newt_girl
newt_girl t1_je9satz wrote
Reply to comment by swamp_bears in Muck boots are amazing. by ExtraordinaryMagic
Xtra Tuffs
newt_girl t1_je4v9yu wrote
Reply to comment by seeteethree in Red Land Cotton sheets seem to be BIFL so far by WorldsGr8estHipster
I have sheets from Target that are 36x as old as OPs sheets.
newt_girl t1_jdiokv3 wrote
Reply to comment by sleeknub in Aurora are likely visible from parts of mid to upper Washington right now! Check outside to the north by KerouacMyBukowski_
https://www.gi.alaska.edu/monitors/aurora-forecast
https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/products/aurora-30-minute-forecast
These are the two links I check for aurora activity.
Edit: looks good for the 26th and the 31st. The hang up here is usually cloud cover.
newt_girl t1_jdi4nvf wrote
Reply to comment by sleeknub in Aurora are likely visible from parts of mid to upper Washington right now! Check outside to the north by KerouacMyBukowski_
Looks like the KP is back down to 6 for tonight.
Its harder to see the aurora as we head into summer because of how long the civil twilight lasts.
newt_girl t1_ja3jtzk wrote
That's tragic. I did some survey work up in that area, beautiful forests. A real shame, considering all the clear cut DNR land to the north and the Weyerhauser scars to the south.
newt_girl t1_j9z0ikj wrote
Reply to comment by datscrazee in Elk cow outside my back porch this morning. The herd drops by every few weeks! by datscrazee
I see elk almost every time I head up the Dose. Love that area.
newt_girl t1_j853is9 wrote
Reply to comment by meditationchill in How dangerous are western Washington's woods for a chronic forest wanderer? by cinderings
>they’re not actively hunting out humans to eat, which is what you said.
It's not. I said they're more likely to eat you during an attack than other types of bears one might encounter in the US. A list of fatal bear attacks in the US shows one is statistically more likely to be eaten by a black bear than a grizzly.
Think of the adage 'if it's black, fight back. If it's brown, lie down.' This is because black bears are more predatory toward humans and are trying to kill you, where grizzly attacks are often because you're deemed a threat to their resources; playing dead makes you less of a threat.
newt_girl t1_j84u7wl wrote
Reply to comment by meditationchill in How dangerous are western Washington's woods for a chronic forest wanderer? by cinderings
Black bears aren't afraid of people, and when they do choose to interact, it's to the detriment of every party involved.
newt_girl t1_j8420l9 wrote
Reply to comment by TekkDub in How dangerous are western Washington's woods for a chronic forest wanderer? by cinderings
All bears can be the killing kind. Black bears are more likely to attack humans with the intention of eating them than grizzlies are, and the black bear population in western WA isn't small. They wander into Oly on a regular basis.
newt_girl t1_j8417pn wrote
Reply to comment by TekkDub in How dangerous are western Washington's woods for a chronic forest wanderer? by cinderings
Bears regularly wander into urban areas.
newt_girl t1_j7ve9am wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Oregon's beverage industry cooperative pushes to impose Bottle Deposit in Washington... by Ravenparadoxx
>So make the can different.
This is how it works in Ohio/Michigan.
newt_girl t1_j6v8usy wrote
What if it just sinks all the way down and re-roots itself?
newt_girl t1_j2wrrvb wrote
Reply to comment by Iupvoteanimals in can anyone tell me what these are? there is a large amount of gravel inside the barn and nothing else on the property by Ok_Woodpecker_3625
Thousands, even. I think humans first discovered roofs sometime in the Neanderthal days.
newt_girl t1_j1c527p wrote
Reply to comment by TheStuporUser in US Postal Service commits to buy 66,000 Electric vehicles— finally by MrMike
My cousin is a postal carrier and their truck is a 1985.
newt_girl t1_izlbae0 wrote
Reply to comment by TopRevenue2 in First recorded moose sighting ever in Mount Rainier National Park by WashingtonPass
Thanks for that info. I guess I've got some weekend reading to do!
newt_girl t1_izjy4i5 wrote
Reply to comment by TopRevenue2 in First recorded moose sighting ever in Mount Rainier National Park by WashingtonPass
Source?
newt_girl t1_iydjhf4 wrote
Reply to comment by Twin_Peaks_Townie in Relief Map of the Columbia River Basin [OC] by mushroomgnome
newt_girl t1_iuiei6x wrote
Reply to comment by pala4833 in Kalama Falls, WA by pala4833
https://inciweb.nwcg.gov/incident-publication/wagpf-kalama-fire/kalama-fire-update-october-6-2022 (last updated before rains).
newt_girl t1_iui1v0s wrote
Reply to comment by dudinax in Cool parents carrying their kid off trail and out onto Sul Duc Falls at Olympic by insom187
My partner and I had this discussion last night regarding this photo.
Yes, we do. I love going off trail and a good sporting adventure. But there is a time and place for it. And a popular tourist attraction at a National Park when there are other people around isn't the time or the place. Washington is full of wilderness to frolick in, leave the 'special' areas as they are.
newt_girl t1_iuhmp7n wrote
Reply to comment by Marmotskinner in Lake Rife in Morton, WA by GoGoVTheWorld
It's Riffe Lake. And there are at least 3 towns down there (Riffe, Nesika, and Kosmos).
newt_girl t1_itgvie2 wrote
Reply to comment by MotherOnSomeBeatHoe in Hundreds of rare birds rescued from island cut off by Hurricane Ian by Sariel007
A well-programmed drone is valuable!
newt_girl t1_itc8sq0 wrote
Reply to comment by Parking_Mountain_691 in We eloped in Washington today by Parking_Mountain_691
Camp robbers have no boundaries
newt_girl t1_it7xgot wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in South-west Astrakhan, Russia, has some interesting geographical features I've never seen before. Is there a name for this phenomenon, and how is it formed? by zyphelion
That's what this reminded me of, too. The channeled scablands.
newt_girl t1_isthkk3 wrote
Reply to Woodland creatures by Kabourek4
I haven't seen a jackalope in years!
newt_girl t1_jeb3s4o wrote
Reply to comment by swamp_bears in Muck boots are amazing. by ExtraordinaryMagic
I got downvoted elsewhere for saying they're superior to every other waterproof boot I've ever tried. I have a pair going strong still, after 5 years. They do need a quality insole though; I like cork. Source: am a stream biologist and spent literally 20 years standing in water.