Canada's Most Dangerous Animal... The Moose? | Natural Kingdom | Real Wild

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  • Опубліковано 21 жов 2024
  • In Canada, more people are killed or injured in vehicular collisions with moose than by all other wildlife species combined. In Newfoundland, where moose densities are the highest in the world, there is proof that it is indeed Canada’s most dangerous animal.
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    Canada's Most Dangerous Animal... The Moose? | Natural Kingdom | Real Wild
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 147

  • @marjoriejohnson6535
    @marjoriejohnson6535 2 роки тому +46

    When I was a child more than 65 years ago ,I was on my way to the outhouse in early morning at the fishing camp. The ground below my bare feet began to vibrate and I could hear a oncoming animal. I ducked behind a small bush when just on the other side of that bush came a female moose being followed by her calf. The ground trembled be,ow my feet and I froze in awe....what a memory ! What a charmed childhood!

    • @jungjeru3348
      @jungjeru3348 Рік тому +1

      And you saw a moose deer that day??

    • @marjoriejohnson6535
      @marjoriejohnson6535 Рік тому +3

      @jungjeru3348 a moose passed within 5' or less from me. I grew up with large work horses, one of the biggest breeds, and that moose I swear was taller and made the ground vibrate as much as a trained work horse. I knew a moose was wild and I knew it was dangerous to be around a mother who had an offspring.

    • @marjoriejohnson6535
      @marjoriejohnson6535 Рік тому +2

      @@jungjeru3348 ps..a moose I don't think is ever referred to as a deer.

    • @jungjeru3348
      @jungjeru3348 Рік тому +1

      @@marjoriejohnson6535 I like that.

    • @jungjeru3348
      @jungjeru3348 Рік тому

      @@marjoriejohnson6535 Isn't a Moose a type of deer?

  • @lauramcknight2321
    @lauramcknight2321 2 роки тому +25

    Moose are gorgeously dangerous prey animals. I remember explaining to some tourists who were scared of bears that you are likely safer with them rather than a moose.

  • @crazifyit
    @crazifyit 3 роки тому +8

    That one guy's voice was so incredibly comforting and smooth! He should be a radio announcer if that whole scientist thing doesn't work out for him! 🙃 His voice is AWESOME!

  • @roshangeorge2127
    @roshangeorge2127 3 роки тому +12

    Thanks for uploading this documentary. There are very few documentaries made on moose

    • @jamiebentley7375
      @jamiebentley7375 Рік тому

      Most people who have never seen a.moose before would be amazed at their size.

  • @marilynwillett804
    @marilynwillett804 3 роки тому +8

    I was walking through the woods in Alaska with my German shepherd. We came upon a huge moose with her baby, I said hi moose and she kept eating and eye balling me,. No problem I just walked along.

  • @AniFam
    @AniFam 3 роки тому +16

    Even deer make drivers nervous on the road, but moose!!! Meeting them on the road must be scary!!
    Thank for sharing this wonderful video! 🤗👍
    🔆AniFam〽️

    • @adreabrooks11
      @adreabrooks11 3 роки тому +4

      When I was small, my dad used to drive semi-truck. Back then, it was no big deal to have a preschooler along, riding shotgun.
      We were driving around the north end of Lake Superior, hauling dual trailers, when we rounded a corner and encountered a big bull moose in the middle of the road. My dad swerved, missed it with the cab and first trailer, and caught its antler on the second trailer. In the side mirror, I watched it get hooked, watched its mass counteract the direction of the trailer, and watched as it got slung two to three times the height of the trailer into the air. We went into the ditch because of the twist its weight caused; the moose went into the sky. Being in a large truck, we weren't too shaken when it lurched over - but, surprisingly, neither was the moose. He got up off the pavement where he landed about the same time I got over the oddity of sitting diagonally. He tilted his head back and forth a couple of times, as if to work a kink out of his neck, looked at us, let out a huff as if to say: "Serves you right," and bounded off the road without so much as a limp.

    • @AniFam
      @AniFam 3 роки тому +3

      @@adreabrooks11 What an experience!! Your story sounds like a slow motion, which enabled me to imagine what happened at that time~stunning! 🤗👍

    • @leecrumble3921
      @leecrumble3921 11 місяців тому

      Moose are far worse because of the long legs they fall on the windshield and roof.

