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Keep Your Pets Busy and Happy with BarxBuddy Busy? ?Ball

BarxBuddy Busy Ball
Get The Hands-Free Smart Ball Your Dog Will Love

The BarxBuddy Busy Ball is a modern?-day upgrade of every dog’s favorite toy?—a ball! This highly interactive “smart” ball uses built?-in motion sensors to roll and bounce entirely on its own as soon as it’s touched with a nose or paw. No apps or controls are required?—simply turn it on once and it's ready for? ?play!

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No hands, self-rolling, waterproof, tear-resistant, no toxins

Whether your dog suffers from separation anxiety, destructive behavior, or simply boredom when you’re not home to play, the BarxBuddy Busy Ball lives up to its name by keeping your pup curious, active, and “busy.” Simply place the ball on the ground and the intelligent motion automatically alternates between rolling and bouncing as soon as your pet touches? ?it!

With the BarxBuddy Busy Ball, you’ll never have to experience that sad look of separation your dog gives when you walk out the? ?door.

Try the Busy Ball today and say goodbye to your dog’s anxiety and your guilt for good! Give your pet an epic puppy playtime risk free for
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BarxBuddy Busy Ball
Get 55% Off BarxBuddy Busy Ball







 



























cas Longas from the French Department of Subaquatic Archaeological Research, headed by Michel L'Hour, discovered a life-sized marble bust of an apparently important Roman person in the Rhône near Arles, together with smaller statues of Marsyas in Hellenistic style and of the god Neptune from the third century AD. The larger bust was tentatively dated to 46 BC. Since the bust displayed several characteristics of an ageing person with wrinkles, deep naso-labial creases and hollows in his face, and since the archaeologists believed that Julius Caesar had founded the colony Colonia Iulia Paterna Arelate Sextanorum in 46 BC, the scientists came to the preliminary conclusion that the bust depicted a life-portrait of the Roman dictator: France's Minister of Culture Christine Albanel reported on May 13, 2008, that the bust would be the oldest representation of Caesar known today. The story was picked up by all larger media outlets. The realism of th e portrait was said to place it in the tradition of late Republican portrait and genre sculptures. The archaeologists further claimed that a bust of Julius Caesar might have been thrown away or discreetly disposed of, because Caesar's portraits could have been viewed as politically dangerous possessions after the dictator's assassination. Historians and archaeologists not affiliated with the French administration, among them Paul Zanker, the renowned archaeologist and expert on Caesar and Augustus, were quick to question whether the bust is a portrait of Caesar. Many noted the lack of resemblances to Caesar's likenesses issued on coins during the last years of the dictator's life, and to the Tusculum bust of Caesar, which depicts Julius Caesar in his lifetime, either as a so-called zeitgesicht or as a direct portrait. After a further stylistic assessment, Zanker dated the Arles-bust to the Augustan period. Elkins argued for the third century AD as the terminus post q uem for the deposition of the statues, refuting the claim that the bust was thrown away due to feared repercussions from Caesar's assassination in 44 BC. The main argument by the French archaeologists that Caesar had founded the colony in 46 BC proved to be incorrect, as the colony was founded by Caesar's former quaestor Tiberius Claudius Nero on the dictator's orders in his absence. Mary Beard has accused the persons involved in the find of having willfully invented their claims for pub