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Re: Seahorse safe? (was Re: New to group.-- with seahorses)



Maybe if I get enough nerve to go back to the grass marsh at Folly beach I
will see if I can see any.Ohhhhh Gosh those marsh's are just aweful, they
eat shoes right off your feet and ya sink and get all kinds of critters
stuck to your legs and I tell ya what it doesn't smell very pleasing either
and that is no jist. I guess they make din din out of my legs or try until I
start slapping em.Horrible lil critters.
Alisa
On Mon, 28 Aug 2000 12:50:20 -0400, killietalk at aka_org wrote:

>  
>  The ever-amusing Wright Huntley wrote: 
>  
>  >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>  Sure, Alisa, as long as you recognize that they 
>  (like most wildlife) observe the "din-din" rule.*
>  >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>  
>  And Din-Din Rule #2 probably is appropriate here, too, 
>  if we're talking about sea-horses ....
>  
>  The quickest eat all the din-din, the timid and slow just watch.
>  
>  
>  BTW, Adenia xenica (the diamond killie) is a very attractive little
brackish water native killie worth considering. It's found here in Florida,
but I can't recall off-hand if it ranges all the way up to the Carolinas or
not. 
>  
>  Doug Dame
>  Interlachen/Gainesville FL
>  
>  ---------------
>  See http://www.aka.org/AKA/subkillietalk.html to unsubscribe





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