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@hlonii_productions: Few weeks left 🔥ratla mo Wena sedi 🔥🙌🏾#📷hlonii_productions #umdlalowamanzi #umdlalowegidi🇿🇦🔥 #welovecabs #jfb738nw @Lesedi JFB 738
Hlonii_productions
Open In TikTok:
Region: ZA
Sunday 14 June 2026 09:04:01 GMT
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No Watermark .mp4 (
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Watermark .mp4 (
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Music .mp3
Comments
Chris OmvAt :
27th of history
2026-06-14 23:48:05
1
LFK 609 NW👸🏽 :
Hehe 😭😭😂😂izo dlala itv
2026-06-15 10:39:01
0
Sandile Mithani :
next of next week and can 555 end gp come fetch me because it's my favourite cab
2026-06-14 23:02:33
0
Lesedi JFB 738 :
🤝🫂🔥🙏🏽
2026-06-14 09:28:33
4
Andile :
I like your transport your transport is fresh🙌
2026-06-15 15:00:12
0
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Faltaba yo
em che ô cho anh anh mặc áo mưa cho em rồi hai ta cùng về...hạnh phúc không phải là ở bên nhau mọi lúc, mà là dù có ra sao vẫn chọn đồng hành cùng nhau #xuhuong #tinhyeu
In 1962, British newspaper editor Brendon Grimshaw purchased Moyenne Island, a tiny 9.9-hectare dot in the Seychelles, for just £8,000. At the time, the island had been abandoned for half a century, leaving it so densely overgrown with weeds and choked underbrush that falling coconuts literally never hit the ground. Alongside a local partner named René Antoine Lafortune, Grimshaw spent the next several decades clearing invasive brush by hand, constructing 5 kilometers of nature paths, and planting over 16,000 native trees, including mahogany, mango, and endemic palms. Their tireless efforts completely revived the local ecosystem. Native birds flocked back to the island, and Grimshaw successfully introduced and bred a thriving population of over 120 Aldabra giant tortoises, protecting them from regional extinction. As the Seychelles exploded into a luxury tourism hotspot, developers fiercely targeted Moyenne, offering Grimshaw up to $54 million to buy the property for a high-end resort. He steadfastly refused, famously asking investors where the birds would nest and where the tortoises would live. Instead of cashing out, Grimshaw worked with the Seychelles' Ministry of Environment to officially declare Moyenne Island a protected national park in 2009. Today, it stands as the smallest national park in the world, managed by a foundation that limits visitors to 50 at a time to honor Grimshaw’s lifelong vision of untouched tranquility. #DidYouKnow #facts #fyp
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