@077_b5: #fyp

UZB
UZB
Open In TikTok:
Region: FR
Friday 10 July 2026 12:12:57 GMT
17958
514
28
266

Music

Download

Comments

bbbbb7333
bbbb733 :
Oka yozvorn manga iltmos
2026-07-10 21:11:30
1
szzznnnmmm
karis :
Ока бля
2026-07-10 17:14:17
4
islomxonn175
islomxonn7 :
blya
2026-07-11 10:30:49
0
sultanov_9999
s9 :
Черный юмор
2026-07-10 14:37:57
1
puni56031
Puni :
Прям так и сделаеш?
2026-07-10 21:37:00
1
kmal1bu17
078.BB :
💯💯💯
2026-07-11 06:14:05
1
To see more videos from user @077_b5, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

It’s the year 2100. The landscape of England has changed. Deciduous trees have died off in their millions, while drought and cold resistant pines have taken their place. Wildfires are common from May to October, while bitterly cold winters scour the country's remaining flora. Towns, cities, and villages have retrofitted their buildings. Window shutters have been installed on most homes. Awnings have become fashionable additions, while chimneys have been converted to house air conditioning units. Sea levels have risen, inundating low lying areas of England, including the Somerset Levels and the Fens. Those fortunate enough to have gardens sleep outside in tents during the hottest nights. For those displaced by rising seas and wildfires, camps have been established, particularly along the cooler coastlines. In London, the River Thames has widened and permanent floodgates now stand at the foot of Tower Bridge. Wildfires rage each summer across the city's parks and gardens. Kew Gardens, Hampstead Heath, and Alexandra Park burn year after year. Agriculture is now dominated by viticulture. Grapevines hardy to temperatures as low as -20°C have been developed and now reach as far north as Northumberland. Cereal products are rationed. Crops grown domestically rarely leave the country as nations stockpile their own resources. A 'cereal garden' won the Chelsea Flower Show in 2051, and novelty cereal varieties now sell for astronomical prices at garden centres. The fauna of the country is now predominantly non-native. Hedgehogs, badgers, blackbirds and puffins are extinct. Several native species of bee and butterfly survive only in the north. Species that were once migratory are now permanent residents, including the hoopoe and the Eurasian bee-eater. Wolves and lynx, reintroduced to an independent Scotland, have crossed the border into Cumbria. #climatechange #globalwarming #uk #future #architecture
It’s the year 2100. The landscape of England has changed. Deciduous trees have died off in their millions, while drought and cold resistant pines have taken their place. Wildfires are common from May to October, while bitterly cold winters scour the country's remaining flora. Towns, cities, and villages have retrofitted their buildings. Window shutters have been installed on most homes. Awnings have become fashionable additions, while chimneys have been converted to house air conditioning units. Sea levels have risen, inundating low lying areas of England, including the Somerset Levels and the Fens. Those fortunate enough to have gardens sleep outside in tents during the hottest nights. For those displaced by rising seas and wildfires, camps have been established, particularly along the cooler coastlines. In London, the River Thames has widened and permanent floodgates now stand at the foot of Tower Bridge. Wildfires rage each summer across the city's parks and gardens. Kew Gardens, Hampstead Heath, and Alexandra Park burn year after year. Agriculture is now dominated by viticulture. Grapevines hardy to temperatures as low as -20°C have been developed and now reach as far north as Northumberland. Cereal products are rationed. Crops grown domestically rarely leave the country as nations stockpile their own resources. A 'cereal garden' won the Chelsea Flower Show in 2051, and novelty cereal varieties now sell for astronomical prices at garden centres. The fauna of the country is now predominantly non-native. Hedgehogs, badgers, blackbirds and puffins are extinct. Several native species of bee and butterfly survive only in the north. Species that were once migratory are now permanent residents, including the hoopoe and the Eurasian bee-eater. Wolves and lynx, reintroduced to an independent Scotland, have crossed the border into Cumbria. #climatechange #globalwarming #uk #future #architecture

About