Try saying that fast.Most sea snakes are ovoviviparous.
Most sea snakes are ovoviviparous.
Try saying that fast.Most sea snakes are ovoviviparous.
Many snakes, including boas and anacondas give birth to live young as do many lizards.
I did happen to snap a picture of a seal doing that Nessie thing on my recent holiday
I guess they can't all look like the Loch Ness monster...Why do your photos of seals look like that? Mine don't. I don't think that's fair.
Surely that little lad from The Family Ness has seen Nessie even more? .. he's even got a thistle whistle.Chef's Parents are the most prolific Loch Ness Monster sighters:
http://www.southparkstudios.nu/full-episodes/s03e03-the-succubus#
It's a forearm and hand in shadow. I can see the thumb and everything. I am squeezing my fingers together and have made an identical shape.
There is of course no sense in which a vague and unconvincing photograph has "cracked the mystery". There are loads of vague and unconvincing photographs.New sighting
https://www.thescottishsun.co.uk/news/3640696/author-amazing-new-loch-ness-monster-picture/
A respected military historian reckons he has captured an amazing new pic of Nessie.
Ricky D Phillips took his astonishing snap last week and is convinced his sighting of a "bird-like" Loch Ness monster has cracked the centuries-old mystery.
There is of course no sense in which a vague and unconvincing photograph has "cracked the mystery". There are loads of vague and unconvincing photographs. I suspect that the person who was involved in helping to make this photograph can also do an emu, a red indian, a barking dog, a butterfly...