Pages

Monday, June 20, 2011

Trees eat....things


Beware of the terrifying trees whose bite is worse than their bark

Last updated at 3:40 PM on 20th June 2011
    You would expect trees to be all bark and no bite but these images show that many have a huge appetite for chewing on everyday objects.
Whether it be motorbikes, cycles, cars, warning signs, fences or even a gravestone, this forest of photos show that they will consume anything in their path.
Although the majority were taken in America, there are several taken at spots elsewhere in the world, including a hungry British tree devouring a central London red post box that was placed too close to its trunk.
Yummy: A British plane tree is slowly eating a post box in West Kensington, London
Yummy: A British plane tree is slowly eating a post box in West Kensington, London
Starving: An American tree has eaten this bike over the course of several decades
Starving: An American tree has eaten this bike over the course of several decades
Many of these incredible pictures show how powerful trees simply grow around objects left in their path, no matter how large or small.
Road kill: Slowly but surely this tree is growing around this safety barrier
Road kill: Slowly but surely this tree is growing around this safety barrier
Twisted metal: As signs have been attached to this tree they have slowly but surely been absorbed into its trunk
Twisted metal: As signs have been attached to this tree they have slowly but surely been absorbed into its trunk
Bumper mealCrash diet: This motorbike is eaten by tree
Crash diet: These trees have grabbed by the handlebars and bumper as they have grown around this motorbike and car
The images have become an internet sensation with many logging on to hungrytrees.com to look at them or add their own photos of famished ferns, starving spruces or ravenous rosewoods.
Incredibly, to get to this stage, the trees have usually been slowly eating these items over the course of 30 years.
Gravely hungry: This 18th century headstone has become part of the trunk of this ravenous tree
Gravely hungry: This 18th century headstone has become part of the trunk of this ravenous tree
This fence has become part of the treePipe being eaten by tree
Big dinner: These powerful trees have managed to swallow a pipe and a fence


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2005762/Bark-n-bite-The-hungry-trees-devour-everyday-objects.html#ixzz1PqlUUrvO

Fiat 500 set to become hit....

Reviewing the Fiat 500

In Sunday’s Automobiles section, Jerry Garrett reviews the Fiat 500, the first new model from the Italian brand to make American landfall in 25 years. Whereas Fiats exported to the United States in the ’70s and ’80s would sooner spend time in the shop than accelerating through the apex of a mountain curve, the 500 felt light and sporting in Mr. Garrett’s hands:
With the manual gearbox, the 500 can be a devilish little treat to drive: spunky, spirited and sporty. It was a hoot in town as I sawed through the gears, zipping in and out of traffic and happily tooting the horn, usually in response to admirers. The driving experience was enhanced by comfortable seating, good visibility, a thick-rimmed steering wheel and an armrest not found in European models.

Skinny-dipping sets new record....

Backside the 

seaside...

Freeze a jolly cold fella ... bathers go for world skinny-dipping record
Freeze a jolly cold fella ... bathers go for world skinny-dipping record
Wales News Service

HOW'S this for a bums rush - as seaside bathers in wet and windy Wales yesterday flock to set a world SKINNY-DIPPING record.

Four hundred stripped off and plunged shrieking into the freezing waves.
They had to remain waist-deep for ten teeth-chattering minutes to break the previous Guinness Book record of 250.
Lizzy White, 25 - who jetted from Australia to take part - insisted after the 8am stunt at secluded Rhossili Beach in Gower, South Wales: "It was exhilarating."
But nude bathing fan Sue Jones, 39, of Carmarthen, said: "I've skinny-dipped in Greece and Spain. This was the first time in Wales - and the last."

Read more: http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/3647010/Swimmers-in-Wales-flock-to-set-a-world-skinny-dipping-record.html#ixzz1Pouaxsgh

So you think you can dance? Young boy shows amazing skills...


So you think you can dance? Young boy shows amazing skills on Xbox Kinect game as he wows watching shoppers 

Last updated at 11:13 AM on 20th June 2011
    And this fleet-footed dancer doesn't even need a stage to pull in the crowds.He's the miniature mover who is setting the internet alight.
Getting down to Rihanna's fist pumping song Disturbia, the boy throws some tightly choreographed moves as he is filmed by amazed shoppers. 
Scroll down for video

Watch me move: The youngster dances to Rihanna's Disturbia song
Watch me move: The youngster dances to Rihanna's Disturbia song with his choreographed moves
Raise your hands in the air: It looks like a young friend wants to join in from outside the shop
Raise your hands in the air: It looks like a young friend wants to join in from outside the shop
The boy is 100 per cent in sync with the computer game character on the screen and never fails to miss a beat.
Even though the game is set to 'difficult' he remains focused as he moves around the Microsoft store in Bellevue Washington.
The couple filming the video repeatedly remark how great the boy is, at one point saying: 'He's playing on hard. How ridiculous.'
Passing customers stop to look at the boy as he continues to strut his funky stuff totally oblivious to the gawking onlookers.
 


