I try to imagine what would happen if a small sea creature with the capacity to kill 26 humans turned up on an Irish beach.
An oblivious Brit tourist unknowingly had a brush with death after handling one of the most venomous animals in the world in a holiday video filmed at the beach. Antiques Roadshow historian Andrew ...
British journalist Andy McConnell was enjoying a morning beach walk on Cebu Island in the Philippines when he came across a ...
Efforts to preserve and rebuild populations of the Crater Lake newt, a tiny, semi-aquatic sub-species of salamanders found ...
Celebrate New Year’s Eve on the Delaware River waterfront with Cherry Street Pier’s ticketed event from 5 to 7 p.m. For $27 per person, enjoy crafts, music and activities, a view of the waterfront’s ...
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Along the south coast of Cuba’s Isle of Youth lies a world with Cayman connections that feels almost forgotten.
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Blue ringed octopus

Georgia official responds to 315,000 ballots not properly signed in 2020 Heirs of late billionaire will pay $750 million in ...
What started as a curious moment on a beach in the Philippines has turned into a sharp warning for travellers about touching unfamiliar wildlife. A British tourist, Andy McConnell, filmed himself ...
A British man recorded himself handling a blue-ringed octopus - one of the most venomous animals on earth - while on holiday in the Philippines recently. Andy McConnell - who has been the glass expert ...
Blue-ringed octopus is considered the world's most dangerous octopus species Manila: A plucky British adventurer named Decanterman turned a sunny Philippine beach day into his personal ...
A British traveller's casual beach video in the Philippines turned into a stark warning after social media identified the "baby octopus" he handled as a deadly blue-ringed octopus. McConnell, unaware ...