  • @graftonhale9746
    @graftonhale9746 Рік тому +2

    Great presentation! I learned a lot, not just about Moose but about Newfoundland. Apparently The preferred pronunciation is newfoundLAND. Great to learn something new.

  • @crocodilemaybe4703
    @crocodilemaybe4703 3 роки тому +10

    Moose are really cool animals!

  • @terrykyte1845
    @terrykyte1845 Рік тому +5

    I grew up on moose meat - never tasted beef until I was in my 30s - tough chewing - you bet but my mom started cooking it in a pressure cooker and that cured the chewey problem - dad used the same old mil spec 303 for about 40 years and took at least one moose every year

  • @Silvio.S.Arruda0044
    @Silvio.S.Arruda0044 3 роки тому +3

    Super show of images ... congratulations

  • @frankG335
    @frankG335 Рік тому +3

    It's so dangerous to bring any outside organism into a new ecosystem.
    Cane toads in Australia. Pythons in Florida, etc.

  • @billbadass3773
    @billbadass3773 3 роки тому +7

    Who would have ever thought. Bullwinkle was a thug this whole time!!!

  • @kingofthebeasts4321
    @kingofthebeasts4321 3 роки тому +4

    That old classic Moose hunting song is compelling me to taste a Moose.😋

  • @frankG335
    @frankG335 Рік тому +3

    Like in Ireland, the culture is based on very small, isolated communities where people have to cooperate and rely on each other.
    Even the Irish language reflects this.
    You don't say, "My book" or "our plow". You say (In Irish), "The book (that's) with me, the plow (that's currently) with you."

    • @jungjeru3348
      @jungjeru3348 Рік тому

      Yes and is there many moose deer on that island?

  • @lottytaylor572
    @lottytaylor572 9 місяців тому +1

    That would-be Turdeau

  • @DDAWGY1
    @DDAWGY1 3 роки тому +3

    put fences up and have crossing area's

  • @lynnleigha580
    @lynnleigha580 3 роки тому +2

    That's dumb, I know they're trying to help but calf's grow fast and they will outgrow them collars and be strangled

  • @ariw9405
    @ariw9405 2 роки тому +3

    No frogs?? Excellent I’m moving there

  • @nevermind-he8ni
    @nevermind-he8ni 3 роки тому +3

    I gave right of moose while riding my Harley. I shut my engine off and waited for him to walk back into the woods. The moose was not concerned at at all.

  • @backwooddesignco
    @backwooddesignco 2 місяці тому

    They are so majestic and absolutely massive. However, they don’t tend to be aggressive unless it’s during a rut or a cow with claves. I’d be way more terrified of a polar bear… the only animal that considers humans as food 🫣😅😂

  • @Outlander929
    @Outlander929 3 роки тому +3

    Loving the music in this documentary.

  • @l.b.5892
    @l.b.5892 11 місяців тому +2

    There's no need to show the butchering of the moose for those who find the slaughtering offensive. Disrespecting the animal is not ok! The suggestion of a lamp from a leg is beyond all rational thinking for me, and offensive, to say the least. Pay homage and be grateful. This is so sad at so many levels 😢

  • @richardjohnson5529
    @richardjohnson5529 3 роки тому +7

    This is what happens when humans mess up Nature.

    • @kdawg2472
      @kdawg2472 3 роки тому +1

      You benefit from it. You should be ashamed of yourself

  • @ЮрийСекретарь
    @ЮрийСекретарь 3 роки тому +3

    Спасибо.. за.. красивый..край

  • @daphnerodriguez9980
    @daphnerodriguez9980 24 дні тому

    GREAT VIDEO THANKS YOU GOODNESS 🌟 DAPHNE COTTON ALWAYS 💜,

  • @dallinshumway7188
    @dallinshumway7188 2 роки тому

    Can anyone tell me when this documentary was made?

  • @donnakearse2503
    @donnakearse2503 Рік тому

    Great video.

  • @lawrenceforbes5993
    @lawrenceforbes5993 3 роки тому +1

    Please give more volume for us hearing deficient

  • @चाैतारीटिभी
    @चाैतारीटिभी 3 роки тому +2

    This docu looks like some twenty years old though it is a great documentary.
    I am curious to know the current status.

