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  • July 26, 2018 - Idyllwild, California, U.S - The Cranston Fire continues to burn early into Thursday morning July 26, 2018 in Idyllwild California. The fire has grown to over 4,700 acres and is five percent contained. Over 3,000 people have been evacuated from 2,174 homes and five structures have been destroyed. (Credit Image: © Kevin Warn via ZUMA Wire)
    20180726_zap_w134_001.jpg
  • Members of the ground staff sweep a court on day eight of the Wimbledon Championships at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, Wimbledon. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Tuesday July 10, 2018. See PA story TENNIS Wimbledon. Photo credit should read: Nigel French/PA Wire. RESTRICTIONS: Editorial use only. No commercial use without prior written consent of the AELTC. Still image use only - no moving images to emulate broadcast. No superimposing or removal of sponsor/ad logos. Call +44 (0)1158 447447 for further information.
    37485289.jpg
  • July 7, 2018 - Forest Falls, California, U.S - A large wildfire broke out in Forest Falls off Highway 38 on Friday July 06, 2018. Extreme heat and winds helped spread the fire to over 1000 acres with 0% containment. The city of Forest Falls is under mandatory evacuation. (Credit Image: © Kevin Warn via ZUMA Wire)
    20180707_zap_w134_001.jpg
  • Members of the ground staff sweep a court on day eight of the Wimbledon Championships at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, Wimbledon. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Tuesday July 10, 2018. See PA story TENNIS Wimbledon. Photo credit should read: Nigel French/PA Wire. RESTRICTIONS: Editorial use only. No commercial use without prior written consent of the AELTC. Still image use only - no moving images to emulate broadcast. No superimposing or removal of sponsor/ad logos. Call +44 (0)1158 447447 for further information.
    37485283.jpg
  • Members of the ground staff sweep a court on day eight of the Wimbledon Championships at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, Wimbledon. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Tuesday July 10, 2018. See PA story TENNIS Wimbledon. Photo credit should read: Nigel French/PA Wire. RESTRICTIONS: Editorial use only. No commercial use without prior written consent of the AELTC. Still image use only - no moving images to emulate broadcast. No superimposing or removal of sponsor/ad logos. Call +44 (0)1158 447447 for further information.
    37484132.jpg
  • April 13, 2018 - Nadarzyn, Poland - Consumer Electronics Show started at PTAK Warsaw Expo center, presenting home appliances, shows and entertainment electronics. (Credit Image: © Madeleine Lenz/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20180413_zaa_p133_262.jpg
  • Ground staff sweep the court on day eight of the Wimbledon Championships at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, Wimbledon. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Tuesday July 10, 2018. See PA story TENNIS Wimbledon. Photo credit should read: Steven Paston/PA Wire. RESTRICTIONS: Editorial use only. No commercial use without prior written consent of the AELTC. Still image use only - no moving images to emulate broadcast. No superimposing or removal of sponsor/ad logos. Call +44 (0)1158 447447 for further information.
    37486578.jpg
  • Ground staff sweep the court on day eight of the Wimbledon Championships at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, Wimbledon. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Tuesday July 10, 2018. See PA story TENNIS Wimbledon. Photo credit should read: Steven Paston/PA Wire. RESTRICTIONS: Editorial use only. No commercial use without prior written consent of the AELTC. Still image use only - no moving images to emulate broadcast. No superimposing or removal of sponsor/ad logos. Call +44 (0)1158 447447 for further information.
    37486576.jpg
  • Ground staff sweep the court on day eight of the Wimbledon Championships at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, Wimbledon. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Tuesday July 10, 2018. See PA story TENNIS Wimbledon. Photo credit should read: Steven Paston/PA Wire. RESTRICTIONS: Editorial use only. No commercial use without prior written consent of the AELTC. Still image use only - no moving images to emulate broadcast. No superimposing or removal of sponsor/ad logos. Call +44 (0)1158 447447 for further information.
    37486000.jpg
  • Ground staff sweep the court on day eight of the Wimbledon Championships at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, Wimbledon. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Tuesday July 10, 2018. See PA story TENNIS Wimbledon. Photo credit should read: Steven Paston/PA Wire. RESTRICTIONS: Editorial use only. No commercial use without prior written consent of the AELTC. Still image use only - no moving images to emulate broadcast. No superimposing or removal of sponsor/ad logos. Call +44 (0)1158 447447 for further information.
