Roselvr, tumbleweed is really annoying and an environmental nightmare, but I don't know about dangerous, per se. It can quickly pile up in spots and has trapped people in their homes.
Honestly, with Tommy's penchant for walking, there's no telling where he might be, or even if he wants to be found.
ORDWAY, Colo. (AP) -- Mini-storms of tumbleweed have invaded the drought-stricken prairie of southern Colorado, blocking rural roads and irrigation canals, and briefly barricading homes and an elementary school
The latest drought, which began in 2010, has created tumbleweed trouble in parts of New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas. Desiccated Russian thistle and kochia, both invasive weeds from Eurasia, are the culprits.
In Colorado, herds of cattle would eat the tumbleweed, helping to keep it in check, but many ranchers in recent years have reduced or gotten rid of their animals because of the drought. After the first winter freezes in November, the plants broke loose and began rolling with the wind.
News on Kelsie Schelling. Praying for justice for her and her family!
http://www.thedenverchannel.com/new...riend-pueblo-police-in-wrongful-death02062015
Wow...This article makes me so angry!! This is absolutely ridiculous!!
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News on Kelsie Schelling. Praying for justice for her and her family!
http://www.thedenverchannel.com/new...riend-pueblo-police-in-wrongful-death02062015
From the above link:
"The lawsuit accuses Pueblo police detectives of obstructing the investigation almost from the start. It says police failed to properly process Schelling's vehicle and submit evidence for analysis.
Detective Robinson "confessed that he had lied to Kelsie's family about evidence found in Kelsie's car" when he initially told them "the car was wiped clean, no evidence was recovered," the lawsuit states.
Private investigators hired by Schelling's parents say Robinson later admitted that suspected "dried bodily fluids" and two large palm prints off the front seat head rests of Kelsie's car had been recovered from the car, the lawsuit states. Ultimately, Detective Robinson said the "evidence did not return anything."
Yet, the family's private investigators three fingerprints from the driver's side visor mirror that police had missed. They also identified "undercarriage damage on the passenger side of the vehicle and obtained what appeared to be a human hair from the damaged area," the lawsuit states."