LARGEST LEOPARD IN CAPTIVITY
Guess who's sleepin n who's not.....
I Wonder how does the teacher remember their faces n names!!!
Saturday, April 28, 2007
Thursday, April 26, 2007
big crocodile
This picture was taken by a KTBS helicopter flying over Lake Conroe !
(For those of you who are not local, Lake Conroe is in Conroe , Texas )
That has to be a HUGE gator to have a whole deer in its mouth!
This alligator was found between Athens and Palestine , Texas near a house. How would you like to meet this fella in the dark? Never let it be said that we don't grow them big in Texas
Game wardens were forced to shoot the alligator- guess he wouldn't cooperate...
Anita and Charlie Rogers could hear the bellowing in the night.
Their neighbors had been telling them that they had seen a mammoth alligator in the waterway that runs behind their house, but they dismissed the stories as exaggerations. "I didn't believe it," Charles Rogers said. Friday they realized the stories were, if anything, understated. Texas Parks and Wildlife game wardens had to shoot the beast.
Joe Goff, 6'5" tall, a game warden with the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, walks past the 23'1" alligator that he shot and killed in the Rogers back yard.
(For those of you who are not local, Lake Conroe is in Conroe , Texas )
That has to be a HUGE gator to have a whole deer in its mouth!
This alligator was found between Athens and Palestine , Texas near a house. How would you like to meet this fella in the dark? Never let it be said that we don't grow them big in Texas
Game wardens were forced to shoot the alligator- guess he wouldn't cooperate...
Anita and Charlie Rogers could hear the bellowing in the night.
Their neighbors had been telling them that they had seen a mammoth alligator in the waterway that runs behind their house, but they dismissed the stories as exaggerations. "I didn't believe it," Charles Rogers said. Friday they realized the stories were, if anything, understated. Texas Parks and Wildlife game wardens had to shoot the beast.
Joe Goff, 6'5" tall, a game warden with the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, walks past the 23'1" alligator that he shot and killed in the Rogers back yard.
Labels:
crocodile
Wednesday, April 25, 2007
Strangest Vehicles
Dark Roasted Blend has a collection of the World�s Strangest Vehicles, inclding this three-wheeled high heel. There�s also a stretch Mini Cooper, which strikes me as an oxymoron.
Labels:
Vehicles
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
Belive or not
From mid day Mumbai todayLike you,
this man too, had a dream.
Like you, he too pushed his way into the crowded train
Like you, he too wanted to get going before he got delayed
Unlike you, he slipped and fell in the gap between the
train and the platform at Kandivli station.
And eight bogies went over him
Find out what happened to this man on.
The man obviously has a guardian angel and supportive bystanders who
told him exactly what he shouldn't do - move. And so, the man lay
absolutely still as eight bogies of the train passed over him -
centimeters from his head. Within seconds the 12-coach train passed and
the man clambered out, unaided, unhurt, but too shocked to speak to us
after his near-death experience.
this man too, had a dream.
Like you, he too pushed his way into the crowded train
Like you, he too wanted to get going before he got delayed
Unlike you, he slipped and fell in the gap between the
train and the platform at Kandivli station.
And eight bogies went over him
Find out what happened to this man on.
The man obviously has a guardian angel and supportive bystanders who
told him exactly what he shouldn't do - move. And so, the man lay
absolutely still as eight bogies of the train passed over him -
centimeters from his head. Within seconds the 12-coach train passed and
the man clambered out, unaided, unhurt, but too shocked to speak to us
after his near-death experience.
Labels:
train
Monday, April 23, 2007
Cheapest Dress
Karina from Virginia sent me some pictures of her art project. The project was called �Wearable Art�, and Karina made a dress out of ramen packets. It took 196 packets of ramen, and some chop-sticks to construct! No word on what grade Karina received, but it looks like �A� work to me.
I figure that a 10 cents per packet, and some free chopsticks with take-out chinese, you could make this dress for about $20. That�s not counting the �worth� you get from eating all the ramen.
Labels:
Dress
Saturday, April 21, 2007
Acrobatics performed by bears
The acrobatic show of two bears of the Jinan Zoo of Shandong Province was put on stage on April 17, 2007. The two of them will be providing a marvelous show to the visitors during the forthcoming May Day holiday.
Is the poor fella having problems pulling the car?
Labels:
Animal
Friday, April 20, 2007
Can you do this
Once when people were asked
IS IT POSSIBLE TO BITE YOUR NOSE?
Every body thought it was impossible.. ........
Until this guy came along, just watch how he makes the impossible possible...
IS IT POSSIBLE TO BITE YOUR NOSE?
Every body thought it was impossible.. ........
Until this guy came along, just watch how he makes the impossible possible...