    37485988.jpg
  • The latest candidate for celebrity portrait painter June Mendoza (l) at her studio in Inner Park Road, London, is York-born actress Judi Dench.
    PA-19532698.jpg
  • Bobby Charlton, Manchester United
    PA-306599.jpg
  • SYDNEY, Nov. 12, 2019  A firefighter washes a truck covered by pink fire extinguishing agent in South Turramurra, Sydney, Australia, Nov. 12, 2019. The Australian government has confirmed that it is considering an unprecedented compulsory callout of military reserves to fight bushfires on the nation's east coast. .   Linda Reynolds, the minister for defence, told Parliament on Tuesday afternoon that she is scoping the ''availability and readiness'' of army, navy and air force reserve forces. .Bushfires that have killed at least three people in northern New South Wales (NSW) were on Tuesday exacerbated by ''catastrophic'' conditions as winds strengthen. (Credit Image: © Bai Xuefei/Xinhua via ZUMA Wire)
    20191112_zaf_x99_114.jpg
  • December 4, 2019 - Australia - Bushfires in south and eastern Australian states started growing in number through October 2019, and have since sent smoke halfway around the world. As of early December, the fires continued to rage. The fires burned near the coast of New South Wales, near Canberra and areas north to the border with Queensland. According to the New South Wales Rural Fire Service, 116 bush and grass fires were actively burning around the time of this image; 60 of them were uncontained. (Credit Image: © NASA Earth/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20191204_sha_z03_032.jpg
  • NEW SOUTH WALES, Nov. 11, 2019  Firefighters battle the flames during bushfires near Taree, New South Wales, Australia, Nov. 11, 2019..   A devastating start to the Australian bushfire season has prompted a state of emergency in the eastern state of New South Wales (NSW), with the country's largest city, Sydney bracing for ''catastrophic'' fire danger. .   On Monday, a state of emergency was declared for NSW, with exceptionally hot and windy conditions predicted for Tuesday, threatening to create an even bigger fire disaster than that which left three people dead last week. (Credit Image: © Bai Xuefei/Xinhua via ZUMA Wire)
    20191111_zaf_x99_090.jpg
  • NEW SOUTH WALES, Nov. 11, 2019  A firefighter battles the flames during bushfires near Taree, New South Wales, Australia, Nov. 11, 2019..   A devastating start to the Australian bushfire season has prompted a state of emergency in the eastern state of New South Wales (NSW), with the country's largest city, Sydney bracing for ''catastrophic'' fire danger. .   On Monday, a state of emergency was declared for NSW, with exceptionally hot and windy conditions predicted for Tuesday, threatening to create an even bigger fire disaster than that which left three people dead last week. (Credit Image: © Bai Xuefei/Xinhua via ZUMA Wire)
    20191111_zaf_x99_086.jpg
  • NEW SOUTH WALES, Nov. 11, 2019  A firefighter battles the flames during bushfires near Taree, New South Wales, Australia, Nov. 11, 2019..   A devastating start to the Australian bushfire season has prompted a state of emergency in the eastern state of New South Wales (NSW), with the country's largest city, Sydney bracing for ''catastrophic'' fire danger. .   On Monday, a state of emergency was declared for NSW, with exceptionally hot and windy conditions predicted for Tuesday, threatening to create an even bigger fire disaster than that which left three people dead last week. (Credit Image: © Bai Xuefei/Xinhua via ZUMA Wire)
    20191111_zaf_x99_089.jpg
  • November 11, 2019 - Aerial photo shows burnt bushes near Port Macquarie, New South Wales, Australia. A devastating start to the Australian bushfire season has prompted a state of emergency in the eastern state of New South Wales (NSW), with the country's largest city, Sydney bracing for ''catastrophic'' fire danger. .   On Monday, a state of emergency was declared for NSW, with exceptionally hot and windy conditions predicted for Tuesday, threatening to create an even bigger fire disaster than that which left three people dead last week. (Credit Image: © Bai Xuefei/Xinhua via ZUMA Wire)
    20191111_zaf_x99_083.jpg
  • NEW SOUTH WALES, Nov. 11, 2019  A firefighter battles the flames during bushfires near Taree, New South Wales, Australia, Nov. 11, 2019..   A devastating start to the Australian bushfire season has prompted a state of emergency in the eastern state of New South Wales (NSW), with the country's largest city, Sydney bracing for ''catastrophic'' fire danger. .   On Monday, a state of emergency was declared for NSW, with exceptionally hot and windy conditions predicted for Tuesday, threatening to create an even bigger fire disaster than that which left three people dead last week. (Credit Image: © Bai Xuefei/Xinhua via ZUMA Wire)
