Ducks At A Distance

How to Write Your Life Stories – home study program

A few duck stickers products I can recommend:

How to Write Your Life Tales – home examine program
Devised by author of 27 books, international journalist, expat publisher and prose teacher, Jo Parfitt, this is an 8 session home examine course with four components: workbook, audio, video and 200 inspiring stickers.
How to Write Your Life Tales – home examine program

got ducks? FUNNY Vinyl Decal Window Sticker PARODY

US $3.99
End Date: Monday Feb-06-2012 5:11:20 PST
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CARSON DELLOSA DJ-668030 JUST DUCKY DUCKS STICKERS
US $13.90
End Date: Monday Feb-06-2012 6:27:19 PST
Buy It Now for only: US $13.90
Buy it now | Add to watch list

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Experts fear long oil effect on marine life, food chain

Experts dread long oil effect on marine life, food chain
Scientists studying the massive BP oil spill dread a decades-long, “cascading” effect on marine life that could lead to a shift in the overall biological network in the Gulf of Mexico.
Read more on AFP via Yahoo! News

LawNewsAmerica
In April 2008, a late spring snow flurry resulted in the diversion of ducks from their flyway to a tailings pond (“Aurora Pond”) near Fort McMurray, Alberta, operated by Syncrude Canada Ltd. (“Syncrude”). The ducks landed on the Aurora Pond and were killed by the toxicity of the pond.
Read more on Mondaq

Ducks halted
Tours have been suspended after two childish Hungarian tourists were killed last week with one body located near Pier 80 Friday. “Our thoughts and prayers are with our Philadelphia tour guests, crew members and their families. We are attending to their wants first. In the interim, we have… [This is a summary. To read the full article on SouthPhillyReview.com, click the headline above.]
Read more on South Philly Review

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Will Axle Rose do a benefit concert for sea life; as in manatees, dolphins, ducks, otters and OIL SPILLS?

Question by Honey B: Will Axle Rose do a benefit concert for sea life; as in manatees, dolphins, ducks, otters and OIL SPILLS?
Axle Rose is one of Gods and Buddhas children… but can he prove this to the world? Come on hot babe… prove it to me.

Best answer:

Answer by ???????
Sorry to break it to you but Axl Rose only worships himself so no.

What do you reckon? Answer below!

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Movie Zeros to Real Life Heroes: Disney’s Anaheim Ducks

Often, tales found in the world of fiction are based on reality, rather than the other way round. But the real life tale of Disney’s Mighty Ducks ice hockey team strangely mirrors its fictional counterpart.

In 1992, the Walt Disney Company released the first of a live action trilogy: “The Mighty Ducks”. The films followed the misadventures of an ice hockey team composed of perennial losers who close at the bottom of their league year after year, before a new coach arrives, who inevitably leads the team to victorious glory.

Despite the predictable plots, the trilogy’s commercial success led to Disney founding a real life ice hockey team, based in Anaheim, California. Many hockey purists cringed at the thought of a team life founded by Disney Corp and named after a kids’ movie but, unlike its fictional namesake, the strength of the team surprised fans and the Ducks had an brilliant first season, proving them to be more than just a movie spin off.

Disney later went on to make a further two Mighty Ducks films: “D2: The Mighty Ducks” (1994) and “D3: The Mighty Ducks” (1996) as well as 26 episodes of an animated run called “Mighty Ducks” that were loosely based on the films and the real life hockey team.

The founding of a real life team based on an established fictional thought was marketing genius. The Mighty Ducks team instantly appealed to childish fans of both hockey and the Mighty Duck movies, proving the perfect opportunity for merchandising, with many toys, logos and characters by now in being.

The real life Duck’s team mascot, “Wild Wing”, is taken from a character in the Mighty Ducks cartoon run; he is the chief of the Ducks gang, both on and off the ice and plays as goal keeper in the cartoon team and regularly appears at the real life games.

Disney kept hold of the Ducks for 12 years, but in 2005 sold the franchise for $75 million. In 2006, the team were rebranded from the “Mighty Ducks of Anaheim” to simply the “Anaheim Ducks” and have continued to play a high standard of hockey, reaching the pinnacle of the game this year by winning the highly converted Stanley Cup in June 2007.

The Anaheim Ducks are based in Orange Country, California, and play their home games at the Honda Center. Fans of the Ducks wishing to see the Stanley Cup champions can chose from a number of hotels in Anaheim and, with Disneyland not for away, fans of the Mighty Ducks carton run can stay the ‘Mighty Ducks Pinball Slam’, an attraction based on the cartoon.

It’s impossible to tell what the prospect will bring to the Anaheim Ducks, but the tale of this ice hockey team just goes to show that real life based on fiction, can be weirder than fiction itself.

Adam Singleton is an online, freelance journalist and keen amateur photographer. His portfolio, called Capquest Shooting is available to view online.

