I just saw a squirrel climbing a tree with a baguette in its mouth that was 80% of its body size.
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I just saw a squirrel climbing a tree with a baguette in its mouth that was 80% of its body size.
Impressive.
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I just saw a squirrel climbing a tree with a baguette in its mouth that was 80% of its body size.
Impressive.
@mayintoronto life goals
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I just saw a squirrel climbing a tree with a baguette in its mouth that was 80% of its body size.
Impressive.
@mayintoronto "a tree with a baguette in its mouth"
Canada is weirder than I thought
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@mayintoronto "a tree with a baguette in its mouth"
Canada is weirder than I thought
@tkissing where do you come from where your trees don't have mouths?
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@mayintoronto "a tree with a baguette in its mouth"
Canada is weirder than I thought
@tkissing @mayintoronto The trees have to protect themselves from the beavers somehow…
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@tkissing where do you come from where your trees don't have mouths?
@mayintoronto According to my really vague memories of history classes, the Romans considered my ancestors barbarians, who probably still climbed up into trees at night. That probably caused evolutionary pressure and now, 2000 years later our trees have to get all their nutrients thru roots.
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@tkissing where do you come from where your trees don't have mouths?
@mayintoronto @tkissing Canadian maple trees regularly eat baguettes. It’s what makes the maple syrup taste so good

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I just saw a squirrel climbing a tree with a baguette in its mouth that was 80% of its body size.
Impressive.
I think the size ratio between baguettes and some French people is similar

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J jwcph@helvede.net shared this topic