    20191111_zaf_x99_085.jpg
  • NEW SOUTH WALES, Nov. 11, 2019  A white horse trots on the field where a farmhouse was burnt by bushfires near Port Macquarie, New South Wales, Australia, Nov. 11, 2019..   A devastating start to the Australian bushfire season has prompted a state of emergency in the eastern state of New South Wales (NSW), with the country's largest city, Sydney bracing for ''catastrophic'' fire danger. .   On Monday, a state of emergency was declared for NSW, with exceptionally hot and windy conditions predicted for Tuesday, threatening to create an even bigger fire disaster than that which left three people dead last week. (Credit Image: © Bai Xuefei/Xinhua via ZUMA Wire)
    20191111_zaf_x99_084.jpg
  • November 11, 2019, New South Wales, Australia: Firefighters take a break in smoke while battling bushfires near Taree, New South Wales. A devastating start to the Australian bushfire season has prompted a state of emergency in the eastern state of New South Wales (NSW), with the country's largest city, Sydney bracing for ''catastrophic'' fire danger. On Monday, a state of emergency was declared for NSW, with exceptionally hot and windy conditions predicted for Tuesday, threatening to create an even bigger fire disaster than that which left three people dead last week. (Credit Image: © Bai Xuefei/Xinhua via ZUMA Wire)
    20191111_zaf_x99_081.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Cape Point, South Africa (Credit Image: © Kristy-Anne Glubish/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_044.jpg
  • July 26, 2018 - Idyllwild, California, U.S - The Cranston Fire continues to burn early into Thursday morning July 26, 2018 in Idyllwild California. The fire has grown to over 4,700 acres and is five percent contained. Over 3,000 people have been evacuated from 2,174 homes and five structures have been destroyed. (Credit Image: © Kevin Warn via ZUMA Wire)
    20180726_zap_w134_004.jpg
  • July 26, 2018 - Idyllwild, California, U.S - The Cranston Fire continues to burn early into Thursday morning. The fire has grown to over 4,700 acres and is five percent contained. Over 3,000 people have been evacuated from 2,174 homes and five structures have been destroyed. (Credit Image: © Kevin Warn via ZUMA Wire)
    20180726_zap_w134_001.jpg
  • July 26, 2018 - Idyllwild, California, U.S - The Cranston Fire continues to burn early into Thursday morning. The fire has grown to over 4,700 acres and is five percent contained. Over 3,000 people have been evacuated from 2,174 homes and five structures have been destroyed. (Credit Image: © Kevin Warn via ZUMA Wire)
    20180726_zap_w134_005.jpg
  • July 26, 2018 - Idyllwild, California, U.S - The Cranston Fire continues to burn early into Thursday morning. The fire has grown to over 4,700 acres and is five percent contained. Over 3,000 people have been evacuated from 2,174 homes and five structures have been destroyed. (Credit Image: © Kevin Warn via ZUMA Wire)
    20180726_zap_w134_007.jpg
  • July 26, 2018 - Idyllwild, California, U.S - The Cranston Fire continues to burn early into Thursday morning July 26, 2018 in Idyllwild California. The fire has grown to over 4,700 acres and is five percent contained. Over 3,000 people have been evacuated from 2,174 homes and five structures have been destroyed. (Credit Image: © Kevin Warn via ZUMA Wire)
    20180726_zap_w134_011.jpg
  • July 26, 2018 - Idyllwild, California, U.S - The Cranston Fire continues to burn early into Thursday morning July 26, 2018 in Idyllwild California. The fire has grown to over 4,700 acres and is five percent contained. Over 3,000 people have been evacuated from 2,174 homes and five structures have been destroyed. (Credit Image: © Kevin Warn via ZUMA Wire)
    20180726_zap_w134_008.jpg
  • Grounds staff on court one on day eight of the Wimbledon Championships at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, Wimbledon. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Tuesday July 10, 2018. See PA story TENNIS Wimbledon. Photo credit should read: Nigel French/PA Wire. RESTRICTIONS: Editorial use only. No commercial use without prior written consent of the AELTC. Still image use only - no moving images to emulate broadcast. No superimposing or removal of sponsor/ad logos. Call +44 (0)1158 447447 for further information.