    • @adreabrooks11
      @adreabrooks11 3 роки тому +2

      Same old same old. Some years back, the cod fisheries became more heavily restricted (they were being fished in a highly unsustainable fashion prior to this). The reduction to Newfoundland's primary income source caused many people to move away, to other parts of the country. However, those who remain often find it beneficial to look toward natural sustenance - gardening, hunting, wild foraging and so on. Thus, although there are fewer traditional folks about, many of them have become more avid in their hunting and so on.

  • @frankG335
    @frankG335 Рік тому

    Love the traditional Irish / Cape Breton music!

  • @onimusha13
    @onimusha13 Рік тому +2

    there is nothing cheery in hunting songs and it's actually disgusting to listen to such a cheery tune playing to barbaric killing of such magnificent animals

  • @frankG335
    @frankG335 Рік тому +4

    I love how most animals do ask for permission before copulation. Human males could learn from this. Lol.
    "The female indicates her willingness by ALLOWING him to come a little closer", yet he STILL "asks" by laying his head on her back.
    Again, humans can learn a thing or two from the moose and the Owl (Owl mates for life).

  • @americanwildlife-ongvathoa6605
    @americanwildlife-ongvathoa6605 3 роки тому +2

    Where can I see moose in the US, anyone know?

    • @maryCCFarm
      @maryCCFarm 3 роки тому +1

      New Hampshire is a place to spot them but there are other areas too . Even on sites on Face book they talk about seeing them at local areas . Lake desolation NY and the Adirondacks .

    • @americanwildlife-ongvathoa6605
      @americanwildlife-ongvathoa6605 3 роки тому +1

      @@maryCCFarm Thank you

    • @KingGamer-oj7hn
      @KingGamer-oj7hn 3 роки тому +3

      You can also see them in Alaska, Colorado, Maine, and Minnesota

    • @jimbo3779
      @jimbo3779 3 роки тому

      Moosehead Beer cans

    • @americanwildlife-ongvathoa6605
      @americanwildlife-ongvathoa6605 3 роки тому

      @@KingGamer-oj7hn Wow, thạnk you

  • @robiny.4395
    @robiny.4395 3 роки тому +5

    Curious why they don’t release wolves there? I’d love to see a moose in real life. I hear they’re here in Utah.

    • @americanwildlife-ongvathoa6605
      @americanwildlife-ongvathoa6605 3 роки тому +2

      I often have that question too.

    • @papagigo1
      @papagigo1 2 роки тому

      Mongoose were introduced by MAN to kill snakes in the Virgin Islands, trouble is, 1 sleeps during the day the other at night . Wolves may not be the answer.

    • @kennethheern4896
      @kennethheern4896 2 роки тому

      How about grizzly bears.

    • @franmartinez779
      @franmartinez779 2 роки тому

      They dont release wolves ..because the wolves would get rid of these peoples food source. They bitch about how much the moose eats, so they can justify all the people hunting these animals for food. Nature balances it self ...but when humans change that dynamic...over growth happens. Sometimes on purpose. 😪

    • @nateh1135
      @nateh1135 2 роки тому +3

      Wolves would just become another invasive species. Ecosystems are delicate things that we should try to alter as little as possible.

  • @marinemammalsofcalifornia-79
    @marinemammalsofcalifornia-79 3 роки тому +1

    That fish has beautiful tail and fins

  • @maryCCFarm
    @maryCCFarm 3 роки тому +1

    I LOVE THE MOOSE.. I COLLECT MOOSE ITEMS.. I HAVE SEVERAL. EVEN A MOOSE CAMPING MAT FOR THE OUTSIDE OF OUR CAMPER. A LITTLE PRICEY BUT I LOVE MY MOOSE.I STARTED COLLECTING 1990

  • @frankG335
    @frankG335 Рік тому

    It's weird that scientists didn't understand that bears were predators, early on. Why else would they need to run 30 ft in a one second burst, have the teeth they have, etc?
    Owls have very specific patterns of dismemberment and eating of prey- they eat the head, then the liver, heart, and lungs, if there's an excess of prey.
    If there's a lot to eat, they'll eat only those organs.
    If there's a less plentiful hunt, they might swallow it whole without taking those organs first.
    But most of the time, they eat their favorite organs, which they dissect with their sensitive beak and tongue through the neck hole, then swallow the carcass while.
    The organism does what has worked for the organism all along.

