Buffalo Jokes #8

Two Blondes go to a Tanning studio to add to their tans. The receptionist looks at them and says “Wow! What incredible tans. Are you sisters?” They looked at each other and said ” No, We’re not even Catholic.”

Ok, it’s been awhile since we’ve had a chance to visit with Carl and Roger and as luck would have it they’ve got a blond joke for you today. As you know if you’ve been reading our blog for awhile Carl and Roger are the editors of Buffalo Jokes and have final say over all the material selected and presented here under Buffalo Jokes.

As Director of the blog and sole owner of it and all of it’s content, we try our darnest to keep these two in check. Problem is they’ve amassed quite a following and any attempt on our part to contain their often political incorrectness causes an uprising with their fans and there are riots in front of the blogs’ front door with cries of First Amendment violations on our part and “Leave them alone you Nazi bastard!” and “Let them tell blond jokes! It’s the American way!” and “What’s a matter with you, You wanta burn books too!” plus the often repeated “There he is! Get a rope!” and other indignities that can’t be repeated in a family oriented place like the blog.

As Director of the blog I firstly want to say that we do not condone any type of speech that makes light of, or causes discomfort to any group, regardless of hair color or national affiliation, or however many capitol letters they have as their name. This is America and everyone has the not quite God-given right to say whatever they want. Even buffalos. And in our case particularly buffalos as they actually own 83% of the Buffalo Jokes franchise and have numerously stated they will bring litigation in a big way if we don’t stay the hell out of their business. There are some limits however. For instance Carl won’t allow anything to be said about Republicans and Roger won’t let anything be said about Democrats or puppies. As you can imagine in this political climate there is often scuffling and head butting and even the occasional attempt to gore one another when material comes in that offends one or the other of them. This is why we don’t attend any of their editorial meetings and why the occasional blond joke slips thru. These guys each weigh about 2000 lbs. a piece. It’s best to let them work it out alone.

Now having said all that we want to say that Blonds are our friends. They do not bring sickness in the night, or cause earthquakes or even create some of the reality TV we see today, tho we suspect that there may be some who have dyed their hair another color and do have something to do with Reality TV but we can’t prove that yet so we just say we suspect that to be true. There have even been some blondes that have done great and interesting things for our country, like, uhmm you know, great things, wonderful things not bad things. I mean if you should see a blond or suspect that she may be a blond, march right up to her and say “Dammit, Thank you for your service.” and shake her hand. Ask her first if you can. Be careful there. You just don’t go up and grab a strangers hand, blond or not, without asking first, in fact I might recommend getting her to sign a waiver stating that it was ok. Just sayin’.

Last Weekend of A Walk On The Wildside Show at B&N

For those of you who live in the area but have not had a chance to stop and view the show “A Walk On The Wildside” displayed in the café at Barnes and Noble you have one more opportunity. The show will be on display through this Weekend.

All 18 of the images displayed during the show. Click  to enlarge.

For our International readers and our stateside friends who can not attend the show I’m providing this promotional image with all 18 of the chosen images displayed. I’ve included a short description of each image by number.

1: Into the Void. A coyote staring into a valley that begins right before him. Photographed in Rocky Mountain National Park and taken from the series that appeared on BigShotsNow the blog titled Hard Case here’s the link. http://www.bigshotsnow.com/hard-case/

2: Rosie. Rosie was a Black bear baby factory turning out a new set of cubs, sometimes twins and on the rarer occasion triplets every two years. She could be found around Mt. Washburn in Yellowstone National Park where she would condescendingly allow her picture to be taken. Search for Black bear, Rosie or cubs on the home page of BigShotsNow for more images. See more at http://www.bigshotsnow.com/dog-days-of-summer/

3: Rocky Mountain Bighorn rams, or the Golden Boys, photographed near Rocky Mountain National Park. Caught in a quiet moment right before the rut, resting for the challenges that lie ahead. See more at http://www.bigshotsnow.com/just-two-guys/ http://www.bigshotsnow.com/spring-break/

4: Fishing Wolves of Yellowstone. There are a pack of White Wolves kept in a refuge near Yellowstone National Park that have become fishermen. Rainbow trout are introduced in the stream that runs through their enclosure and the wolves have perfected the art of catching them. See more at http://www.bigshotsnow.com/fishing-wolves/