    37483992.jpg
  • September 1, 2017 - Los Angeles, California, United States - Firefighters at the staging area of the La Tuna Canyon fire in Los Angeles, California on September 1, 2017. (for editorial use only) (Credit Image: © Ronen Tivony/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20170901_zaa_n230_880.jpg
  • May 28, 2017 - Los Angeles, California, United States - Firefighters battle a wildfire in Mandeville Canyon in Los Angeles, California on May 28, 2017. More than 150 firefighters battle the fire that burns near multi-million dollar homes in the Brentwood neighborhood. (Credit Image: © Ronen Tivony/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20170528_zaa_n230_675.jpg
  • June 28, 2017 - Los Angeles, California, U.S - Firefighters try to extinguish the remaining hot spots from a brush fire in Burbank, California, June 28, 2017. A brush fire broke out on a hillside in Burbank, prompting mandatory evacuations as the flames burned near homes. (Credit Image: © Ringo Chiu via ZUMA Wire)
    20170628_zaf_c68_002.jpg
  • Angelina Jolie attending the 18th Annual Screen Actors Guild (SAG) Awards held at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, CA on January 29, 2012. Photo by Lionel Hahn/ABACAPRESS.COM
    306370_127.jpg
  • Angelina Jolie attending the 18th Annual Screen Actors Guild (SAG) Awards held at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, CA on January 29, 2012. Photo by Lionel Hahn/ABACAPRESS.COM
    306370_127.jpg
  • Angelina Jolie attending the 18th Annual Screen Actors Guild (SAG) Awards held at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, CA on January 29, 2012. Photo by Lionel Hahn/ABACAPRESS.COM
    306370_127.jpg
  • Kendall Jenner is seen backstage before the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show at Lexington Avenue Armory in New York City, NY, USA, on November 10, 2015. Photo by Dennis van Tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
    523440_004.jpg
  • Kendall Jenner is seen backstage before the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show at Lexington Avenue Armory in New York City, NY, USA, on November 10, 2015. Photo by Dennis van Tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
    523440_002.jpg
  • July 6, 2018 - Alpine, California, U.S. - Firefighters wait for water as they battle flames at the Alpine Oaks Estates mobile home park on Friday during a fire in Alpine amid a dangerous heat wave. A fast-moving brush fire in Alpine burned 400 acres, destroyed several structures and prompted evacuations. (Credit Image: © Eduardo Contreras/San Diego Union-Tribune via ZUMA Wire)
    20180706_zaf_s44_017.jpg
  • February 5, 2018 - Taiyuan, Shanxi, China - Hundreds of cute kids write brush calligraphy spring festival scrolls to welcome the tradtional Chinese New Year in Taiyuan, Shanxi, China on 05th February 2018. (Credit Image: © TPG via ZUMA Press)
    20180205_zaa_t49_003.jpg
  • October 9, 2017 - Anaheim, California, U.S. - Fire fighters work to extinguish a fire on Via El Estribo during the Canyon Two Fire. A fast-moving brush fire has burned at least 2,000 acres, prompting evacuations of about 1,000 homes, damaging at least six of them, and sending large plumes of smoke over the city. The nearby eastbound 91 freeway is closed at Imperial Highway. (Credit Image: © Jeff Gritchen/The Orange County Register via ZUMA Wire)
    20171009_zan_o44_004.jpg
  • Oct. 3, 2017  - Hong Kong, China - A staff member poses with a rare Ru Guanyao brush washer after it sold for $37.7 million during an auction in Hong Kong. (Credit Image: © Wang Shen/Xinhua via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20171003_zaf_x99_140.jpg
  • October 17, 2018 - Johnson Valley, California, U.S. - PENNY DALE, left, and THAYER COOK of Team Anam Cara take a lighthearted approach to being lost on Day 5 of the third annual Rebelle Rally, the first women's off-road navigation rally in the United States. The event features a unique scoring system in which precise navigation - not speed - is the ultimate goal.  With cell phones and GPS devices banned during the 10-day event, and armed with just maps, compasses and road books, 43 two-person teams are tasked with scoring points based on time, distance and hidden checkpoints as they make their way across 1,600 miles of scrub brush, sand dunes and boulders in the Nevada and California desert. (Credit Image: © Brian Cahn/ZUMA Wire)
    20181017_zaf_ce6_004.jpg
  • August 16, 2018 - Detroit, Michigan, U.S. - MONTEZ MILLER looks up at balloons she placed on Aretha Franklin Way at Brush and Madison streets in downtown Detroit in honor of Aretha Franklin, the Queen of Soul, who died today. (Credit Image: © Detroit Free Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20180816_zaf_f31_004.jpg