  • @LavenderLushLuxury
    @LavenderLushLuxury 3 роки тому +3

    Moose are just trying to, Survive

  • @damsel72
    @damsel72 2 роки тому +1

    Why shoot a moose? They’re harmless.

  • @redelfshotthefood8213
    @redelfshotthefood8213 3 роки тому +4

    Sadly, removing the dead Moose from the road prevents the species from learning how dangerous the road is. The Moose need to connect roads with their death so they take better care in future.

    • @papagigo1
      @papagigo1 2 роки тому

      Red Elf,, Sarcasm,, right ?

    • @redelfshotthefood8213
      @redelfshotthefood8213 2 роки тому

      @@papagigo1 Left-brained people aren’t sarcastic. We see the world very differently from regular folks.
      I have a very different view of wildlife management. For instance, the two vicious attacks on 2 year olds in Stanley Park Vancouver combined with 18 other bites since the pandemic require extermination of all the coyotes in the park. Because they all learned to prey on children. And families take their kids there to play. The local animal control people use the park as a dumping ground for coyotes caught in the city. So the population will return. But it would give the military a guerilla warfare exercise where they can use heat vision googles for a real objective.
      As it stands, park wildlife management trapped a few. So. I’m waiting till next summer and hoping human predation was eliminated, but I don’t think it was.

    • @papagigo1
      @papagigo1 2 роки тому

      @@redelfshotthefood8213 With your left brain , do you feel the moose population has the intellectual capacity to learn from visual examples ?. "The Moose need to connect roads with their death so they take better care in future.".

    • @redelfshotthefood8213
      @redelfshotthefood8213 2 роки тому +1

      @@papagigo1 Everything learns by example. Sharks detecting a chemical found in shark livers in open water will dive and flee the area. Documented by gps locator. Of course the smell of a dead Moose will incite terror in any moose.

  • @justicesomeday
    @justicesomeday 3 роки тому +1

    Snakes are.....not mooses

  • @ridhahaddad1486
    @ridhahaddad1486 Рік тому

    What a beautiful province

  • @FindersKeepers88
    @FindersKeepers88 3 роки тому

    Very Good

  • @marshhawk730
    @marshhawk730 3 роки тому +2

    be honest and mention yhat the original wolves were wiped out to the very last one as were the Beothuk native indigenous tribe it is a fact

  • @Charlimarteli
    @Charlimarteli 3 роки тому

    I've always wanted to know the real name of this documentary. Specifically for the music, I really love it. If anyone knows can you please get back to me....thank you

  • @animallover1404
    @animallover1404 3 роки тому +2

    Happy Earth Day, everybody!!!!!!

  • @kimnoel7179
    @kimnoel7179 3 роки тому +1

    Moose and Caribou.🏀🦌🥤🟥🟩

  • @marilynwillett804
    @marilynwillett804 3 роки тому +4

    No animal is the devil, the devil lives in most human beings. Greed, lust, lies, etc.

  • @boris2342
    @boris2342 3 роки тому +1

    they use moose urine to make Moosehead beer

  • @themergen1
    @themergen1 3 роки тому +1

    Let the moose live. Forget your balsam fir studies. Plant more trees. Quit blaming the moose. Stop blaming the moose for your problems.

    • @Charlimarteli
      @Charlimarteli Рік тому

      I get one every year...and if I can secretly get ore than one I do....lol

  • @Eusantdac
    @Eusantdac 3 роки тому +4

    I've been hiking, camping and driving all over Ontario, Canada for over 20 years and I have never seen one moose in the wild. I am quite disappointed..

    • @papagigo1
      @papagigo1 2 роки тому +4

      Get near a swamp or shallow pond, I've seen 18 in one night !

    • @jungjeru3348
      @jungjeru3348 Рік тому +3

      Yeah I'd never seen one in my first 20 years living in Ontario, then during a road trip from Halifax to Toronto over March break I was driving through bay of Fundy national Park (in New Brunswick) in the middle of the night. I had just seen a moose crossing sign so luckily I had slowed down quite a bit and it probably saved my life because sure enough right as I was coming around a bend I see 2 massive moose walking down the middle of the road!! Such a beautiful sight, and so unbelievably huge!! If I'd had hit them I'd be a goner considering I was driving through the one road through the park and I didn't see another car for at least 2 hours before or after because it was off season and nobody was in the park...

