The seal who loves to rock the boat.


This is the wonderful moment a sea kayaker received an unexpected visitor when a seal hopped up onto his boat to hitch a ride. The encounter between vet Rupert Kirkwood and the curious grey seal happened off Cornwall. He said: 'There was no doubt it was playing because I watched it rolling in seaweed, barking, deliberately splashing me and trying to get on my kayak!
'It had the same look in its eye as a dog wanting somebody to throw its ball.' It has been a record-breaking year for the number of grey seal pups born around the east coast of Britain. New record totals have been recorded at sites including Horsey and Blakeney Point in Norfolk, and at Donna Nook nature reserve in Lincolnshire. By contrast, seal pup populations on the west coast were badly hit by former Hurricane Ophelia in October.
A number of seal pup deaths were recorded off Pembrokeshire, and also at the Isle of Man. However, at many sites around the east coast, numbers continue to swell year on year. At Horsey, near Great Yarmouth, a new record of 1,643 grey seal pups has been recorded, topping 2016's record of 1,500. Volunteers from Friends of Horsey Seals completed the latest count on the beach on Thursday morning. Peter Ansell, the group's chairman, said that he expected record numbers to continue each year 'until a natural disaster', or disease or dwindling fish stocks affected the seals. He said the increase was 'a bit like compound interest', with female seal pups maturing, returning to the beach aged four or five once in a season to mate, then a year later to give birth. Numbers were also up at Blakeney Point on the north Norfolk coast, with 2,598 pups counted on Monday exceeding the previous record from 2014. Stephen Prowse, lead ranger for the National Trust on the Norfolk coast, said good population survival rates in previous years and previous breeding seasons were the likely cause of the increase. The most recent count at Donna Nook nature reserve in Lincolnshire put the tally at 1,984 grey seal pups born more than the 1,957 counted last year. Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust, which manages the reserve, said year-on-year numbers had increased rapidly in the past but had started to level off in recent years. By contrast, numbers at Horsey continue to increase at a more rapid rate, though the reason for these differing rates is not known.

Pepper Spray is a prohibited weapon in Nigeria says Nigeria Police.

The Nigeria Police has said that Pepper Spray is a prohibited weapon in Nigeria.

UPDate: All 13 people rescued from flooded Thailand cave.


The final four young soccer players and their coach were pulled from the flooded cave in Thailand on Tuesday, ending the epic rescue mission that gripped the world for weeks, officials said.

The Weird Hair Style That Broke The Internet.


African hairdressers have become too creative with their beautification skills as what looks like a gun was weaving on the head of a lady.

Schoolgirl, 11, spends up to FOUR HOURS transforming herself into 'hyper-feminised' female drag queen .

A schoolgirl has become a drag queen at just 11 years old in an attempt to transform society's expectations of women into hyper-feminised looks for herself. British-born Bracken Hanke, who lives in Vancouver, Canada, has been dressing in elaborately colourful clothing and exaggerated makeup for two years. After watching TV hit, RuPaul's Drag Race with mum Dominque, 36, she was fascinated by the show's big outfits, larger than life personalities and says, 'I knew these were my people.'The family originally from Kinver, Staffordshire, have supported her decision to dress in drag, where she regularly undergoes a four-hour transformation into a 'hyper-queen' thanks to her eight wigs, ten outfits and enormous makeup collection. She practices applying her 'warpaint' up to twice a week as a way to live out some of her more extroverted personality traits. While in her costumes, she attracts stares in public, questions about her appearance and has experienced 'every kind of shocked face imaginable.'Bracken, who intends to continue drag into adulthood, said: 'For my drag, I take whatever society says, 'a girl should look like' and then take that to one hundred instead of 10 per cent.
'I like the different elements of each look I have made. Anytime that I stick sparkles, flowers, gems or whatever else to my face I love it.'I am a huge fan of books that have bright pink and baby blue because they are known as the gender colours, so if I put them together it makes me feel a bit more open to gender.'When I walk down the street wearing lipstick the reaction is funny, but when I'm in full drag people's facial expressions are hilarious.'They have wide eyes and look baffled, you can think of any kind of shocked face and I've probably seen it, it's kind of hilarious.
I do enjoy being the oddball, as far as I'm aware I'm the only drag kid in Vancouver, I'm the only one outwardly exposing myself as a drag kid anyway.'I'm an extrovert at school but I do find in drag I can let out all this energy inside of me and really go crazy with all of my personality traits that are a bit too much.'When I'm just regular Bracken I have this reputation that I have to keep and social life, so I can't be over the top with my friends otherwise no one would want to hang out with me.'But in drag, I can be wacky, funny, a bit of an oddball and throw out a bunch of personality traits that I keep inside while around friends.'I love being the weirdo, I'm the weirdo at school and at home, I'm an extrovert, I like turning heads and people wondering "what's up with that girl?"'
Mum Dominque says she was aware of her daughter's passion for equality from a young age. At around five-years-old, she cried watching Brazilian women on a beach exposing them bottoms, believing it to be 'for men' and not for women. Dominique said: 'We never spoke about the sexualisation of women or anything like that, it was something where she had these real ideas of equality at a young age.'Then she has always been into quirky clothes and dressing up to take a different spin on life.'She was not a typical little girl, always dressing up putting fun hats on and with me working in the fashion we always had an outlet for that.'
Bracken started drag two years ago, initially taking cues from other drag queens and the stars she worships on RuPaul's Drag Race, but now she's finding her own style. She said: 'I'm a hyper-queen, which means I take the elements of your average female and I enhance it, making it 1,000 per cent and a celebration of femininity. Dominique added: 'She loves sparkles, pink, makeup that verges on a Japanese style and she plays off the girly side that doesn't reflect in her personality normally.' She doesn't wear pink normally or her hair in pigtails, but in drag she hyper-feminises.' Make-up is seen as a war paint that you put on your face to express who you are and how you are feeling, she enjoys being able to express herself that way.' 
She takes what culture and society say she should present and multiples that by 100 and then add glitter to it.' Dominique supports her daughter's decision to dress in drag, believing the LGBTQ+ to be one of the safest places for a person to express themselves. Most recently while Bracken was in full drag attire during Pride parade this month, she was mobbed with fans who adored her look. Dominique said: 'I think it's amazing and a great thing, if she wanted to wear jeans and t-shirt I wouldn't stop that either, but she likes wearing different colours, sparkles and all of these fun things.' She has a big personality and has always liked fashion, we all express ourselves through our clothing, she wants to be quirky and out there.
' I think she is really happy and having fun while in drag, but there's nothing more to it, for her, it's a case of being able to come up with a more inventive and grand way of being.' Bracken says that away from strangers staring at her, friends are supportive and while not all of them understand it, they have not treated her differently. She added: 'It's one of those things that's weird and not normal.' Everyone love dance and gymnastics, everyone has a common thing they do, but for me, I go home from school and throw on makeup and a silly dress.' I don't necessarily have a drag persona, but I do feel more confident about myself when I'm in drag.' I do believe I will continue my drag career, this is one of my passions. Some things I have tried them and was good but then stopped. But with drag, I have enjoyed doing it for two years now.' When I'm myself, there's a specific person I have to be because I have my reputation. But in drag, I can whip anything out of my hat and can be the person I've always wanted to be.'
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