Last night I ate my first mountain lion. It tastes like pork. The cowboys at Avalanche Outfitters in Redstone, Colorado really know how to cook it up. Nate is such a good cook, he could probably BBQ one of his old saddles and I’d never even know the difference. Come to think of it, where’s that old saddle Heidi dropped off?
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Contact: Jerry Begly 970-963-3815 or jerry@jerrybegly.com
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 4-24-10
New Book by Marble Cartoonist
"Dad, the Tooth Fairy Didn't Come!"
Treesock Press
(Marble)- Who knows more about the Tooth Fairy than local cartoonist Jerry Begly? He's the father of seven children, and a kid's ski instructor at Snowmass ski area.
In his new picture book, "Dad, the Tooth Fairy Didn't Come!", Jerry captures the perfect "Oh no!" moment all parents face: forgetting to exchange money for teeth. To make matters worse, the Tooth Fairy really starts missing deliveries when the family begins growing. The result? Tie-on Tooth Fairy wings, a mountain of teeth in the living room (complete with ski lift and a train), and a mysterious "hero" who will win your heart and mind.
"Dad, the ''Tooth Fairy Didn't Come!" is 48 pages of wacky cartoons that were put together at Jerry's Marble home using on-site solar and wind power. "I think this is the first childrens's book with that distinction," said Jerry from his art studio that sits off the grid and has a commanding view of the Marble valley.
"Dad, the Tooth Fairy Didn't Come!" debuted February, 2010, and copies have already made their way to England, Brazil, Canada, and China, as well as from coast to coast in the U.S.
A graduate of Colorado Mountain College, Jerry Begly has been a freelance cartoonist in the Roaring Fork Valley for several years. His cartoons have appeared in numerous books, newspapers, and trade publications, as well as pop culture items like t-shirts and hats.
News staff interested in reviewing the book, or interviewing Jerry, can receive a complimentary copy by contacting Jerry Begly at 970-963-3815, or emailing him at jerry@jerrybegly.com .
"Dad, the Tooth Fairy Didn't Come!" is available for purchase at www.jerrybegly.com/book , and is a production of Treesock Press.

By buying my Carbon Footprint Snowshoes, you can do the things that burden your conscience, as far as producing CO2 goes, and I will NOT do certain CO2 producing things, like wearing lipstick, for the specified period of time. This arrangement will ease your conscience and make me a wealthy man.
The snowshoes are available in all sizes, and will fit all budgets. See the price list below for Carbon Footprint Snowshoes to fit YOUR needs!
2009 Uncle Jerry's Carbon Footprint Snowshoe Price Schedule:
$19.95- The Snowshoe Hairy Conniptious Fit-
I won't turn on the subfloor heat in my house for 2 weeks. In exchange, you get to drive to the mall, buy 3 items made in China, and drink a Starbucks coffee. If the temperature dips below 35 degrees Farenheit in my house, you may need to buy my extended Snowshoe Warranty for $9.98 plus tax.
$49.95- Tweety Bird Special-
My family will eat organic oatmeal daily for 4 weeks straight. In return, you get to watch TV for 22 hours straight while laying in bed with the electric blanket turned on to "6". In addition, you will be allowed to toast an entire loaf of bread during the 22 hours.
$198.95- The Two-faced Special-
I will give up flying first class to Germany,Helsinki, and Florida for one year. In return, you get to leave the lights on for one year when you leave your second home to attend climate summits and political rallies. In addition, you get to idle your car for up to one hour on the 2 days of your choice.
$599.98-Yeti-
I will lay in bed at night with ALL of the lights off for 3 years, not including leap years. You get to travel by either cruise ship,airliner, or Formula One race car to 3 different continents.
$7998.95-Oh Mama!
My family will give up caviar, helium balloons from Russia, lightning bug festivals, and hip hop concerts for life. In exchange, you may eat caviar, buy helium balloons from Russia, attend lightning bug festivals, and wreck yourself at hip hop concerts for life.
$200,000,000,000.00-The Two Hundred Billion Dollar Snowshoe-
This is probably the best deal in the Carbon Footprint Snowshoe line. For this low price, I will keep all of the islands of the world from sinking, prevent hurricanes, tornadoes, and locust plagues, ensure that there is no famine, war, or drought, and cause harmony to ring throughout the land. Act now, and I will throw in this nifty potato peeler.
Uncle Jerry's Carbon Footprint Snowshoes are sure to be a hot item this Christmas. They make great stocking stuffers and are more ecofriendly than a lump of coal. In addition, we have the lowest prices on the web for carbon offset credits. Our prices can't be beat. Not by any carbon traders in the world.