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Day in the Life of my Call Ducks


www.ustream.tv 07/01/09 Here’s more of Loopy and her baby, Crumbles and the rest of the gang. Place to some wild composition. Starts out as a silent morning with a songbird singing. Then the day starts. If you have chicken or duck questions, I suggest going to the www.backyardchickens.com forum first. They have a lot of helpful public there.

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The American Bald Eagle: A Symbol of Life and Freedom

   The United States congress adopted the American Bald Eagle in 1782 as the inhabitant emblem. Native Americans considered these birds to be holy and their feathers sacred adorning themselves with feathers to show their rank in the tribe or their prowess in battle. Not everyone thought these birds to be so honorable. According to myths and tales, they were hunted and slaughtered without regard, reducing their number from the thousands to only a few hundred nesting pairs. Although Congress enacted the Bald Eagle Protection Act to protect the symbol of our nation and to prevent these gorgeous birds from becoming extinct, other battles were subdue to be fought in the war of survival before this magnificent bird started the uphill climb to recovery.
 
   Americans grow up with a mental picture of the American Bald Eagle because it is used as a symbol on some currency, flags, and memorials as well as life a well loved develop for paintings to adorn our parapet. It is easily recognized with a dark body and white feathers on both the head and tail. The female eagles are larger than the males, weighing up to fourteen pounds, while the males commonly weigh seven to ten pounds. Their lifespan can be more than thirty years in the wild. Mating for life, they often nest within a hundred miles of the nest where they were reared; laying a clutch of two or three eggs yearly in a nest they expand year after year, the nest sometimes reaching ten feet in diameter. Both parents participate in the incubation of the eggs, a process which will take between thirty-four and thirty-six days (hatching usually a day or two apart). A childish eagle or fledgling will leave the nest between seventy and ninety-eight days of age. Bald Eagles will breed beginning in February through July away from human disturbances in open areas. Eagles will migrate from Northern area further south for the chill, gathering along waterways with an abundant food supply.
 
   Habitats for the bald eagles include waterways or estuaries, large lakes, seacoast area, reservoirs, and major rivers, but ample food fund is not the only requirement for the large birds. They must also have perching and nesting areas to accommodate this species.
 
   Much of the bald eagles original habitat has been lost since the Europeans arrived in North America due to deforestation for towns, farms, and for lumber to support the growth. This deforestation has ruined perching and nesting sites, forcing the raptors to seek other roost such as the top of a high voltage electric pole.
 
   The bald eagle was adopted by the U.S. Congress as the inhabitant emblem in 1782. At that time, the number of eagles was estimated as high as seventy-five thousand. By 1940, the number had reduced so drastically that Congress enacted the Bald Eagle Protection Act. This act made it illegal to harass, kill, or possess the birds or any bird or any bird parts without a permit. Although this act offered a promise for the prospect of the eagle, the struggle for survival was far from over. Farmers and ranchers viewed the eagle as a threat to their livestock but their primary prey is fish although they will eat waterfowl, small mammals or rodents, and carrion.
 
   The chemical era for agriculture and pesticides after World War II ushered in new problems for the troubled populace of eagles while fighting the war on insects. DDT and other pesticides applied to lawns and crops washed into the nations’ water sources and contaminated water plants, fish, and small creatures, supplying a deadly dose to the eagles as they ate the fish where the chemicals concentrated in their tissues. According to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, DDT was originally used to control mosquitoes along coastal and wetland areas. DDT accumulated in the birds’ stout as the DDT broke down in the birds’ body and slowed the release of calcium into the eggshells produced by the females. These birds in turn laid eggs with thin shells that would be crushed by the parents incubating them.
 
   The Secretary of the Interior in 1967 under the Endangered Species Preservation Act of 1966 listed bald eagles south of the fortieth analogous as endangered. The populace facts had dropped to fewer than 500 pairs in the decrease forty-eight states mainly due to habitat destruction, hunting, and the use of pesticides like DDT. Scientists determined the link between DDT and the decrease number of eagles and the United States government banned its’ use in 1972. Another battle had been won, but the war was subdue not over.
 
   Although the bald eagle received protection first under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918, it wasn’t until after the Endangered Species Act passes in 1973, that conservation measures to protect the eagle were implemented. The Endangered Species Act allowed distinct populations of animal species to be listed and new categories of threatened species to be added. Endangered species are defined by the Act as any species in danger of extinction throughout a significant part or all of its’ range. A intent-breeding program to produce birds for release into the wild was started by the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service. In addition to the intent breeding program, the Inhabitant Wildlife Refuges and local raptor rehabilitation centers work to improve habitats or by rehabilitating injured eagles so they may be released back into the wild. Most of these organizations work through volunteers and are funded by donation, as long as medical care for the birds and public education through presentations and exhibitions. These measures, coupled with law enforcement and protection of the nesting sites during breeding, helped the recovery of the species, but even with these measures there were subdue challenges ahead for the Bald Eagle.
 
