OT: - Want to see some real chutzpah? | The Boneyard

OT: Want to see some real chutzpah?

Bigboote

That's big-boo-TAY
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I had a colleague who drove race cars as a hobby. When he noticed a groundhog hole in his yard, he employed the old "when you're a hammer, everything looks like a nail" approach. He put "a block and two crankshafts" on/in the hole.

The groundhog was undeterred and within a day there was a new hole and the engine parts began sinking. ;)
 

cabbie191

Jonathan Husky on a date with Holi
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In the backyard of the house where I grew up, there was a narrow and flat band of grass 10' in width which was next to a fairly steep hill, followed by a flat area that was also grassed, which finally abutted woods owned by someone else. My parents never tried to plant grass on that hill so it was always an overgrown tangle of wild growth.

In 1968 when I was 16, a woodchuck family burrowed into the hill. Some of their tunnels were underneath the lawn closest to the house and in a couple of spots, the ground started sagging when you stepped there. Mom was concerned about this and asked me to try and get rid of the intruders. I tried smoking them out, and then flooding them out, and last I tried live trapping. I caught several raccoons and a few other critters but never the woodchucks. Since the sagging of the lawn didn't get any worse, and I was clearly a woodchuck removal failure, mom decided to let things be for the time being.

Slow forward 57 years - my brother now owns the house and the woodchucks still own the hill, both parties living in peaceful coexistence.
 

CL82

NCAA Woman's Basketball National Champions
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In the backyard of the house where I grew up, there was a narrow and flat band of grass 10' in width which was next to a fairly steep hill, followed by a flat area that was also grassed, which finally abutted woods owned by someone else. My parents never tried to plant grass on that hill so it was always an overgrown tangle of wild growth.

In 1968 when I was 16, a woodchuck family burrowed into the hill. Some of their tunnels were underneath the lawn closest to the house and in a couple of spots, the ground started sagging when you stepped there. Mom was concerned about this and asked me to try and get rid of the intruders. I tried smoking them out, and then flooding them out, and last I tried live trapping. I caught several raccoons and a few other critters but never the woodchucks. Since the sagging of the lawn didn't get any worse, and I was clearly a woodchuck removal failure, mom decided to let things be for the time being.

Slow forward 57 years - my brother now owns the house and the woodchucks still own the hill, both parties living in peaceful coexistence.
Lol, after reading, the first two paragraphs, I thought we were related, including the timeframe.
 
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For some reason, your subject heading reminded me of this.

 
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My late bridge partner grew up on a farm and had a large backyard in Cleveland, so he always planted vegetables. A groundhog showed up and started invading his garden. He told me he had set a trap, caught it and taught it how to swim. Little 'ole gullible me said that I didn't know groundhogs could swim - to which he replied "They can't."
 
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Once had a tomato garden with about a dozen plants. As the tomatoes started to ripen a despicable ground hog would take 1 bite out of each tomato. I would not have minded if he (she?) ate a couple of them, but 1 bite out of each? Not good... At least the groundhog in the picture is eating a whole tomato :)
 

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