Thanksclick it out of the attachment in your reply. It'll open in a new window and be unblurred.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Thanksclick it out of the attachment in your reply. It'll open in a new window and be unblurred.
A small penguin would, and possibly a pandaYeah, even tiny zebras won’t fit in a blender.
Uh...what kind of pandas live on your planet that they fit in a blender?A small penguin would, and possibly a panda![]()
Red pandas?Uh...what kind of pandas live on your planet that they fit in a blender?
I believe there are fox squirrels here, but I've only ever seen grey squirrels. I did see a black squirrel with a white spot on its head once, still not sure what species that was.Speaking of squirrels (other thread, I don’t care), how many of you only have pathetic little gray squirrels like us? I can drive less than an hour north and they have these huge red squirrels. I think they call them Fox squirrels. So confusing…![]()
Then she shoulda said thatRed pandas?
"Pandas are born fragile and underdeveloped. Weighing between three and five ounces, newborn pandas are 1/900th the weight of their mother."Uh...what kind of pandas live on your planet that they fit in a blender?
Well then you should have clarified that you meant infant pandas. Then we would have known right from the start that you are a baby panda eater."Pandas are born fragile and underdeveloped. Weighing between three and five ounces, newborn pandas are 1/900th the weight of their mother."
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/...irely-helpless-heres-how-giant-pandas-grow-up
Sounds small enough to me![]()
Oh no, I wouldn't eat them. Besides, that would be illegal.Well then you should have clarified that you meant infant pandas. Then we would have known right from the start that you are a baby panda eater.