Ink Pen by Phil Dunlap for February 25, 2024
Transcript:
hamhock: Look, ralston, you and I are wired to eat differently. hamhock: our eating habits are based on our roles in the food chain. as prey, you diet makes you hard to catch and tough to eat. ralston: and your diet makes you...? hamhock: ...burst with juicy flavor when roasting.
fuzzbucket Premium Member 8 months ago
Let’s roast him and be done with this arc.
P51Strega 8 months ago
I love this! LMAO
markkahler52 8 months ago
With a tomato in his mouth?…
TimothyP23 8 months ago
Rabbit’s pretty tasty, actually. Just sayin’.
GG_loves_comics Premium Member 8 months ago
Not sure this is a goal I would pursue.
Teto85 Premium Member 8 months ago
Oh, yes. Bacon and eggs for first breakfast this morning.
NeedaChuckle Premium Member 8 months ago
That was true, but now pork is just dry since they got rid of the fat.
Znox11 8 months ago
Time for a roast off!!
Ed The Red Premium Member 8 months ago
If you’ve ever wondered, wild pigs’ survival skill is insane fury. Should you have the enormously bad luck to run across a herd of wild pigs while out hiking, the best advice is to climb the nearest tree. If they decide to attack you – which they probably will – and they can reach you, they’ll kill you.
No joke.
Rista 8 months ago
Pigs are omnivores with a liking for meat. Rabbits are primarily herbivores (but will happily scavenge, see the study by Michael Peers, a Ph.D. called “Scavenging By Snowshoe Hares (Lepus americanus) In Yukon, Canada” was published in Northwestern Naturalist.) But this whole arc is beyond silly. I’ve owned enough pet bunnies to know they can chow down with the best of them.
willie_mctell 8 months ago
Rabbits are smaller prey than pigs. Wild boars were generally accepted as the most ferocious game animals. To be fair, foxes and cats have had their abdomens ripped open by bunnies.