  • @patrickstewart3255
    @patrickstewart3255 3 роки тому +3

    issue more hunting tags until you get the numbers you want then maintain those numbers.

  • @SharonPierce-p7e
    @SharonPierce-p7e 5 місяців тому

    I alwsys wsnted 2 see a moose on real life . When i went 2 see live with my bro and family way up north in minnasota . He said she had just died

  • @Cycodude
    @Cycodude 3 роки тому +5

    I think wolf reintroduction could really help out in Newfoundland, although I'm not too knowledgeable on the subject

    • @H4WL3YWOOD69
      @H4WL3YWOOD69 3 роки тому

      Lol not unless u have as much deer and animals as u guys do in screetch if so you could toss some bears on the island to lmfao but it all depends on the island ecosystem if they would be able to live comfortably with out us humans bothering them or other territorial animals that also need the same diet of food as them and they a pack animal from a small as 3 or 4 up to 12 or 16 sometimes

    • @H4WL3YWOOD69
      @H4WL3YWOOD69 3 роки тому

      They got bullshit a coyote hunt ina part of central ontario where I live and its kill as many as u can with who u can how u can and it's a fuckin contest now with a winner and prizes cuz we are now building into our forests pushing them out and causing them to hunt closer to town cuz they are destroying there homes in the lands whre I dint think they would ever need to cut down in my life time but its happening and its caused a big affect of animal and human situations where the animal is killed cuz it's a annoyance to people

    • @austinmajor3288
      @austinmajor3288 3 роки тому

      Warm don't exactly hunt mooses often enough to really make a big dent on their numbers, they prefer Caribou, whitetail deer, or elk more often than moose

    • @jimbo3779
      @jimbo3779 3 роки тому

      Wolf reintroduction to the Yellowstone ecosystem has reduced moose population by 50 percent. Also elk and deer resulting in a lot of tree species making a comeback notably aspen.

  • @markgreen4612
    @markgreen4612 3 роки тому

    Given that beef prices are so high in Canada, some enterprising Newfie should start up a moose meat business to supply the country.

    • @austinmajor3288
      @austinmajor3288 3 роки тому +2

      Short-term, yes. But long-term? Also, PETA and other groups would go nuts.

    • @jimbo3779
      @jimbo3779 3 роки тому +1

      In United States you can't sell wild game meat. That's called market hunting and was banned in the early 1900's when modern game management started. Roadkill is usually utilized if not too damaged. I assume Canada has similiar regulations.

  • @themergen1
    @themergen1 3 роки тому +1

    Drive slower, be more aware. Look farther down the highway. The moose is not the problem. The human is the problem in the moose's territory.

    • @adreabrooks11
      @adreabrooks11 3 роки тому

      Newfoundland isn't the moose's territory. :)

    • @themergen1
      @themergen1 3 роки тому

      @@adreabrooks11 with 150,000 moose, it is their territory

  • @plumcrazypreston2797
    @plumcrazypreston2797 2 роки тому

    If one were a clever poacher, one might not shoot a collared animal. One should tell through the rifle scope.

  • @lynnleigha580
    @lynnleigha580 3 роки тому

    Im sure this will be answered but don't they hunt moose? I know here in Illinois we hunt deer because if we let them go unchecked, it'll be nothing but deer,, we even have them roaming around in bigger city's and during the evening people hardly travel the River road because it's long and 9 out of 10 times, you'll be stopping, at least five times for deer to cross which is scary because it's 55 mph and lots of twists, turns, hills, and trees

  • @christinedegarmo4714
    @christinedegarmo4714 3 роки тому +2

    The moose are not the problem, humans are! We build in their territory and it’s so sad to see these beautiful, fascinating, innocent creatures hurt and hunted.

    • @kevinjhonson5925
      @kevinjhonson5925 3 роки тому +2

      hunting is natural and humans have hunted since the start of time. if you eat any meat at all you cant say anything about hunting. hunters spend hundreds of hours just to get a chance at getting one. I know where my meat comes from, not some confined animal in cage that is pumped full of drugs. I work for what I get, I have had to walk for hundreds of Km's for my food not just to the meat section in the supermarket.