5: The Laughing Fox. This is a personal friend of mine from when I lived in the mountains. During cold spells he would appear and ask for a handout. Depending on how cold it was he may or may not have gotten lucky. See more at http://www.bigshotsnow.com/and-then-i-said/

6: Dancing Cranes. These are Sandhill cranes and this is an activity they do that can be thought of as dancing, or courting, or displaying their prowess as cranes in general. They were photographed at the best crane place in America, except maybe Nebraska, Bosque del Apache national refuge. See more at http://www.bigshotsnow.com/last-tango-in-bosque/ and http://www.bigshotsnow.com/when-sandhill-cranes-play-practical-jokes/

7: McCullough Peaks Mustangs. The McCullough peaks are a mountain range located near Cody, Wyoming. They have a resident wild horse herd there that is the real deal. No tame ponies here. In fact you are cautioned to remain in or near your car when viewing them as when the stallions get their wind up they can be quite dangerous. See more at http://www.bigshotsnow.com/bad-boys-bad-boys-whatcha-gonna-do/

8: Bald eagle. Bald eagles can be seen over most of the U.S. but there is something about seeing them in the wild at Yellowstone National Park that is just awe inspiring. This one was a resident at the famous ‘Big Nest’ on the Madison western entrance road from West Yellowstone. See more at http://www.bigshotsnow.com/epic-fail/

9: Into The Rain. An immature Bald Eagle fresh out of the nest is on his maiden flight. Finding a convenient perch on an old log in the middle of the river, he paused to rest a bit and with the coming of the rain took flight to find shelter.

10: Pancho and Lefty. Two wolves from the Cascade Pack. Every time I see this picture I hear old Willie singing the song, the verses starting out “
Livin on the road my friend, is gonna keep you free and clean…” there’s just something about the way an image can attach to a song and become a new entity that sticks in your brain forever, such it is for me with this picture.
See more at http://www.bigshotsnow.com/pancho-and-lefty-standoff-at-cascade-creek/

11: Jurassic Ravens. The juries out on whether there were ravens in the Jurassic period or not. But as for me my money’s on, yeah, there was. There is no proof that I’m aware of but seeing them in positions like this just cements the idea there were. How else would they know how to pose like this. See more at http://www.bigshotsnow.com/strike-a-pose/

12: Great Gray owl. This is a shot of one of my favorite birds. Favorite because I had sought to photograph it for years and never could get the job done. Like I said in my story about it I was always A Day Late and An Owl Short. Then one day fortunes changed and I was able to fulfill the dream and capture the Owl. That was a good day. See more at http://www.bigshotsnow.com/the-great-gray/

13: A Conversation. Ravens spend a lot of time socializing. they seem to favor deep rich conversations that apparently are very important to them. Here are two ravens engaged in a very important talk on small rise next to a deep valley in Yellowstone National Park. Soon after this photo was taken one left, slowly gliding off into the distance. The other stayed, apparently to think more about what was said.

14: The Hitchhiker. It was a cold and snowy day in May and this mother grizzly and her cub were fresh out the den looking for food. Food is sometimes scare at this time of year so Mom had her work cut out for her digging rodents up from the semi-frozen earth. Meanwhile the little one was getting his first taste of cold after being in the warm den for months and the first thing he learned was snow was cold on little paws. So hitching a ride made things a little more comfortable. See more at http://www.bigshotsnow.com/the-hitchhiker/

15: Buffalo Wings. This buffalo was making its way through the geysers near Norris in Yellowstone National Park accompanied by his constant companions the Brown-headed Cowbird. They pick parasites off of his hide and snatch up any insects he stirs while walking. This image is not named after the Buffalo wings served at The Anchor Bar in Buffalo, New York.

16: Against A Yellow Sky. There is a cool refuge in Utah called the Bear River Migratory Bird refuge where birds of all types and sizes pass through on their way to somewhere else. They have one of the largest concentrations of White-faced Ibis in the country, plus just about any other bird you can name. I caught this shorebird in flight and it reminded me of Japanese watercolors I have seen. One of my favorite images. See more at http://www.bigshotsnow.com/out-of-the-darkness/

17: Wolf Prince. This wolf is part of a captive pack of wolves in a refuge near Yellowstone National Park. His regal bearing just says royalty to me. hence the name Wolf Prince. See more at http://www.bigshotsnow.com/fishing-wolves/ 

18: First Flight. Osprey trying out their wings before taking that first flight. This young Osprey made several leaps like this one, then suddenly plunged off the nest and glided around like he’s been doing it for years. It wasn’t long and his siblings were imitating him and they were all soon gone from the nest to find their own territory.

