Got out of work early, so I went to the park to check on the owls. Annabelle and Otis were there doing their thing, but I didn’t see old Hootie. I was hoping they had moved him inside or something since he was so old, but when I talked to the staff, they said he was not doing well the day after Thanksgiving, so the vet took care of him.

Hootie came there as an adult over 20 years ago. He had half a wing removed, lost one eye to disease a few years ago, and lost vision in his remaining eye this year. He was a tough old owl.

The staff was sad to lose him, but as he was close to 30, the lady said he must have enjoyed his stay there to be around as long as he was. They couldn’t tell his exact age, but he was definitely well into his 20s. Wikipedia says there are only 6 recorded captive owls that lived to 30, so Hootie was around pretty darn long.

The photo is the last one I took off him near the end of October. I will miss you Hootie! You never did much or really even moved when I was there, but you were always there doing your thing!

  • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I mean, if the ATF asks, yes, I still have the still… it’s a planter in the kitchen for the microgreens growing in it.

    (actually, It’s a bit too large for the little booze I actually drink… and my state are a bunch of assholes who want their tax dollars,)

    • anon6789@lemmy.worldOP
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      7 months ago

      It’s still neat you have it at least and are enjoying it in some form.

      I distilled like a pint of brandy once just to see how difficult it was. It was fun as an experiment, but it only seems worth it if you’re making an amount that would probably get you in trouble.

      Homemade wine is fun though, but like you, I hardly partake of anything much anymore. Chocolate pomegranate was probably my most creative experiment, and banana was really cheap and good.

      • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        So, they do make stove top things. that are more useful for the kind of micro batches a home disteller would use. The caveat is… to do it legally, you’d have to segregate it from your house in a shed that is only used for distillation, possibly on commercial-only property, and that’s just to get the federal permit.

        gotta be careful in the US, because its illegal federally. without a commercial licenses, that is. Taxman gotta get his cut). and some states FREAK OUT over it. Minnesota is one of those states. They’ll tell you it’s about keeping people safe, which, I mean, you screw up, people go blind… but it’s funny how they’re always worried about collecting their cut of it as the first order of priority, (minimum, 1k/yr, not to mention having a segregated shop where that’s basically all you do with it. I suppose you could have a bar in front, if you really wanted to,)

        • anon6789@lemmy.worldOP
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          6 months ago

          Someone has done their homework! 😁

          I’m in Pennsylvania, the home of the Whiskey Rebellion, so we know how far those guys will go to get their tax!