Synchronized mowing.


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Synchronized mowing.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Овцы-лошадки by Ivan Novikov, 1926.
source
"Antelope Poses and Tracks"
Lives of Game Animals, Volume 3. 1927. Written and illustrated by Ernest Thompson Seton.
Internet Archive
Lives of Game Animals, Volume 3. 1927. Written and illustrated by Ernest Thompson Seton.
Internet Archive
Alexander Kovalensky, Звериные ребята, 1929.
source

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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did you know that they used to have moose in the british isles. they were extirpated about 3600 bce (so right around the "stone age-bronze age transition point" which idk whether that is still in legitimate usage by historians/archaeologues but it gives the vibe anyway) ... anyway... waow crazy what used to be where. i would love to see a moose in real life..... sorry for sounding so mammalpilled. another fun moose fact they are the second-largest north american animal by body mass losing only to bison
(more european moose reading)
A break for freshness.
I recently learned that the distinction between even- and odd-toed ungulates is not the number of toes they have, but the number of toes on which they bear weight (cetaceans being a somewhat controversial exception). This implies that some ungulates might have an even number of toes but bear weight on an odd number of them, or vice versa. so I checked:
Equines (left) only have one toe, so of course it’s weight-bearing. Pigs, bovines, caprines, and deer have two toes they bear weight on and two they don’t, making the number even either way.
Giraffids and camelids (which are even-toed) have two toes and bear weight on both of them. So far, everyone has the same odd or even number of toes no matter how you count them.
Hippos have four toes and bear weight on all of them. Rhinos have three toes and bear weight on all of them. So who’s the exception that makes the weight-bearing distinction necessary?
It’s the tapir. Just this one genus. afaik this individual is alive and well in a zoo in Japan, I just picked this picture to show that the front feet have four toes and the back feet have three. what a rulebreaker. it’s odd-toed btw