There you have it folks. The loosely guided tour of “A Walk On The Wildside” soon to be featured in a new book of the same name. If you get the chance please stop by and see the show. It’ll be up thru this weekend. See you there.

All of the prints in the show are available for purchase. If you’re interested contact me at Dwight Lutsey at the following email address. dlutsey@enchantedpixels.com

A Note To Our Local Readers Pt.2

The Second Half of my Show “A Walk On The Wildside” is now up and on display in the Café at the Barnes & Noble store at 4045 S. College Ave here in Ft. Collins, Colorado.

Jurassic Ravens Yellowstone National park as displayed in the show 18×24 matted and framed

I’m proud to announce that the second half of my photography show is on display in the café at our local Barnes and Noble store at 4045 S. College Ave here in Ft. Collins, Colorado. There are nine large new images from my ongoing series “A Walk On The Wildside”, a wildlife animal portrait collection presented in a new and unique style. The show is on display until February 15. So stop in and see the current display.

This show is free to the public and you are encouraged to come in and if you decide to purchase one of their amazing pastries to go with that Latte, well I won’t tell if you don’t. If you’re shopping or visiting in the Ft. Collins area stop in and enjoy the show.

All images are available for purchase.

A Note To Our Local Readers

New Photography show at our Ft Collins Colorado Barnes & Noble Café

Into The Void – Coyote – Rocky Mountain National Park

I’m proud to announce that my photography show is on display in the café at our local Barnes and Noble store at 4045 S. College Ave here in Ft. Collins, Colorado. There are nine large images from my ongoing series “A Walk On The Wildside”, a wildlife portrait collection presented in a new and unique style. The show is on display until February 15 and the images will be changed midway thru the show with nine new portraits. So stop in and see the current display and come back and check out the second half of the show.

This show is free to the public and you are encouraged to come in and if you decide to purchase one of their amazing pastries to go with that Latte, well I won’t tell if you don’t. If you’re shopping or visiting in the Ft. Collins area stop in and enjoy the show. Here’s a link describing the show in more detail from The Barnes & Noble FaceBook page. https://www.facebook.com/events/234035574174281/

Although the show is easily available to our folks in the Ft. Collins and surrounding area I realize that this message goes out to our readers around the world (now over 180 different countries at last count) and if any of you international readers want to jump into your Learjet 60, or that Embraer Legacy 650, or even that Dassault Falcon 50 private jet you’ve been keeping out back next to your RV, come on over. I’ll even buy the coffee.

Thanks everyone, see you at the show!!

The Hitchhiker

Early Spring in Yellowstone

It’s early spring in Yellowstone, actually it’s nearly the end of the month and where the rest of the country is looking at early flowers and sunshine, up here it’s cold, the snow keeps falling and food is hard to find.

This grizzly and her cub are up early and looking for supper. Problem is there isn’t much in the way of food right now. Snow covers everything and the ground is still frozen so digging for ground squirrels isn’t on the menu yet. Hopefully there’ll be some winter kill around. A nice frozen buffalo that didn’t make it through the winter would be welcome. Anything dead at all in fact would be welcome, she’s hungry and the cub needs its milk so she’s got to get something going in the way of sustenance.

The cub doesn’t know quite what to make of all this white stuff or the cold for that matter. It’s been snuggling with mom for so long that it’s a real shock to discover cold paws. Luckily mom has been through this all before and doesn’t mind the cub’s climbing aboard to get out of the cold wet snow.

As this is the very end of May, tomorrow will likely bring bright sunshine, rapidly melting snow and food. There’s edible grass under the snow, and on the southern side of the hillsides the ground is warm enough that she can dig out some unlucky ground squirrels, and the cub will be off her back and scrambling around discovering it’s new life out of the den. No need to hitchhike anymore.

