Some times meeting with the animals may result in funny situations.
Of course, you have to remain alive to narrate..
Click The Link.
Check out this great MSN video: Face to Face With a Cheetah!
Some times meeting with the animals may result in funny situations.
Of course, you have to remain alive to narrate..
Click The Link.
Check out this great MSN video: Face to Face With a Cheetah!
Th natural state of Beings is Happiness and Love.
Only when reason blinds it do we get into hatred and complications.
Read an interesting story.
Pointer mix Lejon, two, and three-week-old lion cub Jojo are inseparable since meeting at the Safari Park in Stukenbrock in north-west Germany.
JoJo was initially separated from his mother because of a belly button infection but when carers tried to reunite the pair, she shunned him
Park worker Jeanette Wurms.: ‘After days of treatment we were not sure wether the mother would accept her baby.
‘So for safety reasons we are handraising and bottle feeding. I am glad that Jojo has found something like a step father and step brother in my playful and loving pointer-mongrel Lejon.’
She added: ‘Now he gets fed by hand by me and gets the paternal affection he needs from Lejon.
‘The dog is very patient. Jojo scrambles all over him, jumps on his head, bites his fur. But he doesn’t mind – he’s a very patient surrogate.’
White lions are not albinos but are leucistic. They have pigment visible in the eyes, paw pads and lips.
The leucistic trait is due to a recessive gene that inhibits the deposition of pigment along the hair shaft, restricting it to the tips. A similar gene also produces white tigers.
The less pigment there is along the hair shaft, the paler the lion. As a result ‘white’ lions range from blonde through to near white.
The males have pale manes and tail tips instead of the usual dark tawny or black.
Probably they were living together.
“After an impressive 115 years together, two giant turtles at an Austrian zoo are refusing to share their cage anymore, the Austrian Times reported Friday.
“We get the feeling they can’t stand the sight of each other anymore,” said Helga Happ, director of the Klagenfurt-based zoo, where the turtles — Bibi, the female and Poldi, the male — have lived for the last 36 years. Before that, they called Basel Zoo in Switzerland home.
According to the paper, zoo staff realized something was amiss when Bibi bit off a chunk of her partner’s shell. When the attacks continued, Poldi was moved to another cage.
Animal experts even attempted couples’ counseling — feeding the turtles aphrodisiacs and encouraging them to play games together. But so far, efforts have failed to bring the shelled lovers back together.
Turtles aren’t the only members of the animal kingdom known to “divorce” their partners. Studies have shown that some birds who mated successfully with a partner one year have “divorced” and moved on with another partner in successive years.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/06/08/turtle-divorce_n_1581463.html?ref=mostpopular
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