  • July 6, 2018 - Lakeside, California, U.S. - Two people, who declined to give their names, unload horses evacuated from the West fire in Alpine as smoke from a small fire west of them rises in the background at the Lakeside Rodeo in Lakeside on Friday. A fast-moving brush fire in Alpine burned 400 acres and destroyed several structures prompting the evacuation of most of the foothill community. (Credit Image: © Hayne Palmour Iv/San Diego Union-Tribune via ZUMA Wire)
    20180706_zaf_s44_010.jpg
  • July 6, 2018 - Alpine, California, U.S. - FRED BEGLEY makes a phone call as his home burns in the background at the corner of Pine View Road and Olive View Road on Friday during a fire in Alpine amid a dangerous heat wave. A fast-moving brush fire in Alpine burned 400 acres, destroyed several structures and prompted evacuations. (Credit Image: © Eduardo Contreras/San Diego Union-Tribune via ZUMA Wire)
    20180706_zaf_s44_022.jpg
  • July 6, 2018 - Alpine, California, U.S. - A home burns near Olive View Road on Friday during a fire in Alpine amid a dangerous heat wave. A fast-moving brush fire in Alpine burned 400 acres, destroyed several structures and prompted evacuations. (Credit Image: © Eduardo Contreras/San Diego Union-Tribune via ZUMA Wire)
    20180706_zaf_s44_020.jpg
  • July 6, 2018 - Alpine, California, U.S. - A firefighter approaches a burning home along Olive View Road on Friday during a fire in Alpine amid a dangerous heat wave. A fast-moving brush fire in Alpine burned 400 acres, destroyed several structures and prompted evacuations. (Credit Image: © Eduardo Contreras/San Diego Union-Tribune via ZUMA Wire)
    20180706_zaf_s44_023.jpg
  • Oct. 3, 2017  - Hong Kong, China - A staff member poses with a rare Ru Guanyao brush washer after it sold for $37.7 million during an auction in Hong Kong. (Credit Image: © Wang Shen/Xinhua via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20171003_zaf_x99_139.jpg
  • September 2, 2017 - Burbank, California, U.S. - Aaron Funk waters down the hillside behind his parents' home as a plane makes a drop near Petaluma Dr. in Sun Valley. A raging brush fire in the Verdugo Mountains that began Friday afternoon has consumed over 5,000 acres and destroyed three structures as it continues to threaten homes in Burbank and Glendale Saturday evening. (Credit Image: © Paul Rodriguez/The Orange County Register via ZUMA Wire)
    20170902_zan_o44_040.jpg
  • St Marks church Englefield gets its last brush up prior to pippa middleton and james matthews wedding on saturday<br />
<br />
18 May 2017.<br />
<br />
Please byline: Vantagenews.com
    VN_St_Marks_preparati_734-1.jpg
  • St Marks church Englefield gets its last brush up prior to pippa middleton and james matthews wedding on saturday<br />
<br />
18 May 2017.<br />
<br />
Please byline: Vantagenews.com
    VN_St_Marks_preparati_73472.jpg
  • October 17, 2018 - Johnson Valley, California, U.S. -  Tire tracks in a sand dune on the course on Day 5 of the third annual Rebelle Rally, the first women's off-road navigation rally in the United States. The event features a unique scoring system in which precise navigation - not speed - is the ultimate goal.  With cell phones and GPS devices banned during the 10-day event, and armed with just maps, compasses and roadbooks, 43 two-person teams are tasked with scoring points based on time, distance and hidden checkpoints as they make their way across 1,600 miles of scrub brush, sand dunes and boulders in the Nevada and California desert.(Credit Image: © Brian Cahn/ZUMA Wire)
    20181017_zaf_ce6_012.jpg
  • October 17, 2018 - Johnson Valley, California, U.S. - Team Hoehn Porsche navigates the course on Day 5 of the third annual Rebelle Rally, the first women's off-road navigation rally in the United States. The event features a unique scoring system in which precise navigation - not speed - is the ultimate goal.  With cell phones and GPS devices banned during the 10-day event, and armed with just maps, compasses and roadbooks, 43 two-person teams are tasked with scoring points based on time, distance and hidden checkpoints as they make their way across 1,600 miles of scrub brush, sand dunes and boulders in the Nevada and California desert.(Credit Image: © Brian Cahn/ZUMA Wire)
    20181017_zaf_ce6_010.jpg
  • May 24, 2019 - Elkton, OREGON, U.S - A days old black tailed deer fawn lies motionless in an orchard on a farm near Elkton in rural western Oregon. The fawn is probably not lost. According to the National Wildlife Federation, in most cases, female deer hide their newborn fawns in tall grass or brush and move some distance away to feed to avoid drawing predators to their offspring. (Credit Image: © Robin Loznak/ZUMA Wire)
    20190524_zaf_l31_004.jpg
  • October 17, 2018 - Johnson Valley, California, U.S. - KYOUKA, left, and ASHLEY LEE of Team Sexy Jeep plot their navigation on Day 5 of the third annual Rebelle Rally, the first women's off-road navigation rally in the United States. The event features a unique scoring system in which precise navigation - not speed - is the ultimate goal.  With cell phones and GPS devices banned during the 10-day event, and armed with just maps, compasses and roadbooks, 43 two-person teams are tasked with scoring points based on time, distance and hidden checkpoints as they make their way across 1,600 miles of scrub brush, sand dunes and boulders in the Nevada and California desert.(Credit Image: © Brian Cahn/ZUMA Wire)
