Comments by "SonsOfLorgar" (@SonsOfLorgar) on "Bernadette Banner"
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@Jennaswirly interesting approach to hiking nessecities.
I tend to carry a roll of TP and an entrenching tool as part of my baseline hiking gear, and, if nature calls for nr2, I'd find a tree with a set of branches or a fallen log that would allow for a secure sitting position, dig a 2ft hole underneath that seat location, get the need done, wipe as normal, possibly using some moist white moss for the 2nd to last wipe, then cover the hole and contents back up with the entrenching tool so that nothing looks out of place from more than 10ft distance (an entrenching tool is a small and light foldable and/or break down spade, sometimes with the option of folding the blade to perpendicular to use as a pick or rake, sometimes with an actual pick axe back end, sometimes with sharpened edges or snow shovel module accessory. Each nations armed forces tend to have their own style due to different local needs.)
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@linkelinse4534 as an amateur blacksmith, there is however no really good alternative to a vegetable tanned leather apron and a pair of insulated leather gloves as canvas, weather cotton or linnen or something else requires the same soaking in very toxic flame retardants as synthetic fibres to be viable in a forge.
I do however conceed that it's a nessesary evil at best, and even as a meat eater, I agree with you on a moral level.
Cows, pigs and even sheep are very curious and far more clever in their own ways than they get credit for.
One of the funniest traffic incidents I've been in as a taxi driver for a regional public transport service involved a calf in the middle of my lane as I came driving at a sensible speed on a country road after dropping off a customer.
As I gently slowed down and stopped about three car lengths before the calf, it looked at me and I caught it's eyes and tilted my head while making a slightly admonishing face trying to express something like: "Young man, you know you aren't supposed to play in traffic"
And as I did, the calf seemed to sigh, turned around and trotted off the road, crouching and wiggling back under the fence to the meadow where his mom and friends were grazing and playing as I started back on my way to pick up the next set of customers! 😊
I've also had to deal with an escaped horse grazing in a ditch by a paddock near an intercity motorway (100kph speed limit and heavy traffic)
And a runaway Sow with piglets on a single width snow and ice covered gravel road.
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