Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Polis Wanita Iran

Polis Wanita Iran

Women Police of IRAN, Siapa kata Muslimah tidak boleh lakukan aktiviti lasak. Dengan pakaian yang sesuai, muslimah pun boleh..lihatlah aktiviti panjat dinding tu..

Agak-agak kat Malaysia ni, bila dapat buat camnie...


Japanese's Food....so cute!!!










Pelik tapi Hairan..hehehhe Sotong Berkepala Manusia......





The World 1st Flying Hotel!!!!







u like it??i love it.....huhuhu It's biodegradable new milk packaging!!







To all Cat Fish Fans........MEKONG GIANT FISH

MEKONG GIANT FISH
Fishers in northern Thailand netted this huge catfish in the Mekong River on May 1. Nearly nine feet long (2.7 meters) and as big as a grizzly bear, the behemoth tipped the scales at 646 pounds (293 kilograms). Experts say the fish, which belongs to the species known as the Mekong giant catfish, may be the largest freshwater fish ever recorded.
Thai fishers struggled for more than an hour to haul in the record-breaking Mekong giant catfish. Officials from Thailand 's Inland Fishery Deparment then used aperformance- enhancing drug to stimulate the pituitary gland of the female fish in order to prepare it for a breeding program (above). Despite efforts to keep the bear-size catfish alive, it died and was later eaten by villagers.
Thai fisheries officials had hoped to release this adult female Mekong giant catfish after they stripped it of eggs (above) for a captive-breeding program. But the whopping fish, which was as big a grizzly bear, didn't survive.
Listed a critically endangered by the World Conservation Union (IUCN), the Mekong giant catfish is one of the world's largest freshwater fishes. Other contenders include the Chinese paddlefish and the dog-eating catfish—another Mekong River giant.
After a record-breaking Mekong giant catfish died, residents of Hat Khrai, a Thai village on the Mekong River , butchered the fish for its meat.
" Mekong people believe it's a sacred fish, because it persists on plant matter and 'meditates'"—in the deep, stony pools of the Mekong River —"somewhat like a Buddhist monk, said Zeb Hogan, a fisheries biologist who studies the largest freshwater fish in the world. A WWF conservation fellow and National Geographic Society Emerging Explorer, Hogan has received funding from the National Geographic Society Conservation Trust.
Mekong giant catfish attract high prices in Thailand , because eating the fish is supposed to bring good luck.

Ukiran....terer gler....cm jadi bangku pn de......

Wow!!! How Awesome is THIS!

What a talent!

He must paint these when the 're finished.


And this was the finished product. Pretty cool stuff, huh!

it looks like he's been doing this stuff since the '80's.