With the help of 2 simplified joysticks and a boat-shaped switch, your child can drive this car independently. Parents can also use the included remote control to master direction and adjust speed for younger kids.
Tough plastic shell holds up to 66 lbs for years of use. A 4-point adjustable seat belt and soft rubber bumper strip offer double protection. A wide footrest and high backrest make your baby feel relaxed and comfortable.
Powered by 2 rechargeable 6V batteries that let your kids enjoy 45-60 minutes of riding fun. Equipped with 12V dual motors, this vehicle speeds up to 2 mph to provide your little one with an exciting battle experience.
Our snail-shaped bumper car features dynamic music, colorful flashing LED lights and 360-degree spinning functions, which will be warmly welcomed by the kids of 3-8 years old. Great as a birthday or Christmas gift.
CHARACTERISTICS
The Chipmunk is a member of the family Mammalia, Rodentia and Sciuridae. It is also known as the Striped Squirrel, the Timber Tiger and the Mini-bear. The body length among most Chipmunks ranges from 5.5 to 6.3 inches and the tail length is 5 Inches. Chipmunks typically weigh about 0.02 pounds and live about 5 to 10 years. They have small but prominent ears which face forwards, and small eyes on the sides of their heads. Most wild Chipmunks are lively.Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.
CHARACTERISTICS
The Giant African Land Snail is a medium to large land snail of the gastropod family Agaricidae. The adult shell length is generally 7-8 cm, and the largest can grow to over 20 cm. The shell is narrow and tapered, with a length to width ratio of about two to one. The shell is slightly thick, shiny and oblong-oval in shape. The shell is 130 mm high and 54 mm wide, with 7-9 conical spiral layers. The shell is topped with deep sutures. The shell surface is yellow or dark yellow with a burnt brown mist pattern. The embryonic shell is generally jade-white in color. Each other snail layer has broken reading brown stripes. The growth line is thick and obvious, and the shell is lavender or blue-white, the threads on the body conch layer are not obvious, and the conch layers in the middle of each conch layer are interlaced with the growth line. The mouth of the shell is ovoid, with a simple, complete mouth margin. The outer lip is thin and sharp, easily broken.
RANGE AND HABITAT
The Giant African Land Snails prefer moist environments. They live on land, mainly in vegetable patches, farmland, orchards, parks, rubber plantations, weedy, wooded, shady and damp environments, humus soils, mounds of dead grass, caves, and under leaves and stones.
DIET
The Giant African Land Snail feeds on vegetables, flowers, and other crops. All kinds of green plants and bran can be used as the food of this species. Generally in the spring to feed cabbage, greens, lettuce and other broad-leaved plants; summer can feed a lot of sugar cane, sunflower leaves, a variety of melon and fruit scraps, etc.; autumn temperatures are low, the amount of food reduced, you can feed some vegetable leaves, potato chips, etc., do not eat grass, weeds, refuse to eat the irritating taste of onions, leeks, garlic.
BEHAVIOR
Habits and Lifestyle
The African snail is diurnal and swarming, and likes shady and humid environments. During the day, they live in dark and humid places and hide in humus-rich and loose soil, garbage heaps, dry grass piles, soil holes or rocky caves. The suitable area for the African snail to grow and breed is the low heat river valley area below 800 meters above sea level. The suitable temperature for the Giant African Land Snail to live is 15-38℃ and the soil humidity is 45%-85%; the most suitable temperature is 20-32℃ and the soil humidity is 55%-75%.
Mating Habits
This species is hermaphroditic, heterozygous and highly fertile. It can lay eggs four times a year, each time laying 150-300 eggs. After eggs hatch, they mature after 5 months of sexual development and adult snails generally live for 5-6 years, up to 9 years. The eggs are laid in the 1-2 cm layer of soil under the humus and moist topsoil or in damp piles of dry grass and garbage, with 150-300 eggs per head. Young snails do not feed when they first hatch, but start to feed after 3-4 days, and become sexually mature in 5-6 months. Eggs hatch from a few hours to 17 days. Snails mature at 5-15 months, depending on the temperature. (Maturation is delayed in winter when temperatures are low in order to survive the winter.) Giant African Land Snails may live up to 9 years, generally 5-6 years.