    20181017_zaf_ce6_015.jpg
  • October 17, 2018 - Johnson Valley, California, U.S. - MARIA GUITAR of Team Ridgeline Rebels takes a reading on the course on Day 5 of the third annual Rebelle Rally, the first women's off-road navigation rally in the United States. The event features a unique scoring system in which precise navigation - not speed - is the ultimate goal.  With cell phones and GPS devices banned during the 10-day event, and armed with just maps, compasses and roadbooks, 43 two-person teams are tasked with scoring points based on time, distance and hidden checkpoints as they make their way across 1,600 miles of scrub brush, sand dunes and boulders in the Nevada and California desert.(Credit Image: © Brian Cahn/ZUMA Wire)
    20181017_zaf_ce6_014.jpg
  • October 17, 2018 - Johnson Valley, California, U.S. - A vehicle on the course on Day 5 of the third annual Rebelle Rally, the first women's off-road navigation rally in the United States. The event features a unique scoring system in which precise navigation - not speed - is the ultimate goal.  With cell phones and GPS devices banned during the 10-day event, and armed with just maps, compasses and roadbooks, 43 two-person teams are tasked with scoring points based on time, distance and hidden checkpoints as they make their way across 1,600 miles of scrub brush, sand dunes and boulders in the Nevada and California desert.(Credit Image: © Brian Cahn/ZUMA Wire)
    20181017_zaf_ce6_013.jpg
  • October 17, 2018 - Johnson Valley, California, U.S. - Team Hoehn Porsche navigates the course on Day 5 of the third annual Rebelle Rally, the first women's off-road navigation rally in the United States. The event features a unique scoring system in which precise navigation - not speed - is the ultimate goal.  With cell phones and GPS devices banned during the 10-day event, and armed with just maps, compasses and roadbooks, 43 two-person teams are tasked with scoring points based on time, distance and hidden checkpoints as they make their way across 1,600 miles of scrub brush, sand dunes and boulders in the Nevada and California desert.(Credit Image: © Brian Cahn/ZUMA Wire)
    20181017_zaf_ce6_011.jpg
  • October 17, 2018 - Johnson Valley, California, U.S. - EMILY WINSLOW, left, and ALICIA FARRAR of Team Naviguessers on Day 5 of the third annual Rebelle Rally, the first women's off-road navigation rally in the United States. The event features a unique scoring system in which precise navigation - not speed - is the ultimate goal.  With cell phones and GPS devices banned during the 10-day event, and armed with just maps, compasses and roadbooks, 43 two-person teams are tasked with scoring points based on time, distance and hidden checkpoints as they make their way across 1,600 miles of scrub brush, sand dunes and boulders in the Nevada and California desert.(Credit Image: © Brian Cahn/ZUMA Wire)
    20181017_zaf_ce6_009.jpg
  • October 17, 2018 - Johnson Valley, California, U.S. - EMILY WINSLOW, left, and ALICIA FARRAR of Team Naviguessers on Day 5 of the third annual Rebelle Rally, the first women's off-road navigation rally in the United States. The event features a unique scoring system in which precise navigation - not speed - is the ultimate goal.  With cell phones and GPS devices banned during the 10-day event, and armed with just maps, compasses and roadbooks, 43 two-person teams are tasked with scoring points based on time, distance and hidden checkpoints as they make their way across 1,600 miles of scrub brush, sand dunes and boulders in the Nevada and California desert.(Credit Image: © Brian Cahn/ZUMA Wire)
    20181017_zaf_ce6_008.jpg
  • October 17, 2018 - Johnson Valley, California, U.S. - WENDY FISHER, left, and BROOKE JACKSON plot their course on Day 5 of the third annual Rebelle Rally, the first women's off-road navigation rally in the United States. The event features a unique scoring system in which precise navigation - not speed - is the ultimate goal.  With cell phones and GPS devices banned during the 10-day event, and armed with just maps, compasses and roadbooks, 43 two-person teams are tasked with scoring points based on time, distance and hidden checkpoints as they make their way across 1,600 miles of scrub brush, sand dunes and boulders in the Nevada and California desert.(Credit Image: © Brian Cahn/ZUMA Wire)
    20181017_zaf_ce6_006.jpg
  • October 17, 2018 - Johnson Valley, California, U.S. - PENNY DALE, left, and THAYER COOK of Team Anam Cara take a lighthearted approach to being lost on Day 5 of the third annual Rebelle Rally, the first women's off-road navigation rally in the United States. The event features a unique scoring system in which precise navigation - not speed - is the ultimate goal.  With cell phones and GPS devices banned during the 10-day event, and armed with just maps, compasses and roadbooks, 43 two-person teams are tasked with scoring points based on time, distance and hidden checkpoints as they make their way across 1,600 miles of scrub brush, sand dunes and boulders in the Nevada and California desert.(Credit Image: © Brian Cahn/ZUMA Wire)