The Road Trip

“Goddamn it Harriet, You’re going to kill us all.”  Those were the words that bellowed out of the big mans chest startling the boy into a motionless figure staring in amazement at his father. He had heard his father swear before but never with such conviction and utter finality. It was a shock, not just the swear words, he had heard them before, but the fact that it was directed at his mother. The words “Goddamn it Harriet, you’re going to kill us all.”  rang in his ears sending a thrilling but terrifying sensation through his eight year old body like the time he stuck his finger in the light socket to see what it felt like. This was different than regular conversation. His mother just sat there with that stubborn defiant look on her face that was ripening into a righteous anger and the boy knew something really bad was going to happen. When that look appeared there was going to a reckoning and there would come a reckoning later, his mother was going to address this situation with his father. They were going to talk about it. And that talk would be loud and long-lasting, like way into the night long-lasting and he would lay there in his bed hanging on every word trying to figure out what everything meant, afraid but mostly curious.

The problem that caused that explosive reaction from his father was simple on the surface. There was a wasp in the car. A huge wasp. The Grandmother of all wasps. His mother didn’t like wasps, she didn’t like bees, she didn’t like flies, she didn’t like bats, she didn’t like any thing that could fly and dart around, possibly and however remotely, get tangled in her hair. She wasn’t one of those women that if she got bit by a bee or a wasp she’d just die. She wasn’t allergic. No, this was something else, it was just a primal fear of anything that moved like bugs do. Spiders! Spiders were even worse than things that could get tangled in her hair. Those creepy things would set her off in a hysterical reaction that was epic to behold. If there was a spider scurrying somewhere in the house or even next door at the neighbor’s house and she knew about it she would nearly go out of her mind. Everything stopped until that miserable spider was dealt with and dispatched to spider hell.

The incident that became known as the Family Calamity happened as the family were in the early stages of a road trip to see his mother’s brother and family in California. There was a chance they might get to go to Disneyland or even Knottsberry farm once they got there. Everybody, especially the two kids, were pretty excited. They were heading across the Mojave desert en route from the wilds of Northern Wisconsin in a 1951 Hudson Hornet that his father had borrowed from the boy’s grandfather so they could go to California to see his mom’s brother and all of his kids. Their family car, an old used Chevy that was on its last legs, would never have made the trip so it was their good fortune to have the luxury of this huge comfortable car. His father was driving, he had on a white t-shirt with the sleeves rolled up because of the heat, normally you’d see a pack of cigarettes in that rolled up part of the sleeve. Maybe a pack of Lucky Strikes or unfiltered camels rolled up tight in there because they fit just right. A pack of Pall-malls were too long and looked funny so you didn’t carry those. His father didn’t smoke he just rolled his sleeves up like the other guys did without the pack of cigarettes, the boy guessed that was what men did then, sort of a look that meant you were a man and don’t mess with me.

His mother was prettier than the average woman, this was back in 1951 when she was 25-26 years old and everyone thought she looked like Jane Russell. She was also dressed for the heat with a sleeveless blouse and a kind of scarf thing wrapped around her head to keep the dust from the wind out of her hair. Besides being pretty the boy thought she was smart and the best mother in the world but she had this awful fear, his father called it an idiosyncrasy, whatever that meant, about any thing that could fly and get tangled in her hair or bite her. All of the rest of the family just thought it meant that she was extra scared, not like an ‘idio’ which some of the boy’s friends thought meant, like an idiot, but as they didn’t know what syncrasy, the other part of the word meant, the boy would punch anyone that said it meant his mother was an idiot regardless of what syncrasy meant.

They had just left the gas station, the one with the flying red horse on its sign, where they got one of those desert water bags, one of the grey ones that felt like it was made out of an old blanket with the picture of a wagon being pulled by some mules on it, the picture was a faded red, even the cactus in the background and they filled it up with water. It was then hung off the hood ornament by the rope on top of it like a picture frame so that it hung down in front of the radiator so that when you drove, the wind the car made would blow through it and let cool air into the radiator as they drove across the desert and the car wouldn’t overheat. It was hot in the desert, it would get up to a 115° during the day, it was hot, hot, hot.

The old Hudson didn’t have air conditioning. In those days they rolled the windows down but that only worked for a little while because it was sort of like, well, a rotisserie, or like one of those convection ovens they have now where it blows hot air over your chicken to cook it. That’s what it was like. The kids sat in the back on those big wide grey, prickly feeling seats that were wide enough they were like a bed and as they proceeded across the heartless desert with its unrelenting heat they began turning a beautiful cherry red color. Not only because of the sun being so hot but because the heat sucked the moisture out of their bodies and they just got redder and redder. They lay there panting like a pile of puppies, tongues nearly hanging out and just endured. Now they would call it heat exhaustion or something like that. Back then it was just what happened. If they lived and almost everyone did they just called it an experience. Now they would call it heat exhaustion or something worse and they’d be arrested for child endangerment or something. 

