View Full Version : Do you cook and eat your roadkill???
Ext User(Don A.Gomez)
01-04-2007, 04:13 PM
I wonder if you do cook and eat your roadkill.
I do. Snakes, kangaroos, sometimes Aborigines -
it's all just meat and still edible...
Ext User(the_dawggie)
01-04-2007, 05:03 PM
On Apr 1, 4:07 pm, "Don A.Gomez" <spartan_i...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> I wonder if you do cook and eat your roadkill.
>
> I do. Snakes, kangaroos, sometimes Aborigines -
> it's all just meat and still edible...
Yeah, I think I would.
I'd limit myself to kangaroos - like the
taste of the meat. It really would have
to be one I killed, not a stinky one
rotting left in the sun by someone
else.
Ext User(RainbowWarrior)
01-04-2007, 06:13 PM
"Don A.Gomez" <spartan_isle@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:1175407623.255485.128650@q75g2000hsh.googlegr oups.com...
>I wonder if you do cook and eat your roadkill.
>
> I do. Snakes, kangaroos, sometimes Aborigines -
> it's all just meat and still edible...
No, I sell it to the nearest Macca's so they can feed it to dumb boring
internet troll wannabees :P
Ext User(John_H)
01-04-2007, 07:03 PM
Don A.Gomez wrote:
>I wonder if you do cook and eat your roadkill.
>
>I do. Snakes, kangaroos, sometimes Aborigines -
>it's all just meat and still edible...
I wouldn't.
'Cept for the snakes, you've gotta bleed 'em while their hearts are
still beating, and the bruised bits aren't edible anyway.
A head shot is the way to go if you can't catch 'em first.
--
John H
Ext User(Diesel Damo)
01-04-2007, 08:33 PM
On Apr 1, 4:53 pm, "the_dawggie" <the_dawg...@hotmail.com> wrote:
> I'd limit myself to kangaroos - like the
> taste of the meat. It really would have
> to be one I killed, not a stinky one
> rotting left in the sun by someone
> else.
They reckon wombat tastes great. Never had it myself and prolly not
likely to. Apparently it's "sweet".
Ext User(Cyborg 0019)
01-04-2007, 09:13 PM
Don A.Gomez wrote:
> I wonder if you do cook and eat your roadkill.
>
> I do. Snakes, kangaroos, sometimes Aborigines -
> it's all just meat and still edible...
>
I don't eat meat,it leads to a phycological condition known as
anxiety,where one is dependant on a food source of another foood source.
It creates the mind set where one feels * the need for somthing *
One is reliant on the life of another,also a sense of insecurity,its the
reason many trust other humanes and put their life in the hands of
governments,
Eating meat in Australia related back to england also,where meat was
only available for the rich as a luxury.
I am not realted to native Australians,so cannot comment as needing it
to survive in this harsh undeveloped land.
Where I live It is so cold that I would think that one would have to eat
meat as most foods don't grow unless grown under a long established
imported environment
Ext User(the_dawggie)
01-04-2007, 09:13 PM
Diesel Damo wrote:
> On Apr 1, 4:53 pm, "the_dawggie" <the_dawg...@hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>>I'd limit myself to kangaroos - like the
>>taste of the meat. It really would have
>>to be one I killed, not a stinky one
>>rotting left in the sun by someone
>>else.
>
>
> They reckon wombat tastes great. Never had it myself and prolly not
> likely to. Apparently it's "sweet".
LOL!
I'd try it. I've eaten quite a few strange things from Quail
to various wild animal stuff found in Africa. 'roo I actually
like and would prefer to eat over a beef steak anytime.
Insects and snakes and that sort of shite .... no.
Then again, I eat seafood such as prawns.
I still need someone to sort of cut up my road kill
and package the eatables for me, as actually doing that
bit would not really appeal to me.
Ext User(the_dawggie)
01-04-2007, 09:23 PM
On Apr 1, 8:57 pm, Cyborg 0019 <jjbr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Don A.Gomez wrote:
> > I wonder if you do cook and eat your roadkill.
>
> > I do. Snakes, kangaroos, sometimes Aborigines -
> > it's all just meat and still edible...
>
> I don't eat meat,it leads to a phycological condition known as
> anxiety,where one is dependant on a food source of another foood source.
> It creates the mind set where one feels * the need for somthing *
> One is reliant on the life of another,also a sense of insecurity,its the
> reason many trust other humanes and put their life in the hands of
> governments,
And you eat what? ... exactly ... mushrooms?
Ext User(Michael C)
01-04-2007, 11:24 PM
"Cyborg 0019" <jjbruce@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:460f9031@news.comindico.com.au...
> I don't eat meat,it leads to a phycological condition known as
> anxiety,where one is dependant on a food source of another foood source.
> It creates the mind set where one feels * the need for somthing *
> One is reliant on the life of another,also a sense of insecurity,its the
> reason many trust other humanes and put their life in the hands of
> governments,
> Eating meat in Australia related back to england also,where meat was only
> available for the rich as a luxury.
> I am not realted to native Australians,so cannot comment as needing it to
> survive in this harsh undeveloped land.
> Where I live It is so cold that I would think that one would have to eat
> meat as most foods don't grow unless grown under a long established
> imported environment
But meat tastes goooood. You can't beat a nice rare steak, 2 or 3 mins each
side for a nice thick steak.
Michael
Ext User(Clockmeister)
02-04-2007, 02:33 AM
"Michael C" <nospam@nospam.com> wrote in message
news:460faea0$0$16552$afc38c87@news.optusnet.com.a u...
> "Cyborg 0019" <jjbruce@gmail.com> wrote in message
> news:460f9031@news.comindico.com.au...
>> I don't eat meat,it leads to a phycological condition known as
>> anxiety,where one is dependant on a food source of another foood source.
>> It creates the mind set where one feels * the need for somthing *
>> One is reliant on the life of another,also a sense of insecurity,its the
>> reason many trust other humanes and put their life in the hands of
>> governments,
>> Eating meat in Australia related back to england also,where meat was only
>> available for the rich as a luxury.
>> I am not realted to native Australians,so cannot comment as needing it to
>> survive in this harsh undeveloped land.
>> Where I live It is so cold that I would think that one would have to eat
>> meat as most foods don't grow unless grown under a long established
>> imported environment
>
> But meat tastes goooood. You can't beat a nice rare steak, 2 or 3 mins
> each side for a nice thick steak.
>
Bleh, but to each their own ;-)
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