So if you are looking to ease your conscience, or just want to get back to the good old days of indulgences, look no farther than Uncle Jerry's Carbon Footprint Snowshoes. They're hip, they're helpful, and if everybody bought some, I'd be a rich man.
(This blog was printed on 100% post organic digital VGA formatted glass.)
There are two things in this world that I hate working with: sheep, and cactus. Yesterday, 1000 sheep went walking by onto our road as they were being driven home out of the high country. Today was Seven Foot Tall Cactus Day.
I'm struggling with the knots on the cactus while wearing rubber gloves. How rubber gloves are going to protect you from the prickers, is anybody's guess. The guy who tied the knots, never intended to untie them himself. He must have tightened them with vice grips.
I got the cacti untied, climbed down, and Jason showed up with a hand cart. The owner said that we could wrap the thin white cloth around the cacti for transport, and that way we would "hardly get any prickers" in us. Brother! I told Jason that I wanted to go back to the truck, get a machete, and chop the top 3 feet of of the impending disasters off. When I suggested wrapping cardboard around the towering pincushions, everybody agreed. Jason and I went wheeling the flopping cacti to the truck and loaded them in.
On the way back to the store where we were delivering the cacti, Jason hit a bump, and when we opened the back door of the delivery truck, the cacti (which had been strapped down as best we knew how to strap flopping seven foot cacti in minuscule pots , down) were laying on their side. More cardboard, more ropes to hoist the cacti onto their feet, more tape. We just about lost Jason and one of the cacti off of the hoist lift on the back of the truck. Can you imagine laying in the bushes with a seven foot octopus full of prickers on top of you? "One Adam Twelve. See the man laying under a cactus at _______. Be advised to wear welding gloves upon arrival..."
We got the cacti into the store, unwrapped them, and leaned them up against a wall. They were so floppy, that the previous owner had the gardener remove them from the house, and tie them to a pine tree outside, so we could come and remove them.
What a day. I even got into an argument with the GPS. I knew full well where we were going. I had just been to a birthday party near there a few weeks ago. These GPS contraptions often take you the long way around. ' Turns out the GPS was right. And she's never even been to that part of Colorado, before.
I'm not sure. If you had the choice, would you rather lay under a seven foot cactus, or a dead moose?
When I was a Wilderness Ranger in Meeteetse, Wyoming, I rode horses, and saw moose. There were lots of moose/horse stories being told, but I never thought that I would be in the middle of one of them.
My horse's name was Grover, because he looked like a Muppet: shaggy, one color (black in this case), and a bit wild. Being the low man on the Totem Pole, they let me ride Grover...
It was a rainy, late September day; the kind of day when even a 27 year old can feel in their bones the advancement of winter. The kind of Wyoming winter where it is 30 below zero, and you have to chop the ice on the water tanks for the livestock. As a kid, I used to chop the ice for my dad's cattle back in Indiana.
Grover and I were headed up the Greybull River trail. Before we got to Venus cabin, there was an opening with a huge bull moose standing at the other side. The moose had antlers that were bigger than anything I had seen in my life. I patted Grover on the neck, knowing that he must have already seen the moose, and that me being on the horse, the moose would quickly walk away. But the moose didn't.
We were headed toward the moose at a nice horsey pace. Grover's head was bobbing up and down, as they do when your mount is working hard up in the mountains.
"I'm sure you see the moose," I said to Grover.
Grover walked along, kind of dopey like. Doo dee doo. Doo dee doo, his head bobbing up and down.
We were about 80 yards from the moose.
"I'm sure you smell the moose," I reassured Grover, knowing that horses have a keen sense of smell, and can detect danger long before humans. Doo dee doo. Doo dee doo went Grover, walking up the trail with a soggy ranger on his back. We were about 50 yards from the moose.
Another pat on Grover's neck for a reminder, and then, "I'm sure you can hear the moose milling around," I said a little louder. It seemed like an urgent reminder, knowing that horses are animals given to fear and running away. We were now about 35 yards away, and the moose wasn't interested in stepping out of the way. Being a very brave, very stupid ranger, I kept the course. Doo dee doo. Doo dee doo went Grover's head, bobbing up and down.
Suddenly, Grover's head jerked up, his eyes grew wide, and he jumped about two feet straight up in the air. He yelled, "A MOOSE!" He spun around, 180 degrees in the air, and hit the ground with all four hooves spinning. The race was on.
If we had been in the Kentucky Derby that day, we would have won by about 4 lengths. That old cow pony pulled speed out of his hind end, and set it on fire. We were flying down the trail, and that horse was wearing Nike horseshoes.