The boy’s father’s arm, the left one which rested on the window sill and slowly turned into third degree burns found its place there seeming of its own accord everyday even though the boy’s father knew the price he’d pay. When he got done driving at night the boy’s mother would put some kind of ointment on it they called Udder Balm that was good for burns and other ailments and also cows udders which apparently often needed it, because there’d be just about blisters all up and down his arm and his father would be the brightest red imaginable. Plus a little irritable, course he was irritable a lot of the time so you didn’t notice it after a while. But there wasn’t anywhere else to put your arm while you were driving so that was the price you paid for driving across the desert in the hot sun during the daytime.

They left early about four in the morning, as they wanted to be way across the desert before it got real hot just so they wouldn’t have engine trouble because of the heat and die alongside the road. The longest stretch of that mean desert could be made in a day if you didn’t falter and laze around. “Best not to Tarry” my grandfather said to my dad, the only advice he gave him for the trip.

In all that desolation, in the heat where nothing could possibly live, somewhere, some how, there was the Wasp. Unannounced It blew into the car through the open window, flew past the boy’s mother’s face just slow enough that she could count the black and yellow rings on its tail and trigger the “Bee Reflex”.  The Bee Reflex was involuntary. She shrieked, not once but four or five times, threw her arms up, swatted at it but instead of hitting the wasp hit the boy’s father in the face knocking his glasses off, making a red mark on the bridge of his nose that he rubbed a lot over the next few days, causing him to jerk the steering wheel severely to the right and head off across the highway into the unknown desert. Swerving and fishtailing they rocketed in and out of the shallow ditch alongside the road, a rooster tail of dust and sand shooting into the sky, bumped through several hundred yards of unadulterated desert and came back up onto the pavement as if the whole thing had been planned. Fortunately nothing happened to the Hudson, it didn’t roll over, nothing really bad happened except the boy’s father said “Goddamn it Harriet, you’re going to kill us all.” He actually said that several times.

Immediately the boy’s mother bristled and snapped “It was a bee.” in a louder voice than was perhaps necessary. “No, it was a wasp.” the boy’s father said. “Well that ‘s even worse.” his mother replied. “No, generally a wasp won’t kill you, a bee might kill you because they have like bee poison in them, but a wasp won’t.” the father replied. He was an expert apparently on whether a wasp would kill you or a bee would kill you. It was his considered opinion, like it was on most things, that bees killed you. So if you’re going to get bit by something then get bit by a wasp, you’ll live.

HIs mother on the other hand didn’t care what it was. If it flew, if it got near her hair it was deadly and it was to be killed immediately or she was going to take us all with her as we went flying into the ditch at 65 miles per hour.

The wasp was still a clear and present danger and needed to be dealt with. His father tried to stop the car but he was a afraid to because the temperature gauge on that old Hudson was hovering way, way too close to 212° and although you could drive them a little hot he was afraid that if he did stop, the car would overheat for sure with no air blowing on the radiator and before long their bleached bones were going to be found inside that old Hudson alongside the road, in the middle of that desert and they’d all be dead and desiccated because Harriet his wife of many years was afraid of bees and had hit him in the nose leaving a mark.

When he realized he couldn’t stop the car he thought that if he went slow enough the car shouldn’t overheat. He got it down to about 10-15 miles per hour and he said to the boy “lean over the front seat here and steer. Be careful stay in the lane. Don’t hit nothing.” while he proceeded to swat at the wasp and tried drive it out the window. But wasps are pretty smart. If you got a wasp in a quiet car where they can sort of float around and buzz  and look like they’ll sting you just for the hell of it, and you give them a choice whether they want to head out into 65 mile per hour, 115° degree wind, or stay inside and bite you, most of the time they won’t do it, they won’t leave. You have to really convince them.

In all of his eight years the boy had never participated in anything as exciting as Wasp killing, Hudson Hornet driving and avoiding running back off into the desert even at a slow rate of speed, while his father swung his arms all over trying to kill the wasp while bellowing at his wife to shut up as his mother shrieked like a banshee. That was exciting.

