Backyard chickens accused of attacking woman at park in San Francisco.

I dont think mine turned out too well :lau

"A chicken who likes spicy food? A chicken who likes chicken? A chicken who likes hot? A chicken who likes spicy chicken? A chicken who likes spicy chicken like a chicken?

A chicken who likes chicken, who likes hot, who likes spicy, who likes chicken like a chicken?

A chicken who likes chicken, who likes hot, who likes spicy, who likes chicken like a chicken?

A chicken who likes chicken, who likes hot, who likes spicy, who likes chicken like a chicken?

A chicken who likes chicken, who likes hot, who likes spicy, who likes chicken like a chicken?

A chicken who likes chicken, who likes hot, who likes spicy, who likes chicken like a chicken?

A chicken who likes chicken, who likes hot, who likes spicy, who likes chicken like a chicken?

A chicken who likes chicken, who likes hot, who likes spicy, who likes chicken like a chicken?

A"
:lau:lau:lau:lau:lau:lau

:lau
 
Sorry, last one, I swear, but what even is this one!? :lau

CA5F38F4-D869-46E7-90C7-98CC99F53A4F.png
 
Duck eats own foot

The Duck, as it's known, lives up in the trees of the Central Valley, where the land is so moist that even the leaves have lost their waterproofing. In a wetter climate, the leaves would lose moisture faster. But the Duck isn't a tree. It's an avian amphibian, and like many amphibians it can dry itself out in a variety of ways. That is how it ended up with a foot full of mud.

Scientists aren't sure what's causing the mud to stick to the Duck's feet, but they suspect that it may have been accumulated while the duck was living in the tree, and then when the Duck eventually dried out, the mud clung to the wetted surface of the feet.

In addition to the Duck, scientists in the United Kingdom found a species of spider that ate a foot-full of mud and a fly that chewed on another leg-full. And earlier
(Earlier what!?? :gig :lau)
 
Little giant chicken

Somewhere in there are two things worth noting. The first is that I think the "lunch" part of the ad might be a reference to the fact that it was a week before Easter. The second is that the phrase "breathtaking" is an old one used for chickens. "Lunch" in a song by the same name was written in the 1880s by an unknown author and became an unofficial anthem for poultry farmers in the UK.

4. A Bunch Of Crows

One of the few references to birds in a children's cartoon was the birds themselves. A Bunch Of Crows was an animated children's cartoon about an American family on a road trip. It is a classic children's cartoon that still is highly rated in the UK. It featured a lot of bird noises, some of them very high pitched, and was one of the first cartoon shows to have a narrator. It also featured
 
Duck eats own foot

The Duck, as it's known, lives up in the trees of the Central Valley, where the land is so moist that even the leaves have lost their waterproofing. In a wetter climate, the leaves would lose moisture faster. But the Duck isn't a tree. It's an avian amphibian, and like many amphibians it can dry itself out in a variety of ways. That is how it ended up with a foot full of mud.

Scientists aren't sure what's causing the mud to stick to the Duck's feet, but they suspect that it may have been accumulated while the duck was living in the tree, and then when the Duck eventually dried out, the mud clung to the wetted surface of the feet.

In addition to the Duck, scientists in the United Kingdom found a species of spider that ate a foot-full of mud and a fly that chewed on another leg-full. And earlier
(Earlier what!?? :gig :lau)
Hahaha! :lau
 
Little giant chicken

Somewhere in there are two things worth noting. The first is that I think the "lunch" part of the ad might be a reference to the fact that it was a week before Easter. The second is that the phrase "breathtaking" is an old one used for chickens. "Lunch" in a song by the same name was written in the 1880s by an unknown author and became an unofficial anthem for poultry farmers in the UK.

4. A Bunch Of Crows

One of the few references to birds in a children's cartoon was the birds themselves. A Bunch Of Crows was an animated children's cartoon about an American family on a road trip. It is a classic children's cartoon that still is highly rated in the UK. It featured a lot of bird noises, some of them very high pitched, and was one of the first cartoon shows to have a narrator. It also featured
:lau
 
Guinea flying through the ocean.

Fruit fly larvae are being made to fly using a system invented by Japanese scientists.

The researchers have discovered that by manipulating the size of individual neurons within the fruit fly's brain, it is possible to steer them in a direction.

A single neuron in a fly's brain acts as a control mechanism, according to a paper published in the journal Nature Communications.

This means that if one neuron is removed the flies can no longer control their flight.

Fruit flies can be trained to perform a particular task by altering the location of a single nerve cell in the fly's brain. This leads the flies to use the control neuron to guide their movements

HOW A ROADMAP IS PUT TOGETHER To find out how the fly control neurons work, scientists from the University of Tokyo attached a small antenna to a fly's head and then trained the insect to swim in a tank with a light and a camera mounted

:lau:lau:lau:lau:lau
 
Ducks learning how to type

The Oregon Duck has been used to teaching computers about how to learn the English language, with its ability to learn phrases and complete basic tasks like "Where is my friend's car?"

This is how the computer, developed by the University of California, Santa Barbara, will learn to type on the computer keyboard, according to the university.

"The Duck is not only teaching typing, but also the process of typing itself, which is something that's very hard to replicate with existing technologies," said Alex Trebek, a professor of computer science at UCSB.

To learn how to type on a keyboard, the computer uses the visual cues that computers and humans share, as well as the structure of a typical sentence.

In the beginning stages of training, the computer would type on its keyboard as well as a human would.

"It learns how to write and type a little bit like you do, it uses similar techniques
 

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