    • @adreabrooks11
      @adreabrooks11 3 роки тому +1

      You may have missed this statement in the documentary, but Newfoundland is not their territory. Moose are an invasive species on the island. The region was originally caribou country - but humans created a problem (as we often do) by introducing moose in past centuries. Their population boomed, displacing the smaller caribou and playing havoc with local vegetation (and, thus, the rest of the biome) with their feeding and other behaviours. An individual moose may be "innocent," as you say; but thousands of moose are devastating.
      The hunting is, of course, primarily commercial in motivation - moose hunting provides millions in revenue each year. However, this simply means that the government provides enough licenses to keep the population even. The ecologically responsible thing to do would be to wipe them all out from Newfoundland (This is not the case on the mainland, of course; they belong there.); but the continuous income (and the benefit in providing food to people) means that they simply keep the moose numbers from growing. The logic is that the current damage has already been done; yearly hunting just keeps it from getting worse. In short, the needs of the human population makes moose a "necessary evil" in the area.
      Regarding "hurting" them: most hunters are nature-lovers, and have no wish to see animals suffer. A bullet to the heart or head is a humane way to go - particularly compared to the slower death of a bear attack, starvation or disease that they would naturally encounter. It is indeed sad to see one of these majestic creatures fall. However, the harm in *not* killing them far outweighs the harm in culling the population.

  • @emmey57
    @emmey57 2 роки тому

    but, is the moose in high density in newfoundland ? xD

  • @themergen1
    @themergen1 3 роки тому +1

    Make wildlife bridges like in Colorado. Fence the highway up to and at the wildlife bridge. I don't need to tell you how to handle this problem. The moose don't need radio collars. If God wanted moose to have radio collars, they would have been born with them. Stop blaming the moose. Do the moose blame humans. COHABITATE. COHABITATE. COHABITATE.

  • @coolrunnings3
    @coolrunnings3 3 роки тому

    I can’t hear it😐

  • @satchycollins3985
    @satchycollins3985 Рік тому

    Cool

  • @bluebee5266
    @bluebee5266 3 роки тому +2

    That is horrifying how casually they terrorize that mother and that baby for their study. I don't see this as entirely ethical.

    • @papagigo1
      @papagigo1 2 роки тому +1

      @blue bee ,,, how would you do it ???

  • @whatthehellisadishwasher37
    @whatthehellisadishwasher37 3 роки тому +2

    First

  • @itzeldeanda4328
    @itzeldeanda4328 3 роки тому +2

    ❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @kelvingoode1393
    @kelvingoode1393 3 роки тому +1

    too many moose deaths to watch

  • @frankG335
    @frankG335 Рік тому

    Apex predators help strengthen the herd by killing the sick and weak.

  • @bigmeeps1239
    @bigmeeps1239 3 роки тому

    Wow

  • @robertberger8981
    @robertberger8981 3 роки тому

    Why not bring wolves to control the moos

    • @marshhawk730
      @marshhawk730 3 роки тому

      they were there originaly the islanders wiped them out see my comment below

  • @decorn6648
    @decorn6648 10 місяців тому

    Seems like a boring but peaceful place to live.

  • @eetho4life
    @eetho4life 3 роки тому

    Its drake dummies

  • @1mrflo
    @1mrflo 3 роки тому +1

    I’m guessing this is from the late 80’s early 90’s. I know it’s not Grizzly Adams but damn! All they have to do is release wolves, wolverines and beavers. I’m thinking that may bring balance to the environment. I wonder if there’s a updated video here on UA-cam🤔

  • @richardjohnson5529
    @richardjohnson5529 3 роки тому +1

    maybe make the cars and trucks go a lot slower?

  • @danielmcleod2674
    @danielmcleod2674 Рік тому

    poplar bear

  • @frankG335
    @frankG335 Рік тому

    People who declare everything they don't understand as "the devil" are exhausting.

  • @shira6561
    @shira6561 3 роки тому

    i havent killed a singale moose

  • @larryproffer8603
    @larryproffer8603 7 місяців тому

    Trudeau

  • @mello3214
    @mello3214 Рік тому

    ❤❤❤