![]() |
No items matching your keywords were found.
Runaway Rabbit Pretty

![]() |
No items matching your keywords were found.
|
|
Pretty Woman / Runaway Bride $6.99 Pretty Woman / Runaway Bride |
|
|
The Runaway Rabbit $8.78 No Synopsis Available |
|
|
Girls Night In Triple Pack (Pretty Woman / The Proposal / Runaway Bride) $10.99 Girls Night In Triple Pack (Pretty Woman / The Proposal / Runaway Bride) |
|
|
Runaway $12.49 Runaway |
|
|
The Runaway $13.99 The Runaway |
|
|
Runaway, The $6.49 Runaway, The |
|
|
Runaway Bride - Widescreen $7.99 In 1990, Pretty Woman turned Julia Roberts into a star and gave Richard Gere's career a much-needed boost; for 1999, Roberts and Gere reunited with director Garry Marshall for the romantic comedy Runaway Bride. Roberts plays Maggie, who has left so many prospective husbands at the altar that she has gained notoriety as "the Runaway Bride," and a reporter (played by Richard Gere) is assigned to write a story about her. He tracks her down to a small town in Maryland where she's spending time with her family and preparing to give marriage another try. However, the more time she spends with the persistent reporter, the more second thoughts she has about her fianc? (Christopher Meloni). Hector Elizondo, another Pretty Woman alumnus, appears in the supporting cast alongside Joan Cusack, Paul Dooley, and Rita Wilson. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi |
|
|
Runaway Bride (WS/DVD) $13.3 A down-and-out big-city reporter (Richard Gere), in a last-ditch effort to save his tarnished career, chases a scoop on a mercurial, small-town girl (Julia Roberts) known as the Runaway Bride, due to her habit of leaving her grooms-to-be on the alter. Director Marshall once again directs the stars who made his PRETTY WOMAN a worldwide smash in 1990.DVD Features:Region 1 EncodingKeep CaseAnamorphic Widescreen - 2.35Additional Release Material: Trailer - 1. Original Theatrical Audio Commentary - 1, Gary Marshall, Director Music Video - 1. Dixie ChicksReady To RunInteractive Features: Interactive Menus Scene Selection |
|
|
Runaway Horses $8.99 Runaway Horses |
|
|
Runaway Father $5.99 Runaway Father |
|
|
Runaway Heart $6.99 Runaway Heart |
| Account limit of 2104 requests per hour exceeded. |
Wit - The Runaway Bunny
Guides on Shooting Deer for Young Hunters
A person who is new in hunting, sometimes feel difficulties to get a shot on a deer. What shall he do to be a good hunter?
I had a young fellow come to me one time. He was not a paying guest but a boy who lived nearby. I knew that he had done some hunting but had never bagged a deer. He told me he was never able to find or see any deer. I always like to give a little aid to these young men when I have the chance, so when he said that he was sure he could get a deer if I would only take him out and show him one, I decided to give him a lift, right then. Since it was midafternoon, I thought his best chance would be to go to an abandoned orchard and wait for a deer to come after apples.
We had a walk of nearly half a mile along an abandoned road to reach the orchard and as soon as we reached the woods I knew why he had never shot a deer. He talked continuously. He didn't care where he put his feet. He waved his arms as he talked, and worst of all, he waved the gun in his hands. When I saw his actions, I made him walk in front of me as I was in danger of my life. With him in front, I could at least see what he was doing and might be able to dodge if anything went wrong.
We came to a deer crossing where I pointed out to him that it might be a good place to watch at some future time. He had a habit of turning his head over his shoulder as he talked and all of a sudden he brought his gun to his shoulder and pointed it back along the road. I hit the dirt. I thought he had lost his mind and was about to shoot me. After he had fired, I looked down the road and there lay an eight-point buck deader than a mackerel—shot through the neck. That fool buck had tried to cross the road while that fool hunter was gabbing away like a runaway gramophone.
Do you know that till this day that fellow thinks I am the greatest guide who ever lived because I helped him shoot his first deer? He wonders why I've never taken him on another deer hunting trip. I always tell him that since he learned to hunt, I would rather help some other young man. I don't know whether he ever shot another deer, but with luck like that, anything is possible.
Some of you city fellows are slightly nervous about bobcats if you happen to be out after dark. I can assure you that usually they are perfectly harmless. Of course, there are exceptions. Once in while an old cat may have trouble in catching enough rabbits for its needs. It may be unable to bring down a small deer. Or it may be afflicted with some disease similar to rabies. The likelihood of meeting one of these exceptional cats is slight, but it is better not to take any chances and to kill any cat that you see. The bounty will help pay for a hunting trip.
I had an encounter with one of these cats when I was a young man. I was courting a girl at the time who lived about four miles away by the road, but I could cut through the woods and make it about three- quarters of a mile. I liked this girl pretty well and had a well-trodden trail to her house.
A beginner should learn and get the methods from an experience hunter; it is a best way for him to get the idea of the good and effective hunting. He has to make sure that nothing will distract him while he go for the hunt.
About the Author
Mitch Johnson is a regular writer for
http://www.spyware-removal-made-easy.com/
,
http://www.mybroadbandtips.in/
,
http://www.broadbandmadeeasy.info/

