This 85 yard pick 6 by Jason Taylor II was one of the biggest momentum changing plays in Oklahoma State history. It changed the entire complexion of the game.
OSU went onto beat Texas 32-24 🤠
The way I picture it a bunch of pioneers were like WE'RE GOING TO CALIFORNIA and they go in their little wagons with the sheets on top all across Nebraska and Kansas and eastern Colorado and then they arrive at the base of the Rockies and then were like eh this is fine.
Some things are bigger than hockey
Oklahoma State Hockey is devastated to have learned of the passing of U.S. Air Force Maj. John “Alex” Klinner, an OSU alumni. He was one of six crewmembers on a KC-135 refueling aircraft that went down in the Middle East. We honor him today.
summer olympics: look at this teenager run really fast
winter olympics: look at this 41 year old mother of three do a backflip off the side of a mountain
Probably one of the coolest moments we have had in the field…stumbling upon wolf pups sleeping at the entrance of their den which was a huge old beaver lodge.
On this particular day in early May, we were searching clusters of GPS-locations from a collared wolf in this pack to find where it had killed prey. The wolf was a subordinate male wolf and had only spent a few hours on the edge of this beaver meadow so we assumed he was just resting here. I.e., there were no indications, based on the wolf’s movements, that this was a den.
We hiked along the meadow edge for a bit and as we got close to where the GPS-locations from the wolf were, an uncollared wolf popped up out of the grass by the lodge about 50 meters away and ran into the forest.
That seemed far too coincidental…what are the odds that the GPS-collared wolf had been in this spot a few days ago and now, when we arrive there was a different wolf here. As a result, we immediately started to think the lodge could be a den.
We approached the lodge and pulled out our phone to record what we observed. We rounded a side of the lodge, approached the entrance, and we found these 4 pups sounds asleep. What a wild few moments.
Of course, we thought this was especially interesting, in part, because the wolves were using a massive beaver lodge—i.e.., the home of one of their primary summer prey—as a den to raise their pups, which then would go onto to hunt and kill beavers as adults.