    20181017_zaf_ce6_004.jpg
  • October 17, 2018 - Johnson Valley, California, U.S. - WENDY FISHER, right, and BROOKE JACKSON plot their course on Day 5 of the third annual Rebelle Rally, the first women's off-road navigation rally in the United States. The event features a unique scoring system in which precise navigation - not speed - is the ultimate goal.  With cell phones and GPS devices banned during the 10-day event, and armed with just maps, compasses and roadbooks, 43 two-person teams are tasked with scoring points based on time, distance and hidden checkpoints as they make their way across 1,600 miles of scrub brush, sand dunes and boulders in the Nevada and California desert.(Credit Image: © Brian Cahn/ZUMA Wire)
    20181017_zaf_ce6_005.jpg
  • October 17, 2018 - Johnson Valley, California, U.S. - EMILY WINSLOW, left, and ALICIA FARRAR of Team Naviguessers on Day 5 of the third annual Rebelle Rally, the first women's off-road navigation rally in the United States. The event features a unique scoring system in which precise navigation - not speed - is the ultimate goal.  With cell phones and GPS devices banned during the 10-day event, and armed with just maps, compasses and roadbooks, 43 two-person teams are tasked with scoring points based on time, distance and hidden checkpoints as they make their way across 1,600 miles of scrub brush, sand dunes and boulders in the Nevada and California desert.(Credit Image: © Brian Cahn/ZUMA Wire)
    20181017_zaf_ce6_002.jpg
  • October 17, 2018 - Johnson Valley, California, U.S. - EMILY WINSLOW, left, and ALICIA FARRAR of Team Naviguessers on Day 5 of the third annual Rebelle Rally, the first women's off-road navigation rally in the United States. The event features a unique scoring system in which precise navigation - not speed - is the ultimate goal.  With cell phones and GPS devices banned during the 10-day event, and armed with just maps, compasses and roadbooks, 43 two-person teams are tasked with scoring points based on time, distance and hidden checkpoints as they make their way across 1,600 miles of scrub brush, sand dunes and boulders in the Nevada and California desert.(Credit Image: © Brian Cahn/ZUMA Wire)
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  • Resident Tim Harper clears brush to get to his car in the Dommerich Estates neighborhood in Maitland FL, USA on Monday, September 11, 2017, after Hurricane Irma passed through central Florida Sunday night. Photo by Joe Burbank/Orlando Sentinel/TNS/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • June 26, 2017 - Elkton, OREGON, U.S - A wild bobcat walks through brush on a hillside near Elkton in rural southwestern Oregon. Estimates from the US Fish and Wildlife Service place bobcat numbers between 700,000 and 1,500,000 in the US. (Credit Image: © Robin Loznak via ZUMA Wire)
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  • April 4, 2017 - inconnu - Here’s a pregnant singer Beyoncé looking more mouthwatering than usual – carved entirely out of CHEESE !.British sculptor David Bradley chiseled her in cheddar cheese to re-create the infamous photo released by Beyoncé to announce her 2017 pregnancy.Bradley worked with food artists The Robin Collective to create it for the E20 Cheese Carving Championships In London.He and a team spent a total of 28 hours turning 20kg of mild cheddar into a lookalike of the Pop queen using just a knife, paint brush and a magnifying glass .Carving was part of the East Village Cheese and Wine Festival held on April 1st and 2nd in the UK capital April showcasing the very best artisan cheese and wine from over 25 independent retailers. # SCULPTURE DE BEYONCE EN FROMAGE (Credit Image: © Visual via ZUMA Press)
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  • October 17, 2018 - Johnson Valley, California, U.S. - Vehicles on the course on Day 5 of the third annual Rebelle Rally, the first women's off-road navigation rally in the United States. The event features a unique scoring system in which precise navigation - not speed - is the ultimate goal.  With cell phones and GPS devices banned during the 10-day event, and armed with just maps, compasses and roadbooks, 43 two-person teams are tasked with scoring points based on time, distance and hidden checkpoints as they make their way across 1,600 miles of scrub brush, sand dunes and boulders in the Nevada and California desert.(Credit Image: © Brian Cahn/ZUMA Wire)
    20181017_zaf_ce6_007.jpg
