What's up Swaggers!
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Absolutely Beautiful 10x30 GORGEOUS Tiny House For Sale - Duration: 3:19.
Absolutely Beautiful 10x30 GORGEOUS Tiny House For Sale
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'He's not fit enough for this league' - Chelsea FC flop Alvaro Morata SLAMMED by Sky Sports pundit - Duration: 3:50.
That is the opinion of Sky Sports pundit Chris Kirkland. Despite a promising start, Morata has failed to live up to expectations since his initial £58million switch from Real Madrid in the summer of 2017
The Spaniard returned to the Blues fold against Southampton after a spell out of the squad
He failed to impress despite scoring a goal that was wrongly ruled out for offside
And Kirkland believes the striker's head is no longer in it for the long term at Stamford Bridge
He's not fit enough for this league, he looks disinterested as if he wants to move away," he told Sky Sports news
Olivier Giroud is injured and is not really a long term option. "When [Eden] Hazard doesn't score, they don't look like scoring so up top they are really struggling
There has been rumours that Wolves are keen on bringing Tammy Abraham - currently on loan at Aston Villa - to Molineux
Given the current lack of forwards with Pedro, Callum Hudson-Odio and Willian all picking up injuries, the former Liverpool goalkeeper believes Abraham could be worth taking a chance on
I would get Tammy Abraham back and give him a go," he added. "I can't see them doing that for whatever reason, I think they've said that it's a last case scenario to call him back which I find strange
If you look at the five forwards, there's 22 goals between all five of them, that's low for that amount of quality, it's nowhere near enough for a top club like Chelsea
Kirkland was then asked where they would be if they had a top striker. "A lot closer [to the top], they're a way off, five or six more goals, six, seven more points there or those players have got to score more goals
" Maurizio Sarri is desperate for some new additions in attack but admitted it's not his job to bring people in
The club knows very well my opinion. I think we need something different for characteristics," he said after the match
I'm not in charge of the market. I have to try to improve my players, my team, my offensive phase, or better my offensive phase in the last 20 metres
The club knows my position, my opinion. It's up to the board." Get Chelsea latest news updates directly to your inbox Subscribe Thank you for subscribing
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Miss Polly Had A Dolly | Kindergarten Nursery Rhymes & Cartoons For Children - ABC Heroes - Duration: 31:36.
Oh my poor dolly is sick
Don't you worry let me take a look at her...
Miss Polly had a dolly, who was sick, sick, sick.
So she phoned for the doctor to come quick, quick, quick.
The doctor came with his bag and his hat,
And knocked at the door with a rat-a-tat-tat.
He looked at the dolly and shook his head,
And said "Miss Polly, put her straight to bed."
He wrote a paper for a Bill, Bill, Bill.
I'll be back in the morning with the Bill, Bill, Bill.
Oh my poor dolly is sick
Don't you worry she going to be perfectly fine
Miss Polly had a dolly, who was sick, sick, sick.
So she phoned for the doctor to come quick, quick, quick.
The doctor came with his bag and his hat,
And knocked at the door with a rat-a-tat-tat.
He looked at the dolly and shook his head,
And said "Miss Polly, put her straight to bed."
He wrote a paper for a pill, pill, pill.
I'll be back in the morning with the Bill, Bill, Bill.
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Giant panda tries to eat a "IRON BAR" after mistaking it for bamboo - Duration: 12:43.
Giant panda tries to eat a "IRON BAR" after mistaking it for bamboo
A giant panda gave tourists the shock of their lives as it tried to eat a meat cleaver at a zoo in south-west China.
The 12-year-old female panda, named Meng Meng, was filmed playing with the knife after mistaking it for a bamboo stem at the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding in Sichuan province last Wednesday.
The cleaver was accidentally left in the panda's enclosure by a keeper, the zoo said in a statement following the incident, adding that Meng Meng was fortunately not hurt by the blade.
Video footage shows an oblivious Meng Meng fiddling with the knife while sitting in her enclosure in front of horrified visitors at about 9am.
At one point, the panda was seen waving the sharp blade dangerously close to her mouth as it chewed on the wooden handle.
'Oh my god! This is too dangerous!' one female visitor was heard saying in the clip while calling for security. 'Throw the blade away, throw it away!' others were heard yelling.
Apparently realising the metal blade is not its favourite treat, the disappointed panda eventually dropped the cleaver on the ground and climbed towards the bamboo sticks behind her - much to the relief of the visitors.
Witnesses said the panda had been playing with the blade for about a minute.
'The cleaver was mistakenly left by a keeper after it was used to cut up ropes and bamboo in Meng Meng's enclosure,' the Chengdu breeding centre said in a notice on Thursday.
'Staff members immediately removed the blade from the enclosure and conducted a thorough checkup on Meng Meng. She was unharmed by the knife and was released back to the enclosure,' the statement added.
It added that the keeper has expressed remorse after the incident and the centre has issued a 'stern warning and lecture' to the keeper, who was also required to submit a self-evaluation form and had his bonus docked.
Many net users slammed the centre's careless staff and raised concerns for Meng Meng's condition. 'Please have a professional vet inspect the panda again, she might have accidentally cut herself,' one user commented in Chinese microblogging site Weibo.
'Thank goodness Meng Meng is smart enough to throw away the blade. Please be more careful next time,' another said.
'Staff members should have a list of tools that they have brought into the panda's enclosure every time they carry out maintenance work. Just remember to double check the list when they leave the enclosure,' one user suggested.
