Arrgh!BillTre said:
Both are such powerful animals. I'd be hesitant to get too close to them while treating them, but I'm only used to treating humans. I do have one amusing dog treatment story from an event out in the hills in a ravine, but won't share it now.BillTre said:I know a zoo vet who does apes and elephants
Sounds like my wife (she hates shots), but she still asks every time for the smallest gauge needle available.BillTre said:Some animals have been trained to calmly submit to injections.
That's me. Every jab over the last 2 years has led the nurse to ask me to stop tensing.berkeman said:Sounds like my wife (she hates shots), but she still asks every time for the smallest gauge needle available.![]()
I've had soooo many injections over the years since early childhood. Has no one told about the technique of taking a deep breath, looking away and then breathing out slowly and deliberately as the needle goes in? I find that decreases the unpleasantness. Looking at it (like kids often do instinctively) is a bad idea.pinball1970 said:That's me. Every jab over the last 2 years has led the nurse to ask me to stop tensing.
The word "scratch" does not cover an injection btw, we the public are not fooled.
For me the worst actually is, as they try to console and encourage me.pinball1970 said:Every jab over the last 2 years has led the nurse to ask me to stop tensing.
Little kids and Medics. I like to watch their technique.strangerep said:Looking at it (like kids often do instinctively) is a bad idea.
From a dialogue I had the misfortune to overhear when a haemophiliac boy, maybe 8-10 yrs old, needed to get an injection of clotting factor,...berkeman said:Little kids and Medics. I like to watch their technique.![]()
BillTre said:
Don't know. Didn't say.Bystander said:Where geographically? Asia, Africa, S. A., N.A., Oz?
Have to say it's very unusual behaviour.BillTre said:Don't know. Didn't say.
Stripes and rows of dots are slight modifications of an underlying patterning mechanism.berkeman said:
Hey kid! Who's your daddy??berkeman said:[...Baby Zebra Born With Dots...]
Or, maybe say it, who's your dotty?strangerep said:Hey kid! Who's your daddy??
The diploid chromosome number of this species was found to be 102, which included 16 metacentric or submetacentric, 4 subtelocentric and 82 acrocentric chromosomes (Fig. 3a, Supplementary Fig.Nov 6, 2020fresh_42 said:How many chromosomes do whale sharks have?
Amazingly cool!BillTre said:They're like living asterisks.
I thought they were flowers for a moment, until the beaks registered.BillTre said:
BillTre said:
The Oregon coast has a lot of wind. A kite in a strong wind can generate a strong lift.Ibix said:How does the lower bird have the spare lift to carry another bird on top? And how big a stack of birds could you make...?
BillTre said:Not a brave cat:
It may seem strange, but to hunt adult rats is a task way too difficult for an average cat. Exceptions may happen, and heavyweight (above 5-6kg) tomcats might occasionally take down a few, but usually this is for dogs.BillTre said:Not a brave cat:
BillTre said:
I only see a message about disabling tracking protection, but you can click on it to go to the tweet.strangerep said:Sooo many of these images don't display on my browser (firefox). Is it a geographic region thing?
Ibix said:I only see a message about disabling tracking protection, but you can click on it to go to the tweet.
Cannot load Facebook SDK. Disable any adblocker or tracking protection and try again.