Animals don’t need to wear pants, but at the Kamine Zoo in Japan, they’ve helped MAKE jeans. The zookeepers wrapped big rubber tires up in blue denim, then let tigers, lions, and bears claw and chew at them. The zookeepers sewed the torn, shredded cloth into jeans. The claw marks make you look like you rolled around in the lion’s den yourself!
Lace up: If lions, tigers and bears worked on these jeans, how many types of animals helped?
Jog: If a tiger, 2 bears and 3 lions all helped shred the jeans, how many animals is that?
Sprint: If 2 tigers, 2 bears, and 2 lions each used only their 2 front paws to shred jeans, how many paws got into the act?
Hurdle: If you have 8-foot-long pieces of chewed-up denim, how many pieces would stretch 48 feet if laid end to end?
High Jump: If 1 tiger-torn pair cost 120,000 yen (Japanese money), and 1 yen equals about 1 US penny (1/100 of a dollar), for how much did those jeans sell in dollars?
Pole Vault: If people will buy a lion pair of jeans for $2,700, a bear pair for $3,600, and a tiger pair for a price exactly halfway between, how much does a tiger pair sell for?
Answers:
Lace up: 3 types of animals.
Jog: 6 animals.
Sprint: 12 paws.
Hurdle: 6 pieces.
High Jump: About $1200.
Pole Vault: For $3,150.