As the coronavirus pandemic has altered many of our lives greatly, ushering us indoors to spend more time in our own homes and eschewing hobbies that have been rendered impossible by social distancing, we've had to come up with new ways to keep ourselves entertained.
Yes, with each and every Netflix category practically learned by heart and countless sourdough loaves littering our kitchens, seeking out new hobbies that are practicable during the coronavirus pandemic has become the order of the day.
In the spirit of such things, a trend has emerged on social media that involves animals posing ocular conundrums by way of sneaky hiding places, ingenious camouflage, or cleverly taken pictures by their owners.
For instance, Kate Hinds, a newsroom planning editor at a US radio station, who tweeted out a picture of her beautiful bookshelf along with the caption "Today in find the cat".
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And now, a wonderful photograph of two zebra standing in tandem has gone viral on Twitter as users try to ascertain which one is standing in front of the other.
"Let’s see who can tell which Zebra is in front. Clicked & asked by friend @saroshlodhi." The picture is captioned.
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One Twitter user provided a pretty persuasive argument that the answer is the zebra on the left. They wrote, "The left one, going by the folds on his neck (probably because his head is tilted to his right). The right one doesn't have folds on the neck indicating his face is hid straight behind the left zebra's face."
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"Easy. It's the one that's black with white stripes and not the one that's white with black stripes." Another humorously commented.
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"Okey this is like illusion...but look like edited..so no zebra in in front I think," added a third.
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Sarosh Lodhi, who took the picture, told Insider the story behind the incredible snap.
"I was clicking a dazzle of zebras in Maasai Mara, trying out various creative images," he said. "That's when I saw these two approaching each other. Expecting some interaction or nuzzling between the two, I kept my focus glued on to this pair. They kept coming closer and closer and to my utter amusement they reached an alignment that caused a total illusion."
And per Insider, if you guessed that the zebra on the left is actually in front then you're correct. Londhi confirmed that the zebra on the left hand side is the one looking at the camera.