I always wondered how folks did that to Black Flanked Rock Wallabies.
Head down in a sack I guess is the key part. :-)
Chuck Norcutt
On 10/23/2010 8:31 PM, Andrew Fildes wrote:
> Last time I did it was on Black Flanked Rock Wallabies (avg. weight
> 3-4kg) - shave down the base of the tail to get at the lateral caudal
> vein which looks like an alpine road map. While sitting on the ledge
> of a sea cliff with the animal head down in a sack After that, humans
> would be easy. Fortunately I married a professional vampire
> (pathology nurse) with a deft touch. Handy sometimes. Andrew Fildes
> afildes@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
>
>
>
> On 24/10/2010, at 8:51 AM, Moose wrote:
>
>> Add to that the fact that even practiced phlebotomists often had
>> great difficulty drawing her blood. At the lab I usually drove her
>> to, only one tech was fairly reliably able to do so. And no, it
>> wasn't just that lab. There alone you have something that deserves
>> my definition of difficult and fussy.
>
--
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