The Chipmunk is a member of the family Mammalia, Rodentia and Sciuridae. It is also known as the Striped Squirrel, the Timber Tiger and the Mini-bear. The body length among most Chipmunks ranges from 5.5 to 6.3 inches and the tail length is 5 inches. Chipmunks typically weigh about 0.02 pounds and live about 5 to 10 years. They have small but prominent ears which face forwards, small eyes on the sides of their heads. Most wild Chipmunks are lively.
The Red Squirrel, a member of the Sciuridae, is an arboreal, omnivorous rodent often referred to as a Forest Seeder and folklore as the Devil King Squirrel.
The Arizona Gray Squirrel, also known as the American Gray Squirrel, is a member of the family Rodentia and Sciuridae. It is small in size, with gray fur and a belly between white and cream. It has long ears, no tufts of fur and a fluffy tail edged in white. The body is about 16-20 inches long and weighs up to 1.4 pounds.
The Rock Squirrel, also known as Sao Maozi or Stone Mouse, belongs to the rodent and is a species in the family Sciuridae. The most common natural predators of the Rock Squirrel include bobcats, owls, eagles and snakes. Though the Rock Squirrel is cute, alert, and courageous, it is still considered a pest due to its habit of destroying crops.
The Abert’s Squirrel is a member of the genus Sciurus with a body length of 18-22.8 inches, a tail length of 7.5-9.8 inches and a weight of 2.2 pounds, and can live up to 10 years in the wild. Its most distinctive feature is tassels of fur about 0.8-1.2 inches long at the tip of its ears, which looks very interesting. In addition, it is alert and agile.
The Tortoise, the Hare… and the Snail
Once upon a time there was a tortoise, a hare, and a snail. The hare was always boasting about how fast he was, and the others were growing tired of his bragging. So one fine day, the tortoise challenged him to a race. He told the hare, “Well, you might think you’re so fast, but I can beat you in a race!”
Hearing this, the hare burst out laughing so hard he almost fell down his rabbit hole. “Ha!,” he exclaimed. “You couldn’t even outrun Little Miss Snail over there. I accept your challenge.”
The race was on!
The next day, all the animals of the meadow came out to see them begin. At the starting line was the hare, the tortoise, and the snail (you didn’t think she’d let the hare bully her, did you?) The hedgehog announced “On your mark, get set, and… go!!!”
And so they were off.
If you’ve heard this story before, you may remember who won the race. The hare was so overconfident about winning that he decided to take a nap, certain there was no way the tortoise could win. Of course that’s exactly what the tortoise eventually did, crossing the finish line just as the hare awoke from his nap and belatedly tried to catch up.
But this isn’t the whole story. What about the snail, whom we last saw disappearing into a tuft of grass just past the starting line?
Well, as it turns out, she was having quite the adventure of her own.
After she entered the cool shade of that tuft of grass, she drank some drops of dew still left over from the early morning. Refreshed, she slowly made her way up a big hill, meeting lots of other small animals along the way. She hitched a ride on the back of a caterpillar, played games with a family of ants, and took a nap of her own later in the afternoon.
In fact, she found herself having so much fun that she entirely forgot all about the race, preferring instead to pursue her own adventures.
At one point she heard some celebrating in the direction of the finish line, accompanied by a hare screaming “No!!! It can’t be!!!!” She smiled to herself and resumed listening to the crickets in the field make their sweet music. When, a few days later, she finally passed by the tattered remnants of ribbon that said “Finish line,” she was too engrossed in her own adventures to pay much attention to it.
Instead, the snail kept going and going, becoming interested in one thing, and then another and another and another. She ended up making lots of varied and interesting friends, and had one exciting adventure after another.
Many years later, she looked back on a happy and exciting life filled with ups, downs, and everything in between. What had started out as a short race turned out to be a journey. A wondrous journey.
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