Meng Meng is mother to five panda cubs, including the world's first set of captive-bred panda twins in born in May 2018.
She first gave birth to a set of male twins, Meng Da and Meng Er, in 2013 and one male cub, Meng Lan, in 2015.
The Chengdu Giant Panda Breeding Research Base, founded in 1987, aims to increase the population of giant pandas through research and conservation efforts and eventually release some of the animals back into the wild.
The state-run centre has one of the largest collection of captive-bred pandas in the world. As of 2015, it has bred a total of 214 cubs, many of them sent to zoos around the world.
The giant panda, considered a national treasure of China, was moved off the endangered species list in 2016 after years of intensive conservation efforts.
The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) said in a report that the animal has been classified as 'vulnerable', reflecting its growing numbers in the wild in southern China. WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT GIANT PANDAS?.
While its numbers are slowly increasing, the giant panda remains one of the rarest and most endangered bears in the world.
There are an estimated 1,600 giant pandas living in the wild currently and 300 in zoos and breeding centres around the world.
Experts are unclear what age giant pandas can reach in the wild, but the oldest panda reared in captivity so far is 38 years old.
A wild panda's diet is 99 per cent bamboo. wit the remaining one per cent made up of small rodents. Four-month-old baby giant panda Xiang Xiang is pictured getting a physical examination at Ueno Zoo in Tokyo on October 10, 2017 +7.
Four-month-old baby giant panda Xiang Xiang is pictured getting a physical examination at Ueno Zoo in Tokyo on October 10, 2017.
Giant Pandas need to consume around 20 to 40 pounds (10 to 20 kg) of bamboo each day to get the nutrients they need. Giant Pandas stand at around three to four feet tall when standing on all four legs.
Cubs do not open their eyes until they are six to eight weeks of age and are not able to move independently until three months old.
A newborn panda is about the size of a stick of butter—about 1/900th the size of its mother. WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT GIANT PANDAS?.
While its numbers are slowly increasing, the giant panda remains one of the rarest and most endangered bears in the world.
There are an estimated 1,600 giant pandas living in the wild currently and 300 in zoos and breeding centres around the world.
Experts are unclear what age giant pandas can reach in the wild, but the oldest panda reared in captivity so far is 38 years old.
A wild panda's diet is 99 per cent bamboo. wit the remaining one per cent made up of small rodents. Four-month-old baby giant panda Xiang Xiang is pictured getting a physical examination at Ueno Zoo in Tokyo on October 10, 2017 +7.
Four-month-old baby giant panda Xiang Xiang is pictured getting a physical examination at Ueno Zoo in Tokyo on October 10, 2017.
Giant Pandas need to consume around 20 to 40 pounds (10 to 20 kg) of bamboo each day to get the nutrients they need. Giant Pandas stand at around three to four feet tall when standing on all four legs.
Cubs do not open their eyes until they are six to eight weeks of age and are not able to move independently until three months old.
A newborn panda is about the size of a stick of butter—about 1/900th the size of its mother. WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT GIANT PANDAS?.
While its numbers are slowly increasing, the giant panda remains one of the rarest and most endangered bears in the world.
There are an estimated 1,600 giant pandas living in the wild currently and 300 in zoos and breeding centres around the world.
Experts are unclear what age giant pandas can reach in the wild, but the oldest panda reared in captivity so far is 38 years old.
A wild panda's diet is 99 per cent bamboo. wit the remaining one per cent made up of small rodents. Four-month-old baby giant panda Xiang Xiang is pictured getting a physical examination at Ueno Zoo in Tokyo on October 10, 2017 +7.
Four-month-old baby giant panda Xiang Xiang is pictured getting a physical examination at Ueno Zoo in Tokyo on October 10, 2017.
Giant Pandas need to consume around 20 to 40 pounds (10 to 20 kg) of bamboo each day to get the nutrients they need. Giant Pandas stand at around three to four feet tall when standing on all four legs.
Cubs do not open their eyes until they are six to eight weeks of age and are not able to move independently until three months old.
A newborn panda is about the size of a stick of butter—about 1/900th the size of its mother. A giant panda gave tourists the shock of their lives as it tried to eat a meat cleaver at a zoo in south-west China.
The 12-year-old female panda, named Meng Meng, was filmed playing with the knife after mistaking it for a bamboo stem at the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding in Sichuan province last Wednesday.
The cleaver was accidentally left in the panda's enclosure by a keeper, the zoo said in a statement following the incident, adding that Meng Meng was fortunately not hurt by the blade.
Video footage shows an oblivious Meng Meng fiddling with the knife while sitting in her enclosure in front of horrified visitors at about 9am.
At one point, the panda was seen waving the sharp blade dangerously close to her mouth as it chewed on the wooden handle.
'Oh my god! This is too dangerous!' one female visitor was heard saying in the clip while calling for security. 'Throw the blade away, throw it away!' others were heard yelling.
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Drawings for children #h Glitter coloring and drawing Learn colors for kids - Duration: 3:30.
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Blouse models best trendy blouse designs for lehenga and Saree 2019 - Duration: 4:02.
Blouse models best trendy blouse designs for lehenga and Saree
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"Kader Khan" Last Rites Prayer Meet For The Late Actor At Shakuntalam Studio - Duration: 18:22.
"Kader Khan" Last Rites Prayer Meet For The Late Actor At Shakuntalam Studio
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