Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rpi!usc!wuarchive!rex!samsung!uakari.primate.wisc.edu!erb1!osnome!hunting From: fsadl@acad3.alaska.edu (LOOMIS ANDREW D) Newsgroups: rec.hunting Subject: Re: Bear Liver (was Re: Request for info....) Message-ID: <459@erb1.engr.wisc.edu> Date: 30 Mar 91 13:01:13 GMT References: <387@erb1.engr.wisc.edu> <421@erb1.engr.wisc.edu> <452@erb1.engr.wisc.edu> Sender: news@erb1.engr.wisc.edu Organization: University of Alaska Fairbanks Lines: 20 Approved: hunting@osnome.che.wisc.edu In article <452@erb1.engr.wisc.edu>, meyers@leonardo.rtp.dg.com (Bill Meyers) writes... >In article <421@erb1.engr.wisc.edu> mitchell@metaphor.metaphor.com (Greg Mitchell) writes: >[ ... ] >>think any are but some people like it, although I understand that bear >>liver can be poisonous ). Butchering information would show sketetal > >That's Polar Bear liver, which concentrates vitamin A. (A piece of >Polar Bear liver the size of a vitamin A pill _is_ a vitamin A pill. :-) >Ditto other carnivorous marine mammals? But not other bears, I think. Add Greenland Husky to that list. Just in case you ever have to eat your sled dogs like Roald Amundssen did on his trip to the South Pole. Andrew Loomis Bitnet: FSADL@ALASKA Internet: FSADL@ACAD3.ALASKA.EDU Never have so many owed so much to so few. -Winston Churchill He must have been thinking of our liquor bills. -An unidentified RAF pilot