Why did you stop; A crow appears to enjoy scratching its back with a brush. When its owner stops, this brings the brush again and leaves it in his hands.
How to make a pangolin happy A man scratches a pangolin's back using a comb. The pangolin seems to particularly enjoy being scratched.
Goats in a rotating brush Goats scratch their backs thanks to a rotating brush, which has been installed on the wall of their habitat at the Frankfurt Zoo in Germany.
When you scratch the belly of a capybara In Gainesville, Texas, one uses a small rake to scrape the belly of a capybara. Cute rodent seem to particularly enjoy. The capybara lives in South America and is the largest rodent. When I come of age, It is longer than one meter and weighs more than 50 pounds.
The sore point cat A cat particularly enjoys scratching at a particular point of the back of.
The rescue of a small bird As he drove to the mountain roads of Norway, Ron Cholan saw a bird passes just above the windshield of his car. After 5 or 6 kilometers, He stopped to grab photos and walked back to the car. At that time, hearing a scraping from the roof. The little bird was trapped between the car and the roof luggage compartment. Ron managed to free the animal using a piece of cardboard and put it on the seat of his car, as seemed helpless to move from the cold. After a while, adorable small cock regained his senses.
The sore point A cat makes funny sounds when the scrape at a very specific point in the back.
The lemur requires scratching! Somewhere in Madagascar, an adorable lemur with your Sefo name accepts the fondling of two young children. But when the two boys stop, the lemur make them sense that still needs a bit of scratching on the back.