The 50 Plus Cafe, Pub, All-Nite Greasy Spoon and Dive Bar

I forget about those. Used to eat them all the time.


Tonight was salmon and some veggies. (Trying to keep some oil and omegas and all that good stuff in the diet!).
I make mine a little differently. I almost make a tartar sauce, and then fold in tuna. it's delicious. I add onion, garlic. just a little bit of mayonnaise.... just enough to hold it together, and some celery and onion.... delicious
 
Good Evening everyone,

I'm back from my daylong visit with my Mrs Doctors and endless tests, but I don't have many results yet other than she has a enlarged spleen.
{{{RJ and Mrs. RJ}}}
Thank you for the update. I'll go with the "No news is good news" and keep sending healing thoughts your way!! I hope they figure out the cause and a plan of action for you both soon. 🫂🫂
 
I remember a week or so ago someone posted about a coyote that looked more like a wolf. I found this on FB today, so take it with a grain of salt.
As I understand it, they are out there. Apparently they have some domestic dog in the genome too. There is some concern they may replace wolves, but I think the FB article is exaggerating quite a bit...
 
I remember a week or so ago someone posted about a coyote that looked more like a wolf. I found this on FB today, so take it with a grain of salt.
As I understand it, they are out there. Apparently they have some domestic dog in the genome too. There is some concern they may replace wolves, but I think the FB article is exaggerating quite a bit...

https://nywolf.org/coyote-awareness-day-2022/

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There is a wild hybrid canid living in the eastern United States, and it is the result of evolution occurring right under our noses!

Over the years these dynamic canids have acquired a number of nicknames. Both "Coywolf" and “Coydog” have been growing in popularity; however, the majority of the scientific community prefer the less flashy moniker: “Eastern Coyote.” It's no surprise that "wolf" and "dog" have been woven into the identity of wild canids in the region, as current science indicates a number of species are represented within the genome of the eastern coyote. Ecologist and evolutionary biologist Javier Monzón, previously at Stony Brook University in New York, now at Pepperdine University in California, analyzed the DNA of 437 eastern coyotes and found the genes contain all three canids -- dog, wolf and coyote. According to Monzón's research, about 64% of the eastern coyote's genome is coyote (Canis latrans), 13% gray wolf (Canis lupus), 13% Eastern wolf (Canis lycaon), and 10% dog (Canis familiaris). Sounds like a recipe for canis soup!

Monzón, J., Kays, R., Dykhuizen, D.E., 2014. Assessment of coyote-wolf-dog admixture using ancestry-informative diagnosticSNPs. Molecular Ecology vol 23: 182–197.
 

https://nywolf.org/coyote-awareness-day-2022/

View attachment 2437058

There is a wild hybrid canid living in the eastern United States, and it is the result of evolution occurring right under our noses!

Over the years these dynamic canids have acquired a number of nicknames. Both "Coywolf" and “Coydog” have been growing in popularity; however, the majority of the scientific community prefer the less flashy moniker: “Eastern Coyote.” It's no surprise that "wolf" and "dog" have been woven into the identity of wild canids in the region, as current science indicates a number of species are represented within the genome of the eastern coyote. Ecologist and evolutionary biologist Javier Monzón, previously at Stony Brook University in New York, now at Pepperdine University in California, analyzed the DNA of 437 eastern coyotes and found the genes contain all three canids -- dog, wolf and coyote. According to Monzón's research, about 64% of the eastern coyote's genome is coyote (Canis latrans), 13% gray wolf (Canis lupus), 13% Eastern wolf (Canis lycaon), and 10% dog (Canis familiaris). Sounds like a recipe for canis soup!

Monzón, J., Kays, R., Dykhuizen, D.E., 2014. Assessment of coyote-wolf-dog admixture using ancestry-informative diagnosticSNPs. Molecular Ecology vol 23: 182–197.
Thanks hun.
 
A plateau is the highest form of flattery.

No matter how hard you push the envelope, it’ll still be stationery.

Having sex in an elevator is wrong on so many levels.

I couldn’t remember how to throw a boomerang, but it came back to me.

I’m reading a book about anti-gravity. It’s impossible to put down!

I wrote a song about a tortilla. Well actually, it’s more of a wrap.

I’m giving dead batteries away, free of charge.

Wounds heal better if they are covered. This is an example of gauze and effect.

Running in front of a car will make you tired, but running behind one is exhausting.

A life in politics is full of parties.

What do you call a small mother? A minimum.

When you have a bladder infection, urine trouble.

I hate negative numbers. I’ll stop at nothing to avoid them.

Sleeping comes so naturally to me, I could do it with my eyes closed.

People using umbrellas always seem to be under the weather.

I had a joke about vacuums, but it sucked.

I couldn’t figure out how to put my seatbelt on, but then it clicked.

Apple is designing a new automatic car, but they’re having trouble installing Windows!

I told my wife that it was her turn to shovel and salt the front steps. All I got was icy stares.
 
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