30 hours
58 minutes. For the first 57 minutes the goat climbs 171ft and slips back 114ft (total = 57ft) in the 58th minute he climbs the last 3ft to the top of the cliff.
12 days At the end of 10 days and nights the spider will have climbed 20 feet. On the eleventh day he climbs another 4 feet for a total of 24 feet and freedom.
11:40
28 days. 27th day = 27 ft. 27 + 3 = 30 ft. The Kangaroo reached the top.
It means two consecutive hours, as in back-to-back. For example: I slept for two straight hours from 2-4.
It takes 2 hours to get a frog to get out of well. The first hour it climbs to the top and slips back two feet, then next hour it climbs up 2 feet and out 1 foot so it can't slip back.
58 minutes. For the first 57 minutes the goat climbs 171ft and slips back 114ft (total = 57ft) in the 58th minute he climbs the last 3ft to the top of the cliff.
30 days The answer is 28 days. On the 27th day, the monkey has reached 27m. He then climbs 3m on the 28th day and reaches the top.
Well, its simple. It says every hour it climbs up 3 metres then down 2. So each hour it climbs up 1 metre and, then you would easliy find the answer: -It takes 30 hours for the frog to reach the top!!! Enjoy!!!
No. It continues spinning in the same direction.
12 days At the end of 10 days and nights the spider will have climbed 20 feet. On the eleventh day he climbs another 4 feet for a total of 24 feet and freedom.
Take out the 2 bolts on top of light assy and lift up and forward. There is a tab on the bottom that slips into a slot when you put it back in.
The raccoon climbs up a tree bout 15-20 feet then backtracks all the way down to the bottom. It then climbs up another tree. Then after it thinks that the coast is clear it comes back down. hope this helps:)
The raccoon climbs up a tree bout 15-20 feet then backtracks all the way down to the bottom. It then climbs up another tree. Then after it thinks that the coast is clear it comes back down. hope this helps:)
30 days
nothing... why would it?
Dissolving traps. When an insect flies inside a pitcher plant, the leaves don't close up immediately. Instead, it tumbles down the stem. At the bottom there is a seriously poisonous liquid called acid. The insect climbs up the stem, but slips down again. Eventually, they get so tired that they turn to unconsciousness and let themselves tumble back down into the stem, where they either drown or dissolve in the acid.