Now I never considered myself a great rider, but I knew one thing: You don't fall off of a speeding horse up in the mountains. You could get killed, and if you don't get killed, you might just lay there, all busted up until you die. Your chances of having a grizzly bear come along are as good as having another person show up and look at your from their horse, wondering what you are doing, laying there all crumpled up, and soaking wet.
So I hung on for all I was worth. Narrow, winding, mountain trails at full speed require a certain amount of anticipation when riding a scared, wet horse. You lean inside the curves like a Can am motorcycle racer, and you flop to the other side before you even get to the curve. All the while I was shouting "Whoa! Whoa!"
After about what I estimated to be half a mile, Grover and I rolled to a stop, about like a Land Speed Record holder car would at the Bonneville salt flats. Grover stood there, trembling. His sides heaved in and out as if he had just finished the Boston Marathon, or won the 1000 meters at the Olympics. Grover turned his head back toward me and said "Why didn't you tell me there was a moose!"
Stupid horse. Wait 'till you hear the grizzly stories...
Don't ever do mouth-to-mouth resuscitation on a Venus Fly Trap. That is, unless it is still in the plastic protective planter that you buy at the store.
I'm 51 years old, and I've never owned a Venus Fly trap. It's not like our Amish neighbors raised acres and acres of Venus Fly Traps on their neighboring farms in Indiana. Rather, we had the smell of cows, pigs, turkeys, and horses coming from the neighbors. The kind of critters that attract flies
So I'm in the grocery store with two of my young sons. The flower lady gives a cool demonstration of how the fly traps work. My sons are in awe, and I'm drooling on the plants at the thought of hundreds of flies dying in these quiet little death traps. I can just imagine a Venus Fly Trap with about 80 flies in its stomach, looking like a fat, green Santa Claus. So we bought a plant.
At 8500 ft. elevation, and 10 percent humidity, these Fly Traps really take it in the shorts. They die quickly, and when they are alive, they open slowly-real slowly. The instructions on the outside of the plastic cover say, 65-85 degrees Fahrenheit, and 50% humidity...hence the idea to give the plants mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. I mean, come on, your breath is way warmer than 60 degrees, and the humidity from your lungs has got to be more than 10%. So I decided to give the little suckers a few puffs, sort of like when you do on Recussa Annie, the CPR mannequin.
I don't think the American Red Cross would approve of mouth-to-mouth on a Venus Fly Trap, but I could write the manual on it.
Don't think for a minute that I put my lips on those hairy little guys. I simply blew into the can through the holes on the top of the lid. And I blew. And I huffed, and I puffed. I was getting kind of lightheaded. I wanted the empty plants to open up so I could watch the live fly go waltzing in and get creamed. I was on my knees on the floor, with my lips on the lid when my 8 year old son walked into the room.
"What are you doing, Dad?"
"Giving mouth-to-mouth to the Fly Traps," I replied, not missing a beat, and giving the recommended 12 breaths per minute.
He just walked out of the room without a reply.
I sat up and thought to myself, "This would look pretty strange to the average person, but apparently not to my family."
Did the Venus Fly Trap mouth-to-mouth resuscitation work? I don't think so. Maybe it's because their little tummies are full, and they know when to push away from the table.
Hackers are trying to weasel their way into my website. How do I know? My webmaster pulls up info and shows it to me all the time. Up to this point, we've had seven hacking attempts, and they've all failed.
“How do you keep them out?” I can hear you saying. It's easy: If you look at my spinning globe on the homepage of www.jerrybegly.com , you will see a character holding a sign which says something. The character came from Camp Pinetar, a comic strip that I drew several years ago. His name is “Hacker”, and he was way ahead of his time. (He hooked up a fax machine to his 3-D computer program and was faxing camp meatloaf to Africa. The natives at the other end thought that the fax machine was spitting out bricks for their new hospital.)
If you can catch it, the sign has a cryptic “anti hacker” message on it. One free t-shirt (no kidding) will be given to the first person who emails me and explains WHAT the sign says, and HOW it is used!
Bonus round: One free t-shirt (no kidding) will be given to the person who can email me and tell me what was used to make the squeaking sound on the globe. You must be specific. You haven't heard the squeaking sound, or oiled the globe? What's wrong with your computer?
Anyway, hacking is not encouraged in our society, but I can tell you the name of one major company in our area that is completely vulnerable to hackers. They are a multi-million dollar entity, and they must have a two-bit IT department. Shame. Maybe someday, you'll see a spinning “Hacker” globe on their home page...
