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10/06/2026

(June 10, 2026) While a skunk is generally safe from predators because of its smell, nature has one last trick, great horned owls can't smell and will eat them regularly.

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A striped skunk walks through a meadow at two in the morning carrying the most effective chemical weapon in North American wildlife. Two glands under its tail can spray a sulfur compound called butyl mercaptan up to fifteen feet with accuracy, and the smell is detectable by a human nose from over a mile downwind.

The spray causes temporary blindness, nausea, and a burning sensation that does not wash off with soap or water. Every predator in the eastern forest knows what a skunk smells like and what happens if you get too close. Coyotes leave them alone unless starving. Foxes avoid them. Bobcats will kill one occasionally and spend the next hour rubbing their face in the dirt regretting it. The skunk walks through the night with the confidence of an animal that has solved the predation problem.

Then something drops out of the sky that cannot smell anything.

The great horned owl is the skunk's primary predator. Not occasional predator. Not opportunistic predator. Primary. Great horned owls eat skunks with enough regularity that wildlife biologists use skunk remains in pellets and nests as a reliable indicator of owl activity.

Taxidermists and nest surveyors can identify a great horned owl's nesting site before they see it because the tree stinks. The scent glands that keep every ground predator in the county at a safe distance do nothing to an animal attacking from thirty feet above at forty miles per hour with no functional sense of smell.

Most birds have limited olfactory capability compared to mammals. Great horned owls are on the extreme end of that spectrum. The olfactory region of their brain is small relative to their total brain volume, and their olfactory bulbs are reduced compared to bird species that do rely on smell, like turkey vultures.

The owl can detect enough scent to taste food, but the concentration of butyl mercaptan that would send a coyote gagging into the next drainage registers as background noise in the owl's nervous system. The skunk sprays. The owl does not care. The spray hits feathers that the owl will preen clean within hours. The skunk's entire defense, the product of millions of years of evolutionary pressure, is neutralized by an attacker that lacks the hardware to process it.

The mechanics of the kill compound the problem for the skunk. A skunk defends itself by turning its back, raising its tail, and spraying in a directed stream aimed backward and slightly downward. The defense is designed for ground-level threats approaching from behind or from the side. A fox circling a skunk gets sprayed in the face. A dog lunging at a skunk gets sprayed in the eyes. The spray's targeting geometry assumes the threat is on the ground.

A great horned owl attacks from above and behind in near-total silence. Owl flight feathers have serrated leading edges that break up turbulence and suppress the sound of air moving over the wing. A great horned owl in a hunting dive is functionally silent. The skunk does not hear it coming. The strike hits the back of the skull or the shoulders, and the talons, which can exert roughly 300 pounds per square inch of crushing force, kill or immobilize the skunk before it can orient its spray glands toward the threat. The attack comes from the one direction the skunk cannot aim, delivered by the one predator that would not be affected if it could.

A striped skunk can weigh up to nine pounds. A great horned owl averages three. The owl routinely kills prey that outweighs it by a factor of two or three, including rabbits, marmots, and house cats. Its talons are strong enough to sever the spinal cord of a skunk on contact, and when the prey is too heavy to carry whole, the owl feeds on it where it falls or dismembers it and carries pieces back to the nest. A three-pound bird killing a nine-pound mammal that is chemically armed with one of the most repulsive substances in the animal kingdom is not a fair fight. It is a design mismatch where one animal's primary defense is irrelevant to the only predator that hunts it consistently.

Source: National Park Service / Cornell Lab of Ornithology / Naturally Curious with Mary Holland / Center of the West.

Remember the 1970s Oil Crisis? This Isn't That - TT 06/06/2026

(June 6, 2026) The increased domestic production since the 1980's has indeed prevented the oil "crisis" of the 1970's, which was always a phony claim. Because the production exist today, there NEVER was a shortage of oil in the United States. It was always because of the stupid government policies, regulations, and even laws that have gradually been remove over the last 40 years, beginning with President Ronald Reagan who was to the public an actor but was by education an economist. He understood the real economic engine of America, the ability of the individual to freely make personal decisions to create new businesses and industries. In the case of oil and gas, by leaving oil and gas companies to just carry out their main business, drilling for oil, refining oil, and selling its products on the open market, there was always plenty of domestic production to cover the nation's demands. In the process, create more jobs, distributing wealth the natural and proper way, through hard work. Everybody prospers in America.

The nations that follow the foolishness of the earthly socialist "paradise" only makes life more miserable for the majority, and spreads poverty, while the elite of control freaks enjoy their sanctuary lifestyle behind locked gates.

Remember the 1970s Oil Crisis? This Isn't That - TT Higher energy costs have a muted impact on employment now because states where oil production is concentrated can see job gains even as others record losses.

31/05/2026

(May 31, 2026) Oh well, it's back to the drawing board. Blue Origin plans to launch its lunar lander on this one. Space X did not fare any better, losing its Starship in its recent test, and getting grounded by the FAA. NASA dropped its "Lunar Gateway" orbiting space station as building costs were "skyrocketing" [pun intended]. The Apollo program did have its major setback in 1967 with the Apollo 1 fire that killed its crew on the ground. However, the main rocket, the Saturn V, was the only rocket built that never had an explosion.

It is unfair to claim that Space X and Blue Origin are just a generation of amateurs, particularly for Space X which has successfully launch people. It just that after 60 years, a lot of experienced engineers and scientists that made their mistakes in the 1960's have long ago retired or died, and their "hands-on" knowledge is gone, only whatever lessons written in now long forgotten or even lost technical reports now has to be relearned, sometimes making the same mistakes made 60 and 70 years ago. Nothing you can do about it but to just keep going and keep trying again and again until the mistakes are corrected. The learning curve climbed before has to be climbed again.

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