[Sca-cooks] kumiss and aphrodisiacs

Elaine Koogler ekoogler1 at comcast.net
Tue Sep 14 06:44:36 PDT 2004


Pixel, Goddess and Queen wrote:

>>>>Adamantius sez:
>>>>        
>>>>
>>>>>Besides, I didn't mention the kumiss with
>>>>>          
>>>>>
>>>the beef dissolved in it.
>>>      
>>>
>>>>>We couldn't find tiger bones... ;-)
>>>>>          
>>>>>
>>Not even from your favorite Chinese apothocary?
>>The other thing could be to contact your local
>>zoo, and, showing them your research etc, ask
>>them if they had any tiger bones or could give
>>you one when and if one of their tigers died.
>>The key to success in this is to be able to
>>convince the zoo that you weren't some weirdo but
>>someone with a genuine project but at the same
>>time not wanting to harm any living tigers.
>>
>>Huette
>>    
>>
>
>Since tigers are endangered, trade or trafficking in any of their bits is
>Extremely Illegal. So it's not likely that such a project is going to get
>very far. It's like distillation being Massively and Hugely Illegal and No
>Matter How Scientific The Reason, No, You Still Can't Try To Duplicate Any
>Of Those Nifty Renaissance Distilled Elixers Because We At The BATF Said
>So.
>
>Margaret
>_______________________________________________
>Sca-cooks mailing list
>Sca-cooks at ansteorra.org
>http://www.ansteorra.org/mailman/listinfo/sca-cooks
>
>  
>
Not even from one that died of natural causes?  I was under the 
impression that, though elephant ivory is also forbidden, if you get a 
piece that is certified as coming from one that died naturally, it's 
allowed.  Surely if you got the bones of one who died in a zoo, that 
would be ok, right?

Kiri




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