The interesting plant pond in the forest is almost covered with duckweed.
Some people say it is covered with algae.
But algae is algae, and duckweed is duckweed.
Duckweed is an interesting plant, unlike other plants.
Its roots are small, with small green discs floating on the water and oval protrusions on them.
These protrusions are its stems and branches, each like a round pancake.
Duckweed has no leaves.
Flowers sometimes bloom, but are extremely rare.
Duckweed does not need to bloom, and it reproduces easily and quickly.
As long as a disc-shaped branch falls off from a disc-shaped stem, one duckweed plant becomes two plants.
Duckweed lives freely, and nothing can restrain it.
When a wild duck swims by it, it clings tightly to the duck's flippers and follows the duck as it swims from pond to pond.
Pavlova: How the fox drove the badger out of the house. The fox's house suffered a disaster: the roof of the cave collapsed, and the little fox was almost crushed to death.
When the fox saw it, something was not good and he had to move to another place quickly.
The fox came to the badger's house.
The badger has an excellent burrow, having dug it himself.
There are entrances and exits on the left and one on the right, and side holes and side holes are crisscrossed to prevent sudden attacks by the enemy.
A badger's burrow is so big that it can accommodate two families.
The fox asked to stay, but the badger refused.
He is a very demanding landlord: he loves to be tidy and clean, and his home must be spotless.
How can you live here with your children?
It drove the fox away.
"Hmph!" the fox thought, "You are like this! Let's wait and see!" The fox pretended to leave, but he hid behind the bushes and sat there waiting.
The badger looked out and saw that the fox was gone. He crawled out of the hole and went to the forest to find snails to eat.
At this time, the fox suddenly got into the badger's hole, pooped on the ground, made a mess in the hole, and then ran away.
The badger came back, "Oh my God, it stinks!" It snorted in frustration and went to dig a hole for itself somewhere else.
This plays into the fox's hands.
The fox picked up the little fox and started living in the comfortable badger hole.
Purple cornflowers bloomed in meadows and glades.
Whenever I see them, I think of barberries because, like barberries, they do little tricks.
Cornflower flowers are not in clusters, but in flower heads.
Its beautiful, fluffy, fork-shaped flowers are all insubstantial flowers.
The real flowers are in the middle, many dark purple tubular flowers.
Inside these tubular flowers are a single pistil and several magic stamens.
As long as you touch these small purple tubes, they will tilt to the side, and a small ball of pollen will emerge from the pores of the small tubes.
After a while, if you touch these little flowers again, they will sway again, and another ball of pollen will emerge.
It’s just such a little trick!
These pollen are not wasted in vain. It responds to every insect's request. If you want it, just give it a share of pollen.
Take it, eat it, put it on yourself, as long as you can bring a little bit of pollen to other cornflowers.
Pavlova's Mysterious Night Thief A mysterious night thief appears in the forest.
The inhabitants of the forest were terrified.
Every night, several little rabbits disappear.
At night, deer, pheasants, grouse, rabbits, and squirrels all feel unsafe.
Whether it's a bird in the bush, a squirrel in a tree, or a mouse on the ground, you don't know where it will be attacked.
This mysterious killer sometimes appears suddenly from the grass, sometimes appears in the bushes, and sometimes jumps down from the trees.
Maybe, it is not a lone killer; maybe, they are a gang!
One night a few days ago, the roe deer father and mother roe deer were grazing in the forest clearing with their two young roe deer.
The male roe deer stood guard eight steps away from the bushes, while the female roe deer and her calf were grazing in the middle of the clearing.
Suddenly, a dark thing jumped out of the bushes and pounced directly on the male deer's back.
The male roe deer fell down, and the female roe deer fled deep into the forest with her calf.
The next morning, when the female roe deer returned to the forest clearing, the male roe deer had only its antlers and hooves left.
It was an elk that was attacked last night.
It was walking in a secluded forest and found what seemed to be a large, ugly wood knob on the branch of a tree.
The elk is a forest giant. Who has it been afraid of?
Its pair of huge horns are so big that even bears dare not attack it.
The elk walked under the tree and was about to raise his head to take a closer look at what kind of wood tumor was growing on the tree. Suddenly, a scary guy, weighing a pood (16.38 kilograms), pounced on it.
on the neck.
The elk was of course frightened by the surprise. It shook its head violently, threw the killer off its back, and ran away without looking back.
It didn't even figure out what had attacked it in the night.