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2005544/So-think-dance-Boy-shows-amazing-skills-Xbox-Kinect-game.html#ixzz1PoqylDff

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Curry herb can spice up sex life....


Herb that can spice up your sex life by at least a quarter

Last updated at 12:13 AM on 20th June 2011
It's a herb you may have used to add flavour to your curries. 
But fenugreek can also spice up your sex life, a study suggests. 
Men taking it can boost their sex drive by at least a quarter, researchers found.
Breakthrough: A spice used in curries could now be used to spice things up in the bedroom
Breakthrough: A spice used in curries could now be used to spice things up in the bedroom
Sixty healthy men aged between 25 and 52 took an extract of the herb twice a day for six weeks.
Their libido levels were monitored using a scoring system to assess any changes after three and six weeks.
Within six weeks, their scores had soared by an average of 16.1 to 20.6 – a 28 per cent rise.
Meanwhile, another group of men taking dummy pills saw their scores fall.
Fenugreek seeds contain compounds called saponins which are thought to stimulate production of male sex hormones including testosterone.
Secret weapon: Fenugreek - which could be the key to raising up the temperature in the bedroom
Secret weapon: Fenugreek - which could be the key to raising up the temperature in the bedroom
The tests were carried out by researchers from the Centre for Integrative Clinical and Molecular Medicine in Brisbane, Australia, who said: ‘This study has demonstrated that there was significant improvement in sexual function and performance following treatment.’
Fenugreek is a bean-like plant that grows throughout Asia and features widely in Indian cooking. 
Its leaves and seeds have been used to treat fever since the time of the ancient Egyptians.

China 'steals' Alpine village from Austria


China 'steals' Alpine village from Austria in hope to transform outdated southern city

Last updated at 12:04 AM on 19th June 2011
    It hopes the chalets in the southern city of Huizhou will be sought after by homesick Europeans.China is building a replica Alpine village in a grimy industrial city.
The village will be a £5.7billion copy of Hallstatt in Austria, complete with artificial lake. Posing as tourists, the Chinese have been photographing every building there for three years.
Picturesque: The Lakeside village of Hallstatt in Austria is set to be copied to the industrial city of Huizhou in China
Picturesque: The Lakeside village of Hallstatt in Austria is set to be copied to the industrial city of Huizhou in China
The plan was discovered when a Chinese guest at Hallstatt’s hotel left behind a bundle of blueprints.
China already has Chengdu British Town, modelled on Dorchester, and Thames Town, near Shanghai.
    Publicly, Hallstatters say they are proud that their village has caught the eye of Minmetals Land Ltd. the real estate development arm of China Minmetals Corp., China's largest metals trader. 
    With most of them dependent on the hundreds of thousands of tourists who overrun Hallstatt's 900 inhabitants each year, they see the project as good for business.
    'We're happy they find it beautiful enough to copy,' says souvenir store owner Ingrid Janu. 
    Hallstatt Mayor Alexander Scheutz describes the plan as 'a compliment to our village,' while hotel owner Monika Wenger thinks at least some Chinese who have seen the copycat version of Hallstatt will want to visit the original.
    But in a deeply traditional part of Austria shielded for centuries from much of the rest of the world by towering mountains and steep valleys, the apparent secrecy surrounding the project has also revived suspicions of outsiders, even though Hallstatt survives only because of the millions of tourist dollars spent here every year.
    All change: The city of Huizhou, which is set for a radical revamp
    All change: The city of Huizhou, which is set for a radical revamp
    Although the Chinese developers say construction started in April, Scheutz and Wenger say the village knew nothing about the plan to replicate Hallstatt until early this month. 
    They say a Chinese guest involved in the project and staying at Wenger's hotel spilled the beans - apparently inadvertently - showing Wenger drawings and plans she should have kept to herself of the central marketplace, Wenger's 400-year old hotel and other landmarks that were mirror images of the originals.
    'I saw myself confronted with a fait accompli,' says Scheutz of his first reaction when he saw the drawings, now collected in a thick folder on his desk containing documents that he says copy much of the town, down to the individual boards of scenic wooden balconies. 
    While he disputes local media accounts citing him as furiously vowing to prevent the Chinese project, he acknowledges being 'definitely a bit stunned.'
    Wenger is more outspoken. She says most of the villagers she has talked to are 'outraged - not about the fact but the approach.'
    'I don't like the idea of knowing that a team was present here for years measuring, and photographing and studying us,' she said Thursday, sitting at her hotel's terrace against the stunning backdrop of Lake Hallstatt, its surface mirroring nearby granite peaks. 
    'I would have expected them to approach us directly - the whole thing reminds of a bit of Big Brother is watching.
    'This house is my personal work of art,' she said of her 400-year-old hotel. 
    'And then someone comes here and copies it - for me, it's as if a painter copies someone else's artwork.'
    Transfer: China has already copied the town of Dorchester, pictured, with its development of Chengdu British Town
    Transfer: China has already copied the town of Dorchester, pictured, with its development of Chengdu British Town
    The Chinese developers are advertising the project as low-density, high-end residential development 'surrounded by mountains with mountain and lake views,' to be built 'in a European architectural style, with a commercial street built with the characteristics of an Austrian-style town.'
    But at the Chinese site, in the city of Huizhou about 100 miles north of the border with Hong Kong, there is little to indicate that the copycat version will ever approximate the beauty of the original.
    A few low-rise buildings are in the early stages of construction, their frames covered with bamboo scaffolding and green mesh. Cranes and trucks moved around the area Friday dodging workers carrying steel construction elements.
    Though the area is hilly, there was not an alpine peak in sight and the waters of a nearby lake - apparently the faux Lake Hallstatt to be - were green and murky. Instead of mirroring majestic alpine mountaintops, several dead fish floated on the surface.
    Minmetals executive Crystal He says the developer plans to copy all of Hallstatt's touristic core. She said the project will spread over 20,000 square meters - nearly 5 acres - and will include a shop selling Austrian-style glass crystal and other souvenirs.
    The subdevelopment will likely appeal not only to upscale Chinese but also 'Caucasian people living in Hong Kong who are homesick,' she said.
    Wenger, the Hallstatt hotel owner, noted the drawings in her possession show sections of Hallstatt in mirror image - possibly suggesting an effort to evade copyright claims. But Minmetals' He said the idea was never to copy the Austrian town down to its last details.
    There will be no issues with 'so-called intellectual property,' she said.
     


