonous. Because they, you know, they may have had things but they got teeth. And they do strike if they're provoked, you know, as timid of a right it might be. Let's see, there was some others that got in here. Now, we have an invasive species here, they're called iguana. And these things get really big. I had to reset there. They look like, you know, miniature dinosaurs. Some of them grow to be enormous. And enormous, I mean, like the size of the German shepherd. But I don't think that was an iguana that I saw in that canal. I think that was another species that somebody released in there. And that's how these critters get out into the environment is, you know, they're held as pets. And then, you know, we got all these snakes in the Everglades. I haven't seen any boas or some of these other species. I'm not thinking the name of it right. I can't think of the name of it right now. Besides boa, they kind of get their prey by strangling it within their body before they swallow it whole, which is kind of disgusting. Just think about that. And they're not good. Now, the iguanas might be good because they eat undesirable things. But there's so many of them. And I had one of them on the patio. And I had to get him. A good thing I got my grabbers because otherwise, you know, I don't have any way of getting them out of the house. The little lizards, you know, I kind of ignore them because they're, they eat, you know, smaller bugs and roaches and stuff. So they're pretty good. But they're native, you know, they're not like the big iguanas that grow up 100 times the size of, you know, the biggest lizard you could find. So that's my story about what's around here. There's some possums. I got some pictures of possums, nasty looking. You know, they were out on the fence. There was a couple of them and I got a couple of pictures of them. They look like real ferocious looking but they're kind of timid. And if you don't happen to catch them at night, if you happen to walk out, you know, when you turn on the light and see them, you catch them after they tried to cross the street and didn't make it to the other side. Ron, AA4H show in Miramar, Florida. Over to G, I remember. Over to G.

Explore

Linked public records