A 23-foot Giant Pacific Octopus named Baylee Monroe made her way 1398 miles West of her home where she was soon captured by fishermen in 1813 off the shore of the Atlantic Ocean. Baylee was soon thrown into captivity after the fishermen came to realize that the 23-foot octopus would be to much of a challenge to put down. She was shipped to the Baltimore Aquarium in exchange for $24,598. She was stationed there until April, 29th 1826, when she was transported to The Miami-Dade Aquarium, but shortly after was released back into the wild. After 176 years of Baylee being completely untracked and unmonitored, she was washed ashore 18 miles sound of Cocoa beach, Fl, in Melbourne Beach, Fl in 2002. Marine biologist studied the carcass through numerous autopsies. The cause of death was obviously, old age. The news of the octopus spread fast from local news stations, to statewide newspapers, to national news until everyone knew of and shared her stories of merciless adventure.
Baylee Monroe of the Atlantic Ocean found love in every single type of specie, gender, size, each and every creation of God on this beautiful green and blue Earth. This is our calling to do whatever it takes to make friends with all of our peers, and make everyone in our environment smile, just to smile. LOVEKEEPSTHEWORLDSPINNING
i know haha (: and ive been good how about yourself?! i seen you found a new person to work with [: thats good ! and i live in pennsylvania haha. its cold here :/ lol.