London on the dietary needs of animals.
Lisa:
“What does a horse eat?”London:
“Butter.”Lisa:
“What does a pig eat?”London:
“Nuts.”Lisa:
“What does a turtle eat?”London:
“Water.”
My godson is a genius, pure imaginative genius. ;-)
London on the dietary needs of animals.
Lisa:
“What does a horse eat?”London:
“Butter.”Lisa:
“What does a pig eat?”London:
“Nuts.”Lisa:
“What does a turtle eat?”London:
“Water.”
My godson is a genius, pure imaginative genius. ;-)
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No one makes natural disasters romantic like Iceland… thanks Sigur Ros.
Incredible photos of Iceland’s volcanic eruption currently wreaking havoc on the European airline industry.
Via the Big Picture.
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(via theanimalblog):
My curly gal, Julie, after having won the award for “Most Indistinct Breed” at the 2010 Brooklyn Mutt Show.
Great dog! I bet any Mongolian street dog would be in the top 10 as well. =)
Our TV cable in Mongolia got sliced by the cable guy cause we told them we didn’t want to pay the monthly fee for cable. (I guess there’s no off switch?). We hardly watch TV anyways, mostly just watch movies, so I decided to just throw together a cheap home server to show movies on our projector screen. I’m allergic to Windows so hunted down a tutorial on how to build a home server hackintosh…
Parts:
Open-box MSI Wind Nettop w/Atom 1.6ghz processor: $98
1TB Hitachi hard drive: $55 (after $20 rebate)
Sony 16x DVD Burner: $26
2GB 667 DDR2 SDRAM: $30
Total: $209
Installed OS X 10.5.8 on it and had it up and running in a couple of hours. Serves all our media to other computers wirelessly or straight to the projector screen. Handles DVDs, DVD rips, and online media such as YouTube, etc… without a hitch. Cheapest mac I’ve ever owned. =)
A recent article from asiangypsy.net, a great source for Mongolian political and current event news. This posting is about Mongolia’s “Spring Syndrome,” which takes place during the transition period between winter and spring.
Yes, it is that time of the year folks. Westerners are affected by full moon. I have witnessed Western housemates in England turn into screaming lunatics with wild eyes.
However, Mongols are affected by spring season. At this time macro politics reach its boiling point and hysteria on various subjects arise. Mentally unstable people can no longer hide their afflictions and manifestations affect them and those around them. Most of the “normal” people become fatigued, lazy and unmotivated at this time of the year.
The main theme of this spring’s syndrome is the union of civil movements and opening of the branches in many aimags and sums. They are demanding the 1.5 million togrogs promised by Mongolian People’s Revolutionary Party (communists in disguise) and 1 million togrogs promised by Democratic Party and will organize a big rally on Monday, 5th April, 2010. Some fear it may be the repeat of 1st of July riots of 2008. Some monks will actually pray and chant to keep the demonstrators calm and orderly. However leaders of this rally made a blood oath today, to keep struggling until the objectives are reached. It involved pricking their fingertips with syringe needle, signing the demand, leaving bloody finger print and paying respect to the national flag.
Another cause for worry is an increasing talk about an imminent deadly earthquake. Since the turn of the year there were 270 tremors and earthquakes recorded in various parts of Mongolia. Today the department of emergency, police and army held earthquake simulation training. Epicentre of the earthquake is a small settlement called Emeelt which trades in livestock raw material, situated around 20 kilometres west of Ulaanbaatar. Witnesses say that the earlier tremors caused the earth split. It is estimated that Emeelt will be hit with magnitude 10 and Ulaanbaatar will be hit by magnitude 8-9 earthquake. More will follow on this particular topic.
These news items may be worse case scenarios but the civil movements have been uniting and have already staged one peaceful protest. The upcoming April 5 protest is expected to be a bit stronger.
And there have been a lot of tremors and minor earthquakes around Mongolia the past years, however I too was shocked that there have been 270 since the start of the new year. Something may very well be going on under the surface… Pray, cause Ulaanbaatar is one of those cities that if a large earthquake hits a lot of the buildings could simply be leveled.
This photo by Alex Alexander has a timeless quality about it that I really like. It could have been taken 40 years ago, or just yesterday.
Say goodbye to real photos. Yea, I’m impressed too… ;-)