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Showing posts with the label Wild

Carrie Bickmore and Fifi Box from Project checking out of a hotel in Sydney after a night out with wild girls

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They had a wild girls night on a Thursday night in Sydney. And The Project host Carrie Bickmore, 41, and radio star Fifi Box, 45, were seen checking out of the swanky Kimpton Margot hotel the next morning. The two women laughed together as they rolled their suitcases into the driven car. Pajama party! Carrie Bickmore and Fifi Box from The Project check out of their hotel in Sydney on Friday after a night out with the wild girls Carrie and Fifi were dressed as typical Melbourne, both wearing black. Carrie looked absolutely chic in a knitted turtleneck sweater with black skinny jeans and black combat boots worn over it. Meanwhile, a drunken Fifi was wearing a more casual flying outfit, wearing a loose lilac top over a padded jacket. Carrie and Fifi dressed like the average Melbourne citizen, with both wearing black He also wore skinny jeans and combat boots. The night before, the couple looked ready to break away with Carrie looking as youthful as ever and Fifi wearing an em...

'Splendour in the mud': Wild weather causes chaos at NSW music festival

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Chaotic scenes emerge from the popular NSW music festival as heavy rains wreak havoc on attendees. Participants traveled to North Byron’s beautiful four-day festival, Splendor in the Grass, yesterday to start at 5pm. But bad weather has drenched the area, with some people forced to choose between sleeping in flooded campgrounds or in their cars. Tents were submerged in water, with some residents forced to seek alternative accommodation. ( ABC News: Tobias Loftus ) Load Others complain of waiting in long queues just to get into the site. Some frustrated ticket holders have taken to social media to raise their grievances. “Already in the car queue for 8.5 (hours), still potentially three hours to get to camp,” Harry Nicol wrote on his Twitter after midnight. Load Alex Gubbings told ABC News it took him about 12 hours to enter the Splendor page. “I think we were in line at about 4.30pm and we only got in at 4am,” Gubbings said. “It’s not moving, t...

Wild Queensland Men playing with stonefish, one of the most venomous sea creatures in the world

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‘Anyone know what this is?’ A dangerous moment a man plays with one of the most venomous fish in the world – and this is not his first risky stunt with marine animals A man finds rock fish while walking on Stradbroke Island, Queensland The Queensland Museum says rockfish are the most venomous of all fish Juliano Bayd, 21, posted his interactions with fish on his TikTok on Tuesday The video where he touches the fish’s mouth has been viewed 647,000 times He said: ‘I was moving him when I accidentally stepped on his head with a reef shoe’ By Tom Heaton For The Australian Daily Surat Published: 01:12 AM EDT, 21 July 2022 | Updated: 01:14 PM EDT, 21 July 2022 An unsuspecting young man has stumbled upon one of the world’s most venomous fish while on a walk in Queensland. Juliano Bayd, 21, who says he has a ‘strong passion’ for marine wildlife and previously described hi...

Wild bird monitoring to help predict zoonotic disease risk

Australia’s largest sample collection of wild birds has been established by experts across the country, including a Deakin University researcher. This is what is shown about zoonotic diseases. The COVID-19 pandemic is the latest zoonotic disease – caused by germs that spread from animals to humans. But an outbreak of monkeypox and Japanese encephalitis means keeping up with viral traffic has never been more important. Experts say it is only a matter of time before another new infectious virus outbreak strikes. A new virus that combines human influenza and avian influenza is a prime candidate for the next pandemic. Bird flu is causing problems globally and in Australia. In 2020 alone, nearly half a million Victorian birds were culled following several outbreaks involving three strains of the virus. While avian influenza viruses generally attach themselves to infecting birds, they sometimes make potentially lethal jumps to other animals, including humans. Fortunately, research ...