u/Doitean-feargach555

Image 1 — Anyone else a bit of a gear lunatic like myself?
Image 2 — Anyone else a bit of a gear lunatic like myself?
Image 3 — Anyone else a bit of a gear lunatic like myself?
Image 4 — Anyone else a bit of a gear lunatic like myself?
Image 5 — Anyone else a bit of a gear lunatic like myself?
Image 6 — Anyone else a bit of a gear lunatic like myself?
Image 7 — Anyone else a bit of a gear lunatic like myself?
Image 8 — Anyone else a bit of a gear lunatic like myself?
Image 9 — Anyone else a bit of a gear lunatic like myself?

Anyone else a bit of a gear lunatic like myself?

"You could open a shop" - Herself. Personally, I don't think I have enough 🤣

u/Doitean-feargach555 — 9 hours ago

I couldn't resist...

I don't know what people think of these rods internationally, but here at home in Éirinn, this is a nice rod, and I couldn't resist buying it (poor aul bank account is crying though)

u/Doitean-feargach555 — 6 days ago
▲ 2 r/goats

I have to male goats. About a year ago, they broke loose while I was away, walked into a neighbours field and up to their house, and stripped a few laurel bushes of its leaves bar the tops. There were about 7 bushes. They stripped them, had green diarrhoea for a few days, and they were ok.

They are a cross of wild mountain goats and a saanen goat. The amount of laurel they ingested should have killed them according to the vet. But they were fine. They showed no signs of poisoning aside from a few days of diarrhoea, they were ok. I have since cut down all wild laurel near them and fortified the fencing even stronger.

Can anyone with more goat experience tell me why they didn't die?

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u/Doitean-feargach555 — 18 days ago