The 1951 Hudson had one of those great big wide, front divided center bench seats that stretched clear across the width of the car with a backrest that folded down to meet the lower seat creating a console between the front seat passengers. A kid could sit up on there and see out of the windshield. That was before car seats. In fact that was before seat belts. Kids did that all the time, sit up there, look out feeling like they were grown up. The boy was laying on that console and he was so proud because although he could just barely see down the road over the dash he was steering the car.  And he wasn’t hitting anything, course there wasn’t anything to hit but he was still steering. His father was killing the wasp or trying to, his mother was still shrieking, his little sister in the back was sound asleep on the back seat until she heard her mother screeching then she began crying because mom was yelling. And all of this excitement was taking place at 115 degrees.

All of this heady excitement couldn’t last. It got to the point where something had to give. It had to be the wasp, or it had to be, put boy’s mother out on the side of the road, whatever, but it had to be something. His father found a road map, picked it up and rolled it into a kind of a tight cylinder affair. It was a little stiffer than the map would be just holding it flat although it was no longer as wide making hitting the wasp that much harder but he kept aiming and swiping and swinging at the wasp and every time he missed the boy’s mother would shriek ” Stop it! You’re just going to make it mad and it’s going to bite me.” His father just grunted and kept swinging. But he was determined then. He had to kill the wasp, it had become a thing.

In order to be a father and be a man and prove himself he had to murder that wasp. Every once in a while the wasp flew by his wife’s face and that’s when he really reacted and gave that wasp a smack, or tried  to, missing the wasp but not missing his wife as he accidentally smacked her a couple of times right across the bridge of her nose. That added fuel to fire, as if it could get any more volatile, because by then his mother was screaming “The wasp isn’t going to kill me, you’re going to kill me. You’re not even driving.” His Father said “The boy’s driving, the boy can drive. I’m going to kill the wasp. I’m going to kill the wasp before it kills us. If I don’t we’re all going to die, so just shut up and sit back.”

Eventually the wasp became so irritated and probably just embarrassed by the whole situation that it decided that suicide would be better than staying inside the vehicle with these people. The father took one last hit at the wasp just narrowly missing his wife’s face and barely hitting the wasp a little bit and that was it, he darted out into that 65 mile per hour, now 20 mile per hour wind and was out of our life forever.

So that was that. The wasp was gone, mom began to settle down, his father took back the wheel saying “I got it now son, I’ll drive.”

The boy was kind of disappointed because he figured he had another few miles in him. He leaned back into the rear seat pulling up the folding center console and sat down next to his sister. She had stopped crying and wanted to know what was going on but at four years old there wasn’t much to tell her other than “Bee.” At that she looked at her mother, then she nodded her head in a knowing way, way beyond her years, and began playing with her stuffed rabbit with the missing ear and it was life back to normal.

So that episode passed into family lore in the form of an adventure, actually it was a lot worse than an adventure. It was more one of those calamities, a family calamity. Once you’ve been through one and nobody died except maybe the wasp then you’ve got something. You got history, family history. A story that will be told at every family event until those that took part in it aren’t around to tell it anymore. The young boy told his friends ” I drove a 1951 Hudson Hornet across the desert in Nevada.” And he told them the story of the Family Calamity. It gave the young boy some real street cred. He would have the other boys undivided attention. He could embellish it a little, maybe add some stuff that wasn’t all that accurate or didn’t really happen. It didn’t matter they weren’t there. Their reaction was always “Really! Holy cow, did that really happen?” Of course he’d get a stern look on his face and say “By God it did! and you know what my dad said to my mom?” and everybody would lean in and say “No, What?” in hushed anticipatory whispers and he’d say, “he said Goddamn it, Harriet you’re going to kill us all.”

BONUS CHRISTMSAS GIFT For 2017 -In The Spirit Of Giving – Poison Dart Frogs

In the spirit of the season and in keep with the thought of giving more this year to clean up some karmic imbalances that are lingering around the old fire pit we here at *The Institute have decided to add a BONUS GIFT item for you to choose. No, no, don’t thank us it’s our way of saying Thank you for your support during the past year.