  • October 17, 2018 - Johnson Valley, California, U.S. - PENNY DALE, left, and THAYER COOK of Team Anam Cara take a lighthearted approach to being lost on Day 5 of the third annual Rebelle Rally, the first women's off-road navigation rally in the United States. The event features a unique scoring system in which precise navigation - not speed - is the ultimate goal.  With cell phones and GPS devices banned during the 10-day event, and armed with just maps, compasses and roadbooks, 43 two-person teams are tasked with scoring points based on time, distance and hidden checkpoints as they make their way across 1,600 miles of scrub brush, sand dunes and boulders in the Nevada and California desert.(Credit Image: © Brian Cahn/ZUMA Wire)
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  • The Granite Mountain Hotshots clear brush around the alligator Juniper tree to save it in Columbia Pictures' ONLY THE BRAVE.
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  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
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  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
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  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_054.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
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  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
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  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
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  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
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  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
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  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
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  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
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  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
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  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
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  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
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  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_061.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_058.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_060.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_063.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_064.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_065.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_070.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_067.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_069.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_068.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_066.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_071.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_072.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_074.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_076.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A SUPERMUM with 16 children has revealed: “Our Covid-19 quarantine has been tough.” Doris Phillips, 38, and her disabled veteran husband William, 42, have been hailed as modern-day miracle workers after raising their giant brood on a shoestring budget. But with coronavirus ravaging communities, the family have been holed up together around-the-clock and unable to leave their four bedroom home which doesn’t even have a yard or garden. The only time tireless Doris has left their home in Indianapolis, Indiana is to embark on $1,000 a time trips to Costco where she stocks up on essentials for their children Jason, 19, Nicole, 18, Sophia, 6, Zander, 13, Sage, 12, Lance, 11, Kristella, 10, Giscella,9, Liezella, 6, Adeiric, 7, William, 7, Asreella, 5, Adderin, 4, Aleric, 3, Viella, 1, and Abella, seven months. “The virus has forced my family to change our routine which has at times been completely crazy,’ said Doris. “When lockdown first happened it was chaos because the schools suddenly closed and we were trying to do home schooling. The kids are up at 7am and when they had no school to go to they were running around like wild little deers. “The only break I have is when I am wheeling two shopping carts around the supermarket and getting food for the family – and even then people are giving me funny looks because they think I am hoarding. If only they knew how many children I have.” Before quarantine Doris and William were previously spending at least 15 hours a day caring for their litter and exact military precision to master family meals, schoolwork, endless hospital visits, bath times and family outings. But that routine ended in mid-March when states forced families to isolate. “They are up at 7am and if you don’t get into the bathroom earlier and brush your teeth you’ll never get in there. Our day starts early and ends usually at midnight. “We’ve been trying to keep them busy with home schooling and various projects including m
    MEGA663111_077.jpg
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