Years ago, during a visit to a bird sanctuary in Florida, we saw a pelican whose missing upper beak was replaced with PVC tubing cut lengthways.
Works for me! Oops err, for the pelican.
I saw this yesterday, and I’m so impressed with the confidence and skill of this dog; it knows exactly how to control the board, and nothing happens by accident.
The voice that narrates the first video is everywhere, it’s nuanced enough that I don’t think it’s AI; I think it’s a human man, and if so, he get a lot of work!
I literally laughed aloud.
May be a thing sometimes with birds’ beaks. Downtime during a business trip in Provo, Utah scored us a day of exploration. At a nearby pond, we spent a bit of time feeding ducks. One had the front half of its upper beak missing. That duck was much more aggressive during the feeding than the rest. Possible cause: Aggressive nature leading to the fateful beak-busting fight, or the other way around? Whatever the cause, it all comes down to… dinosaurs!
Speaking of voices with the Margay being able to mimic the sound of its prey, what, if like many birds, they can mimic human speech… because…
No. A cute kitty that talks. That would be asking for too much.
It’s a cute kitty that talks to its prey. Maybe you should be glad you don’t hear it calling out to you too…
I’d take the risk.
“density of a dead star” - yes. Very much so.
[Steadfast Stanley]
I looked up the animator’s name - John Cody Kim - and was delighted to see they were in the crew of Nimona, which got several approving nods in our home.
You know what they’d say; “FEED ME, HUMAN!”
Clearly a borb!