Exciting
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Anyone here really do this?

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WillaKissing · 56-60
Do what? I would have to know what the "Do" is before I admit to it.
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WillaKissing · 56-60
Ah, no, but here is a Beaver shot for ya!

@Havesomefun2

Or a little Turtle head action if you like that?

Havesomefun2 · 56-60, M
@WillaKissing love it
Applepiedom · 56-60, M
@WillaKissing soft shell turtle?
WillaKissing · 56-60
@Applepiedom Snapping turtle I caught in my pond and relocated to the Little Scioto River.
Applepiedom · 56-60, M
@WillaKissing ahh expanded picture. I see. I use to live that direction. Westerville.
Soft shell has longer nose but similar color and shape
WillaKissing · 56-60
@Applepiedom
WillaKissing · 56-60
@Applepiedom Yes about the soft shell. Around Columbus, Ohio/ Westerville, Ohio the Scioto River is big and wide and runs South to Portsmouth, Ohio and dumps into the Ohio River. The Scioto River you know is different than the Little Sciot River in Southern Ohio.

This article is about the river in southern Ohio. For the river of the same name in central Ohio, see Little Scioto River (Scioto River).
Little Scioto River

Near its confluence with the Ohio River at Sciotoville
Physical characteristics
Length 43 miles (69 km)
Basin size 233 sq mi (600 km2)
The Little Scioto River is a tributary of the Ohio River, about 42.8 miles (68.9 km) long,[1] in southern Ohio in the United States. Via the Ohio River, it is part of the watershed of the Mississippi River, draining an area of 233 square miles (600 km2).[2]

The Little Scioto River rises in western Jackson County and flows generally southwardly into Scioto County, near Minford. It flows into the Ohio River in the eastern part of the city of Portsmouth,[3] 6 miles (9.7 km) east of the town's center.[4]

The United States Board on Geographic Names settled on "Little Scioto River" as the stream's name in 1913. According to the Geographic Names Information System, the Little Scioto has also been known historically as "Brushy Fork," "Little Siota River" and "Little Sciota River."[5]