Show Student Life Wednesday Utah wildlife Si thru’ tin N w Y ± k&t £ ' iiVLV‘'£-&- flocks of t ns "f tends could be set n of tin so ore jtiul birds Today of four or fit t jet' to see a flock the 1800s uu xuand ir name pure except for black wing tips Iheir bills and feet are vt How rje immature bird is a puli body rai color The aieragt is 30 inches with a amt They wt n i fi t soar of 60 inches The j pounds ceese w 5' rj- Ross leoe are er an Mid Geese However siimt i larger and had ofu n i biuS hie along t'u i M the Dul' id'Undalonttht Ml -rUre Island to in r Tart migration tl r!testhecontim cr he r breeding er no s' ‘ i must of Xl'L fr4 p- rf U i t i r v V- - ' '" f Snow nt t st are most t oinnion set n m foi niations I h fly in lartit fiot ks and as high is non fet t in the an hi y rt at h spet ds 0 m ph of and t in fl teen fistt i w ith tht w md 1 fit ir da t mainly onsists of Iv 1 t rains sin rn attnl h rush and is tht at barlt and spikt- t ht s I n i i t y usually !it more than U) 11 5ls County' gets photos like A Sand t i rirt h come alonn bthored by one of tl s Its "lost revered nil t tra'-a- t fa" 30 years ago rtis dered a classic Bu"iu to -- w a new i this County Almanai IlFstr with Leopold s original and photographs by Tom u he book is a collection tt t irt of that re things that the Ieopold saw and did while rt bull conservation ding a win nnut sand t ountv farm in Wisconsin Mgire walked the same land txptritnced the st a sons and t aptured his pc rt t turns on film The Algire photm griiphs art intended to fit the md wolds tfiit Itopold urutt tugt ther tin v bit nd to t iress the unity tfiit t ists bttwttn man and tht t ai th s A polluting at tiv y e g construction i tc whith plans should address arid idtntifus some possible solutions to those problems It also offer s suggestions on wav s t ltizens can Purtif ipatt effectively in 208 planning and brn fh discusses other ( It an Water ct P I jOOi programs which affect 208 planning Ht fert nc es to additional information sources are in 1 einulturt Single copies are available free from Fduca-tionServices National Wildlife hederation 1412 16th Street N W Washington DC 200S6 Additional copies can be obtained for $2 00 eat h Wildlife trivia What's flapper clowder elver? Almost everyone knows that a a young lady of the I'Ulls who was tasilv rtcognied hv fit r style of drt ss and her fltpptr was attitude toward lift lught W that s narth i lght Hut while then is ltltle question that the flappt r of tht Day Iwentits w is r i prt sentativ e of some putty wildlife the rt is another flappt r that is truly rt prt senta tivi of wildlife and that is the ’ 11 eopold s txiok was excellent itself hut Algire s pictures have added further luster to that excellence The book whith is published by Tamarack Press retails for $19 95 and would be an excellent selection as a t hrist-ma- s gift I hv w ild fow known hv the distinctive name of the young of wild flapper finds art just one of many In art rs of strange and seemingly exotic names What for instance dots ont call a young eel If you call it anything at all which ’ day for pheasants Pheas°ns be taken in Utah Only 0e lands remain openmay to pheasant hunters would seem unlikely the proper name is c ly er The young of a hare is called a lev ent a bain hawk is called an eyas but what you ask do you all a in wlv hatched grouse The ’ c answer is i c beeper And if those names seem uni-qtry some of the catchy collectives that have been thought up For example a num-b- t r of badgers is tailed a c ete of badgt rs And if that doesn’t do anything for you try a clowder of cats a t ongregation of plovers a drift of swine an exaltation of larks a gang of elk a herd of t urlew s a husk of hares or a real strange one a knot of toads And did you know that under the best of conditions an elk could be expected to live for a maximum of 22 years but that a meadow mouse would only live four years0 And if you're thinking that if you ever encounter a gnzzlv bear you re just going to take off and outrun him think again A grizzly can hot foot it along at about 20 miles an hour for that first quarter mile while man’s best effort to date is more than two miles an hour slower The world of animals is nothing short of fascinating so with winter coming on bone up on your trivia information and astound your friends with your knowledge while you warm yourself in front of a roaring fire Same problems but worse and he processes of agriculture industry are fatally tive to aquatic animals of de-str- within reach of their influence As consequence of clearing the wocxls the spawning grounds of fish are exposed the temperature of water is higher in summer and colder in winter than when shaded and protected Industrial operations are no less elestructiv e to fish Milldams sawimpede their migrations dust from lumber mills clogs their gills and substances discharged from manufat tunng establishments poison them b shoals ” Those words were written more than 100 years ago in 1865 b George Perkins Marsh in Man and Nature ” Today his words contain the same ring of truth that they carried when they were written Man continues to abuse the world in which he lives and still Where have asks the question all the fish and wildlife gone0” The answer is that they have BUMPER STICKERS Senior ititn n I I Last i if tin handbo ik ytas funded by a I mot) o i'it Ni h urn tin C S I rmr-- ( mm ntd I’m ti tion i ni Iht handbook di si rd s tht planning and pub-lp it tu ip d on n quirt merits of section 208 planniiu jii ov ides information on each type o' out-da- atrations on i dimension with of some ' ling The end result is addition ssa's is m and is this excellt nt b on Saidy sled m Sand County Almanac "!ten by Aldo Ieop 11 She j a watti quality I voting of Sand W i’t r H8 iru lulled Northern t anada Alaska and the rttu Islands Snow net so mate for life hut little is known about thtir breed inn and nextinn habits bet ause they nest so far north Steen or einht is a normal t lute h of enns (icesetan usually fly within fifty day s of hati hinn Its hinh pitched shrill honkinn or nabbinn an te htard at lonn distant e s biilrich u i ( it li ( turn i pollution y gabbe ed c itionil i f si i A c tht Pn paritio'i t $" the jrow geese take ran their appearanc e ourst for ( d A High-pitch- on mi r‘ io in w is dtvilojjed by the Wil I'lfi f edi i ition fr mi a draft Mtti n b the itur ai Hi souri i s )t fense ( oun ’li in $ 1 1 Handbook concerns clean water handbook k November 30 1977 Page COLOR PRINTS FROM fallt n before his wasteful use and destruction of animal habitat the have been unable to withstand his usurpation of their territorv W hat is the answer0 Perhaps it lies at least in part in these words of Alan Devoe from "Animals in NEGS 8X10-$3- COLOR PRINTS FROM NEGS 5X7-$- 2 IiOve" It is dangerously easy to sentimentalize animals to make the mistake of reading human thoughts and feelings into their actions But it is just as easy to err the other wa forgetting all creation is a brotherhood and that something of the same mind and heart dwells in all of us ” ' ‘THRU 39't W 100 No DEC 7 Logan RAW COLOR PHOTO NJ 4 t iX NOW YOU KNOW!! d The Hub is having a giant Christmas 8 For dinner Dec only pm 175 you get your choice of Baked Ham Chicken Roast Beef Fish Dinner along with your choice of salad and your choice of potatoes and a vegetable Smor-gasboar- 4-- 8 It’s our way of saying Thanks & Merry Christmas UTLikSi GUD |