The Incredibles
Lunes, Agosto 6, 2012
Schooo Cuuuute: World’s Teeniest Revolver
This is the teeniest tiniest itty bitty baby revolver in the whole wide world. It’s 100% Swiss made and, while it’s completely functional, it’s harmless. A BB gun is at least 10 times more powerful than this little guy. Getting hit by a bullet (if you could even call one a bullet — it’s smaller than a raisin!) wouldn’t even inflict, like, a pin prick. It’d probably just bounce right off. But who knows? If this mini revolver eats his veggies and drinks all his milk, then maybe, juuuust maybe he could grow up to be a big boy gun. Just kidding this thing’s gonna stay teeny weeny and always be my little baby revolver. Forever and ever and ever.
Sabado, Agosto 4, 2012
Door to Hell
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Worlds Largest Cave
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Called Hang Son Doong (Mountain River Cave) it is believed to be almost twice the size of the current record holder. Son Doong has replaced the Deer cave in Malaysia to become the world’s largest cave.
Giant Hand In The Desert
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Biyernes, Agosto 3, 2012
The North Korean military parades
The North Korean military parades to celebrate the 63rd founding
anniversary of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea in Pyongyang on
Sept. 9. North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il and his son reviewed the
parade of military hardware and thousands of goose-stepping troops, in
what analysts saw as a bid to bolster loyalty to the regime.
Leopard, South Africa
A dew-bathed juvenile leopard takes a peaceful moment atop a fallen tree on a wintry South African morning. Compared with other African game, leopards are famously shy and rarely seen, partially because of their largely nocturnal hunting habits. Leopards number among many other species of top predators whose population numbers are falling due to human impacts, making this a special sighting of a rare animal that is both powerful and extraordinarily gorgeous.
Tree-mendous:
Tree-mendous: A money tree with copper and silver coins hammered into the wood near Ingleton, North Yorkshire
But it certainly appears to do so on the mysterious coin-studded trunks dotted around the UK's woodland.
The strange phenomenon of gnarled old trees with coins embedded all over their bark has been spotted on trails from the Peak District to the Scottish Highlands.
The coins are usually knocked into felled tree trunks using stones by passers-by, who hope it will bring them good fortune.
These fascinating spectacles often have coins from centuries ago buried deep in their bark and warped by the passage of time.
The tradition of making offerings to deities at wishing trees dates back hundreds of years, but this combination of the man-made and the natural is far more rare.
It used to be believed that divine spirits lived in trees, and they were often festooned with sweets and gifts - as is still done today at Christmas.
The act is reminiscent of tossing money into ponds for good luck, or the trend for couples to attach 'love padlocks' to bridges and fences to symbolise lasting romance.
Some pubs, such as the Punch Bowl in Askham, Cumbria, have old beams with splits in them into which coins are forced for luck.
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