Note: This is a repost of one of our Top Ten Gifts for the discerning buyer originally published in December of 2013, a year that will live in infamy. In what has become a half-assed tradition here at The Institute we have been irregularly reposting these now famous gift selections when we remember to do so in a lame attempt to create a Holiday Tradition and mostly because we suddenly realize it’s Christmas time and we don’t have squat done. It’s fun and we don’t have to spend the time making new stuff up. Enjoy.

Give the gift that keeps on giving! Unique and exclusively available at *The Institute’s own Gift Shop, Catalog, and Screen Door Factory. 

Nature’s Best but our Copy! It’s our very Own Selection of

POISON DART FROGS !!!

It’s that time of year again. You know, when you wrack your brain trying to find that perfect gift for those folks on your indigenous people’s list. We’ve all been through it. You’ve got those eight or nine people that are always so difficult to buy for. They’re in the jungles and backwaters of Guyana or Brazil or even the Amazon. They already have iPhone’s, large screen TV’s, Sam’s club gift cards. You’ve given those Nike T-shirts and matching flip-flops so many times the recipients look at you with that “Is this best you could do.” look and you’re ashamed to add one more set to their collection. What to give them that they’ll love and make a difference in their lives? We have the answer!

This year give them something they can really use. Poison Dart Frogs! That’s right, choose from our great selection of Poison Dart frogs grown in our own highly restricted zoology labs here at *The Institute. We have a fantastic color selection and each frog has been force-fed specially formulated Poison Dart frog chow developed with our friends at Purina. These frogs are as deadly as they come. Those Howler monkeys will never know what hit them, but our friends down there in their snake-infested homes will. See the joy on their faces as it “Rains Howlers!” That’s right “Monkeys from the sky!” See the special glow on their faces as they use blowdarts dipped in their very own Poison Dart poison made from the sweat and other gooey secretions on these little frogs bodies. Watch as they build and customize their very own collection of Poison Dart frogs that you sent them. Remember, Give a man a dead Howler monkey and he will eat and perhaps become ill, but teach him how to make his own poison tipped blowgun darts and you will feed him forever.

Choose from the individuals pictured below. Buy just one or get the 3 pack so your gift-tee’s can mix and match their own specially customized toxic brew. They won’t be able to thank you enough.

Item #8887PDF11-0-6 Dyeing Poison Dart Frog. Known as “Kill Dat Monkey”. Yellow and black with Prussian blue feet. Native to northern South America. Toxicity rating 8.9 on the **HMM scale wgt: 1.73 troy ounces $2300.00 each. Limit 100 to each mailing address.

Item #3359PDF27-0-72 Orange Banded Poison Dart frog, Known as “Drop Them Loggers” Black with orange bands. Native to Guyana, South America.  Toxicity rating 11.4 on the HMM scale wgt. 96 troy ounces. This is our largest Poison Dart frog so we can only fit four in a box. $19.00 each limit 60 to each mailing address.

Item #5916PDF03-0-19 Purple, black, white, Poison Dart frog, native to West Hollywood, California, known as Lavender Lovelace for the deep-throated roar it produces right before expelling its poison. Toxicity rating 4.81 on the HMM scale wgt. .062 troy ounces. This is one of our smallest but easiest to use frogs. Due to its low toxicity it is perfect for children just starting out or feeble folks who tend to not know what they’re doing most of the time. Will burn the skin severely but it will not cause death if treated promptly. Must be used with adult supervision if purchased for minors. $81.00 each no limit

Note: These Poison Dart frogs are dangerous. Use at your own risk. We at The Institute accept no responsibility for misuse of this product. Children under 16 should have adult supervision. May cause skin cancer if applied to the body. May cause agony and death if ingested. Do not suck on the frogs attempting to “get high”, they are not hallucinogenic. Keeps frogs away from food preparation areas. Rinse dead Howler monkeys thoroughly before handling or consuming. Do not store poison in open containers or near fires. Do not rub poison on any part of body to enhance desire. It will have the opposite effect. Keep and read thoroughly all packing and care and feeding instructions for your Poison Dart Frogs. If accidentally swallowed immediately find a clear space to lie down in free of any obstructions so your spasms and contortions will not cause property damage. Do not burn bodies of those killed by Poison Dart frog poison as ingesting the smoke may cause additional fatalities. Enjoy your new Poison Dart Frogs and Happy Holidays.

** HMM (Holy Moley Maynard) a scale developed here at The Institute to measure how fast something dangerous will affect you.

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