    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2005390/China-steals-Alpine-village-Austria-hope-transform-outdated-southern-city.html#ixzz1PjC66sht

    No mod cons! House from 1600 untouched for over 100 years on sale


    No mod cons! Buyers rush for £250,000 house almost untouched in 100 years... with no bathroom, toilet, drains or heating 

    Last updated at 11:54 AM on 19th June 2011
    It doesn't have a bathroom, heating, drains or even a toilet, but that has not put off scores of interested buyers.
    Even though the house has been virtually untouched in 100 years they reckon its a bargain at £250,000.
    Its stunning location in the Yorkshire Dales, near Sedbergh, means the house is probably worth £1.5 million when it is renovated.
    House that time forgot: The four-bedroomed manorial farmhouse called Dandra Garth dates back to the 1600s
    House that time forgot: The four-bedroomed manorial farmhouse called Dandra Garth dates back to the 1600s
    Needing renovation: The barn next to the farmhouse which sits in three acres of land
    Needing renovation: The barn next to the farmhouse which sits in three acres of land
    Buyers of Dandra Garth will get a four-bedroom manorial farmhouse dating back to the 1600s, with a huge attic once used as servants' quarters plus a separate barn and three acres of land.
    The grade II listed house in Lower Garsdale was the home of Walter Harper, whose family moved there in 1942 to farm the surrounding land.
    His father died in 1968 and his mother passed away in 1972, but Mr Harper continued to farm until the early 1980s.
    Now 92, he has moved to a rest home, but until recently he was quite happy living without any utilities or luxuries.
    He was content to keep warm in front of his open fires and to boil water on the range to fill a tin bath in the kitchen.
    Mr Harper was only persuaded to have electricity at the property 10 years ago, before that he used the gas lights connected to a Calor bottle.
    A single tap in the kitchen supplied cold water from an untested spring supply and the loo was an outside earth closet.
    No luxuries: The property only had electricity put in 10 years ago and the decor hasn't been changed in decades
    No luxuries: The property only had electricity put in 10 years ago and the decor hasn't been changed in decades
    It still has a larder and stone shelves that many luxury home owners are now demanding.
    Approached up a track and hidden behind high walls, the house has south facing views over its gardens.
    Estate agent Tim Brown, of George F White, said: 'There is an incredible amount of interest but I'm not surprised. 
    'This place is virtually untouched by the 20th and 21st centuries. Properties like this are very rare.
    Breathtaking view: The Howgill Fells, near Sedbergh, Cumbria in the Dales National Park
    Breathtaking view: The Howgill Fells, near Sedbergh, Cumbria in the Dales National Park
    'It needs everything doing but it is magnificent. It is in one of the most beautiful spots in the Yorkshire Dales National Park and has huge potential.
    Locator map of the area where the farmouse is situated
    'Almost untouched since it was built, it promises to be one of the most exciting restoration projects that we have ever seen. It is a house from the past which can be very definitely made into a beautiful home of the future.'
    Though it looks a bargain, prospective buyers are warned to be realistic about renovation costs which are estimated at £200,000.
    Mr Harper's nephew, Roger has happy memories of visting his uncle's house as a child.
    He said:'He didn't see anything wrong with it and was reluctant to see any change. Getting the electricity in was a revolution. It is very primitive but he liked it that way.'
    The house took its name from one of the Norsemen who were once prevalent throughout Cumbria.
    Its coat of arms has a lion rampart and border of thistles, which shows an association with James I, who is said to have passed through the dale and given a local clergyman the manorial rights.
    It was thought to have passed from its original owner to four Yeoman farmers as settlement after a dispute in the High Chancel Court.


    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2005482/House-untouched-100-years-bathroom-toilet-drains-heating-sale-250-000.html#ixzz1PjBD2KiB