Labels:
Amazing
Monday, April 16, 2007
Eternal embrace? Couple still hugging 5,000 years on
Archaeologists in Italy have discovered a couple buried 5,000 to 6,000 years ago, hugging each other. "It's an extraordinary case," said Elena Menotti, who led the team on their dig near the northern city of Mantova. "There has not been a double burial found in the Neolithic period, much less two people hugging -- and they really are hugging."
Menotti said she believed the two, almost certainly a man and a woman although that needs to be confirmed, died young because their teeth were mostly intact and not worn down.
Saturday, April 14, 2007
Boys will be contaminates
Story on SFGate: Boys Contaminate W.Va. Town With Mercury
So basically, some boys sneak into a dentist�s office and steal four pounds of mercury.
The moral of this article? An entire town is potentially contaminated by the brain-damaging substance that these boys, with their thievery, introduced, and the response is� �boys will be boys.�
�Hahaha, oh, that crazy little Billy and his endangerment of an entire town. That silly kid, but who can blame him? It was shiny and fun!�
Shiny and fun and incredibly toxic�that�s what being a little boy is all about.
Thursday, April 12, 2007
Sunday, April 8, 2007
Jeans made out of Sugar Cane
A Japanese company is making jeans out of a blend of sugar cane and
selvage denim. The cane used is Sweet Sorghum, otherwise known as Sweet
Millet. It�s a type of grass grown all over the world for making a
molasses-like syrup and animal feed. The Sugarcane jeans that feature
this fiber have a faint sweet smell and may have occasional woody tufts
poking out of the fabric! Some of the jeans are dyed with persimmon.
Labels:
Jeans
Saturday, April 7, 2007
Titanic DNA Watch Made From Actual Titanic Parts
Headline: Titanic DNA Watch Made From Actual Titanic Parts
Romain Jerome's Titanic DNA Watch doesn't just name itself after the movie�which we still refuse to see�it's made out of actual steel from the ship. Along with that, the watch face is painted black out of coal recovered from the wreck, and parts of it are made from platinum and other metals they could salvage.
We're guessing a watch made out of parts of a sunken ship won't be "affordable,"
Friday, April 6, 2007
World's Longest Dragon for Luoyang Peony Festival
Thursday, April 5, 2007
He is The World's Shortest Man?
Born on the 10th day of Chinese lunar month July in 1988, He Ping-ping (???) now is 19 years old but only measures 73 centimeters or 2.4 feet in height. Currently, he is applying for the Guinness World Record as the world's shortest man. He ranked the third in a family from Huade county, Ulanqab (????) in northern China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region (also the home to the world's tallest man, 2,36-meter Bao Xishun). According to his father He Yun, he was no larger than the size of an adult's palm at birth. Both of his two sisters are normal and now have married.
Last year, Guinness World Records dismissed an application of Nepal's 14-years-old Khagendra Thapa Magar (his height is mere 50 centimeters) to be the world's shortest man but promised to review the case once he grows to 18 years old.
Labels:
Shortest Man
Tuesday, April 3, 2007
Historical Myths
Many well-known historical "facts" are myths, with no basis in fact.This is because people always tend to exaggerate things, and always add something to spice up the story.Let's start with the following misconceptions...
Walt Disney drew Mickey Mouse
One of the world's most famous fictitious characters, Mickey Mouse, is credited to Walt Disney. However, Mickey was the vision of Disney's number one animator, Ub Iwerks. Disney, never a great artist, would always have trouble drawing the character who made him famous. Fortunately for him, Iwerks was known as the fastest animator in the business. He single-handedly animated Mickey's first short film, Plane Crazy (1928), in only two weeks. (That's 700 drawings a day.) But give some credit to Disney - when sound films began later that year, he played Mickey's voice.
Napoleon was a little corporal
Some people believe that Napoleon's domineering ambitions were to compensate for being so physically small. Not so. True, Napoleon was called Le Petit Corporal ("The Little Corporal"), but he was 5 feet, 7 inches tall - taller than the average eighteenth-century Frenchman. So why the nickname? Early in his military career, soldiers used it to mock his relatively low rank. The name stuck, even as he became ruler of France.
Edison invented the electric light
Thomas Edison is known as the world's greatest inventor. His record output - 1,093 patents - still amazes us, over a century later. Astonishing, except for one thing: he didn't invent most of them. Most Edison inventions were the work of his unsung technicians - and his most famous invention, the electric light, didn't even belong to his laboratory. Four decades before Edison was born, English scientist Sir Humphry Davy invented arc lighting (using a carbon filament). For many years, numerous innovators would improve on Davy's model. The only problem: none could glow for more than twelve hours before the filament broke. The achievement of Edison's lab was to find the right filament that would burn for days on end. A major achievement, but not the first.
Labels:
Historical Myths
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)