In a few days, a complimentary container of delicious, heart-healthy, grass-fed protein powder should be arriving on your doorstep.

Why?

Simple.

If you’re one of the first 250 people to confirm your shipping info on this page, we can get you a container of this protein (normally $50) for Free.

This is all because some friends of ours are celebrating a major milestone in their company’s history. They just sold their 2-millionth container of this grass-fed protein!

To celebrate (and to introduce it to people who’ve never tried it before), they’re giving tubs of it away through the rest of this month.

Click here to get yours now.

This tub of protein powder is 100% Free. No strings attached. No auto-ship, no future charges - nothing.

Click here to get your Free container.

This is the same exact protein our friend Damian has been buying over the last year or so. And it’s the same protein that’s helped him lose 120 pounds - and keep it off. This protein contains:

 

Has no soy or gluten, either.

And it tastes awesome!

To get your Free container (or to find out more about this incredible protein), click here now.

We only have authorization to give 250 of these protein containers away. And this email just went out to more than 114,989 of my readers.

Be sure to click here and get yours now before they’re all taken.

 
rsuit predation, predators chase fleeing prey. If the prey flees in a straight line, capture depends only on the predator's being faster than the prey. If the prey manoeuvres by turning as it flees, the predator must react in real time to calculate and follow a new intercept path, such as by parallel navigation, as it closes on the prey. Many pursuit predators use camouflage to approach the prey as close as possible unobserved (stalking) before starting the pursuit. Pursuit predators include terrestrial mammals such as humans, African wild dogs, spotted hyenas and wolves; marine predators such as dolphins, orcas and many predatory fishes, such as tuna; predatory birds (raptors) such as falcons; and insects such as dragonflies. An extreme form of pursuit is endurance or persistence hunting, in which the predator tires out the prey by following it over a long distance, sometimes for hours at a time. The method is used by human hunter-gatherers and by can ids such as African wild dogs and domestic hounds. The African wild dog is an extreme persistence predator, tiring out individual prey by following them for many miles at relatively low speed. A specialised form of pursuit predation is the lunge feeding of baleen whales. These very large marine predators feed on plankton, especially krill, diving and actively swimming into concentrations of plankton, and then taking a huge gulp of water and filterin