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Getting a spam comment erased from a mountain description



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By Nick Stayner
From The Magic City
Dec 2, 2010
Nick Stayner near the crux. Ryan Minton photo.

Recently someone posted this (it's the most recent comment): mountainproject.com/v/wyoming/grand_teton_national_park/mt_o>>>
on the description for Mount Owen in Grand Teton National Park. The comment has nothing to do with Mt. Owen in particular and when you click on the link provided, it takes you to a site w/ generic, non-climbing GTNP info. The post seems like a shameless way to spam and plug her site. Also, it's the only contribution the user has made.
Not a huge deal, just an annoyance on a great, high-quality site like mp.com. Anyone think they can remove this?


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By Wayne
From Superior, CO
Dec 2, 2010

Look at users siyathomas and Nancy56 for similar posts as well.


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By Monomaniac
Administrator
From Morrison, CO
Dec 2, 2010
Matching after the dyno.

Deleted. Thanks for the heads up.


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By Nick Stayner
From The Magic City
Dec 2, 2010
Nick Stayner near the crux. Ryan Minton photo.

At least those users were smart enough to post their spam in the right place! Thanks Monomaniac


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By Buff Johnson
Dec 2, 2010
 In a zoo in California, a mother tiger gave birth to a rare set of triplet tiger cubs.    Unfortunately, due to complications in the pregnancy, the cubs were born prematurely and due to their tiny size, they died shortly after birth.  <br /> <br />The mother tiger after recovering from the delivery, suddenly started to decline in health, although physically she was fine. The veterinarians felt that the loss of her litter had caused the tigress to fall into a depression. The doctors decided that if the tigress could surrogate another mother's cubs, perhaps she would improve.  <br /> <br />After checking with many other zoos across the country, the depressing news was that there were no tiger cubs of the right age to introduce to the mourning  mother. The veterinarians decided to try something that had never been  tried in a zoo environment. Sometimes a mother of one species will take on the care of a different species. The only "orphans" that could be found quickly, were a litter of weaner pigs.  The zoo keepers and vets wrapped the piglets in tiger skin and placed the babies around the mother tiger. <br />

One day and with aspirations toward the 5000th post, I too hope to be considered for the coveted spam title.

Though I have yet to meet any of those hot russian-asian-nigerian women.


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By AJS
From Boulder, CO
Dec 2, 2010
In the sea of Cortez - Baja California, Mexico

Now that the comment is deleted doesn't it make this thread now useless, even Spam? I should start another thread about this post...but then I'd have to start another thread about THAT thread...

:)


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