Nope! I had to double-check, and there it was!!
One of the best perks of being a hobbyist chef is that it inspires people to make their own creations and use you as a beta eater.
Skiiilllzzzz!
It is working
OMG, itās like one of those wind-up toysā¦
Not sure if adorable raptor is exhibiting predator instinct or just hates opening packaging as much as I do.
The exit at the end reminded me of a cuckoo clock.
That was simultaneously adorable and confusing a/fā¦
Get a little perspectiveā¦
Exactly! And a little unsettling. Iām guessing this might be the strangest thing that anyone has ever seen, or heard of, or conjured up. Itās plain to seeā¦ and it baffles. So many āwhysā. The only thing that might explain it is the parrotās desire to do what it did with the cup. Perhaps itās experiencing some extreme tactile pleasure from nibbling/tonguing the cupās rim, while its flat-footing shuffling along the floor is simply a secondary effect generated from the feverish high-frequency nibbling. Iāll bet once the parrot got back into its cardboard house, the nibbling continued.
(I wonder if all the liquor bottles in the background has something to do with what we saw. )
I think more likely heās figured out that this is the most efficient way of dislodging goodies from a jar.
No cute animals, but this is unquestionably a Wonderful Thing to brighten the day:
Thatās entirely plausible. I still wonder, though, why the parrot still kept the cup and brought it with him/her into the cardboard house. Parrots are clever; this one must have determined that the cup was empty.
The big payoff (for viewers) is when the adult capybara enters the picture, revealing the othersā true size! Just kids!
That totally threw me this morning