Posted on 10/13/2005 7:21:49 PM PDT by NormsRevenge
King Midas, a 300-pound green sea turtle, swims in his watery home with other fish at the Audubon Aquarium of the Americas in New Orleans, La., Thursday, Oct. 13, 2005. King Midas was taken to a temporary home at Moody Gardens Aquarium in Galveston, Tex., after he was evacuated in the wake of Hurricane Katrina and returned today. (AP Photo/Don Ryan)
Mercury Morris, Larry Csonka, Garo Yephremiam.....who were the other six?
Would any of these be the "killer dolphins" that got loose?
Some sad news, but also some good news as well. I just hope the manatees recover.
So much for the irreparable "toxic soup" theory.
Maybe its those missing killer dolphins. If I were a dolphin, I'd make sure I was locked and loaded before I went to NOLA.
Dialup strikes again :(
They call him Flipper, Flipper, Flipper...faster than lightening.
Or am I seeing things?
Exactly. The constant "sky is falling" drone of the ecoidiots is really nauseating. Hurricanes have hit the coast for eons--of course it healed. That's what it does.
Ricky Williams hasn't been seen for a while. And Larry Czonka can't swim.
Jim Kiick, Bob Griese, Paul Warfield
Mercury Morris, Larry Csonka, Garo Yephremiam.....who were the other six?
Bob Griese & Paul Warfield. ;-)
The big dolphin with the shellac hair claimed to be Shula. Pretty sure Earl Morral was there too (I'm pretty sure he was the QB....my brain ain't what it used to be)
I like them blackened!
Tuna supplements.
I'm going out on a limb here. I would think most of the crap pumped back into the lake will take the form of residual oil, and the various end products that came out of vehicle exhausts that buried into the road bed surface. Plus obviously things like raw sewage which are biodegradable, and will be consumed by various type bacteria forms living in the lake. As for the offshore fisheries as some are aware, reports are coming in that the fishing industry may not have suffered to badly. The gulf is a huge body of water. And though thousands of towns close to the coast where wiped out, it does not mean huge amounts of pollutants ended up in the near shore fishery zones. And most of the refinery complexes may not have leaked a drop of bad stuff into the gulf. So perhaps the fishing and shrimp industries shall once again be a reality in our gulf states.
Just giving you a chance wise guy. :)
OK
Larry Little , Earl Morrell, Jake Scott, Larry Seiple, Nick Buonoconi (sp)
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