I first heard about this when we were on our way to Maine or Florida and thought it was a cool story that breathed life into an old problem of how to deal with snakes in paradise. Then I saw that they dropped the fourth wave. The think I always wonder about in these sorts of 'out of control' predators introduced into a virgin territory, is how the little devils find themselves a mate. I mean it must be hard to be the only one of your kind in a 150,000 square miles and find the only member of the opposite sex? I don't think so.
One reads the strangest stories in The Mail. God love 'em.
ReplyDeleteI first heard about this when we were on our way to Maine or Florida and thought it was a cool story that breathed life into an old problem of how to deal with snakes in paradise. Then I saw that they dropped the fourth wave. The think I always wonder about in these sorts of 'out of control' predators introduced into a virgin territory, is how the little devils find themselves a mate. I mean it must be hard to be the only one of your kind in a 150,000 square miles and find the only member of the opposite sex? I don't think so.
DeleteGee, I wish I could see their tiny parachutes. What a great story.
ReplyDeleteWell, you see they studied vertical envelopment and came up with a brilliant cardboard solution. Parachute and habitat all in one.
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