   Another cause of mortality has been lead poisoning with more than two hundred and twenty five cases diagnosed in the last 15 years. The Inhabitant Wildlife Federation succeeded in the early 1980s in getting the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service to ban the use of lead shot nationally in hunting waterfowl, Waterfowl that had eaten or been wounded by lead shot would cause lead poisoning in eagles, which could weaken or even kill adult eagles. Since the ban, waterfowl hunters use shells biased with steel shot instead of lead. Although the change to steel shot has helped the problem of lead poisoning, it has not cured it since upland hunters can subdue use lead shot, while other reports show some birds have been poisoned from lead fishing sinkers. In order to reduce the risk, public should not leave solid debris such as lead sinkers in rivers and lakes where there is a chance they could be ingested by an eagle.
 
   Another battle subdue life fought concerns the toxic things of mercury distressing eagles with a variety or neurological problems that can alter motor skills and reduce the rate of eggs hatching. The fund of the mercury has been identified entering waterways as air emissions from solid waste incineration sites as well as other sources. The impact on the bald eagle populace in the Southeastern Region is under investigation.
 
   In the first half of this century illegal shooting subdue posed a threat to eagles, this impact has been reduced through public education and law enforcement. Some deaths subdue suggest itself on power poles and lines that have not been redesigned to protect raptors, although the poles are usually configured to reduce the occurrence of electrocutions.
 
   Humans and their disturbances are subdue a long-term threat to the Bald Eagle. Recreational endeavor in nesting sites can impact the reproduction processes of these birds. Eagles prefer to breed away from human disturbance in the open and adult birds can be flushed from the nests during incubation and brooding periods. This can expose the eggs or childish to adverse conditions. In order to reduce some of the problems caused by these disturbances, land management practices have included zones of protection restricting public access during crucial times. If an individual finds themselves in an eagle habitat, he or she should avoid disturbing the eagles by staying at least three hundred feet away and by keeping an obstacle between them.
 
   Although each of these problems individually is no longer a serious threat to the being of the Bald Eagle, collectively, they can cause serious problems if not monitored. On August 11, 1995, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Division of Endangered Species, ruled that the American Bald Eagle would be removed from the endangered list but would remain listed as threatened even though the eagle has made a spectacular comeback to nearly 5,800 pairs. In a CBS new report on June 29, 2000 Cindy Hoffman stated that lawyers for the government were trying to determine if the birds’ habitat would be protected by federal law if it is taken off the endangered species list. Due to all of these efforts, generations to come will be able to look up and see our inhabitant symbol flying overhead instead of just seeing in on our currency, stamps or flag poles.
 
   The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will work with disorder agencies to monitor the status of the bald eagle for five years, a requirement of the Endangered Species Act. They are the principal federal agency responsible for protecting, conserving, and enhancing wildlife, fish, and their habitats while managing over 150 million acres, 550 units in the Inhabitant Wildlife Safe haven System, operating sixty-six inhabitant fish hatcheries and 37 wetland management districts. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service administers the Endangered Species Act, enforces Federal wildlife laws, conserves and restores wildlife habitats, manages migratory bird populations, and helps foreign countries with their conservation practices, while overseeing the Federal Aid programs to disorder fish and wildlife agencies. In addition to all of these duties, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service established the Inhabitant Eagle Repository in early 1970 to provide feathers from the Golden and Bald Eagles for Native American ceremonial purposes located at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal Inhabitant Wildlife Safe haven in Denver, Colorado. The repository is a pool point for dead eagles. The Bald Eagle Protection Act prohibits the taking, transportation, barter, trade, import or export, sale of any part of and the possession of eagles. This Act makes it illegal to possess and eagle or body part from an eagle. Possession of an eagle body part, even a spine, without a permit, is a felony and can carry a fine up to $10,000 and/or imprisonment. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will issue a permit to a Native American to receive and possess eagle feathers from the Repository for use in devout ceremonies, but there is a large demand with thousands on a waiting list. The Repository receives around nine hundred eagles per year and it could take up to two and a half years for an order to be filled for even a single spine.

   As of January 2209, The American Bald Eagle is subdue listed as a threatened species for certain populations in the Sonoran Desert (Region 2) but is listed as Taxon-recovered for the decrease 48 states. Diligent observation is subdue required to maintain this recovery but proper steps were taken to provide the necessary protection for these magnificent birds.
 
   The American public have risen to the occasion to protect the symbol of our nation and because of this dedication; the American Bald Eagle has made a spectacular recovery from near extinction. The tale of the fight to save this magnificent bird shows the same courage and honor as we associate with the bird itself. It has been an uphill battle, but it is one the American public rose to meet head on. Maybe one day on the long guide to school, in the early morning hours, I can look up at one of those gorgeous birds soaring high above the trees and feel pride in knowing it is there because we cared enough not to give up.

Lynda M Lacroix is an accomplished novelist with 40 years experience working with scenery and species that inhabit this planet. She has dedicated her life to methods of co-existing on this planet; reducing our carbon footprint; preservation of species; and now wants to educate those interested in income a homestead life. A homestead life uses the group of life merged with new technologies bringing back vital values that have been forgotten. Click here for more: http://alternativehomesteading.com

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