Thursday March 12 Twins @ Red Sox(Early) 1:05

Good morning everyone & have a great day

Hi, Sue :hugs:

Go Sox

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I had some Bose earbuds that I thought I left on the kitchen counter but couldn’t find them until I had to turn on the disposal & they are now gone. One guess on how the ended up down in the disposal. Yeah; him

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Your evil twin, Jack?

:rofl: :rofl: :rofl:

We know it wasn’t him, just ask Ma.

Good morning, everyone, I hope it is a wonderful day.

Sue, hi!!!

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She’ll just say it’s my fault for leaving them out. Sure, all my fault

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Now, you get it.

:rofl: :rofl: :rofl: :rofl: :rofl:

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Morning good folks

USA and Canada on Saturday!

Oilers against Dallas tonight. Whooop!

Hey Sue

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IMG 1736

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Good morning from Joolz and Sue :two_hearts:

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Great! I don’t see it on the schedule :rofl:

https://www.mlb.com/world-baseball-classic/schedule/2026-03-14/www.mlb.com

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I don’t either. This is what Leah said but I don’t see it anywhere either. Maybe don’t quote me just yet :joy:

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Here it is. They play tomorrow

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I’m not sure which Decorah eagles I’ll follow, but this is fascinating.

From RRP:

DNF laid her first egg of 2026 on Saturday night at 6:35 PM. As far as we know, DNF and UM haven’t copulated, so if this egg is fertile, it was fertilized by Mr. North. Female raptors can store sperm for up to four weeks and possibly longer – well within the fertility window, since Mr. North disappeared on February 25 – so any eaglet that hatches from this egg must have been sired by him.

Does UM know the egg wasn’t fertilized by him? Not in any conscious sense, since birds don’t track paternity the way we might imagine. But the lack of copulation means he has no behavioral or hormonal investment in this egg regardless of whose it is. He’s provided only one food gift (and had a hard time surrendering it) and hasn’t incubated at all. That’s likely because he skipped the bonding and copulation sequence that normally triggers a rise in prolactin: the hormone critical to the onset and maintenance of incubation behavior in both sexes. Without that hormonal shift, the drive to incubate simply isn’t there. Whether that changes will depend largely on whether DNF begins accepting him as a mate.

Will she lay another egg? Bald eagles typically lay their second egg two to four days after the first, which would put it around Tuesday. We’ll be watching! Talons crossed for Mr. North and DNF’s last clutch. We’re all pulling for you, DNF!

If you’d like more information on incubation, follow this link! https://www.raptorresource.org/2026/03/09/what-makes-bald-eagles-incubate-2/

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Very interesting. Thanks for sharing that

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Trevor Story with a 3-hit game and he’s on 3rd with a triple

Twins lead 2-1 in the 5th

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You’re welcome.

I think I’ll post about both nests.

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Tie game

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Twins lead 4-3 after 6

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