Life in the Most Crowded Place on the Earth ….!!!

Santa Cruz del Islote is a squeeze.

Santa Cruz del Islote is a squeeze. Source: Supplied

THERE are no doctors. Electricity runs for just five hours a day. There’s no running water or sewerage system, with fresh water dropped off by the Colombian navy once every three weeks.

Welcome to Santa Cruz del Islote — and make sure you breathe in! This teeny tiny picturesque Caribbean island is insanely crowded. It’s just .012 square kilometres, but somehow 1200 people manage to inhabit it, making it four times as densely populated as Manhattan.

Located in the archipelago of San Bernardo, it lies two hours from Cartagena, Colombia. According to local legend, it was discovered about 150 years ago by a group of passing fishermen from the coastal town of Baru, 50 kilometres away.

They found something very attractive about the island — it had no mosquitoes, a rarity in the area. So they set up camp.

Santa Cruz del Islote

It’s arguably the most densely populated island on Earth. Source: Picture Media

These days, there are 90 houses, two shops, one restaurant and a school. Space is so limited that many of the structures extend onto the water, and the isle is part artificial.

And with no high-rises, everyone is squished onto the ground level.

The only empty space for people to visit is a courtyard which is half the size of a tennis court.

Life is actually quite relaxing, although cramped.

Life is actually quite relaxing, although cramped. Source: Supplied

Most of its residents work on nearby islands, and life here is described as peaceful, with children well-behaved and doors never locked.

“Life here is calm and delightful,” says 66-year-old Juvenal Julio, a descendant of the Islote’s founders, told the Toronto Star. “We don’t have violence, we don’t need police, we all know each other and we enjoy our days.”

Stunning. Picture: A TripAdvisor traveller

Stunning. Picture: A TripAdvisor traveller Source: Supplied

Despite the lack of crime, there is a lone security guard. He’s stationed there because Colombia funds a school on the island which is attended by 80 children, and law states that there must be a guard for every school.

Not that they need it, with children described as “docile” by their teachers.

When death strikes, the bodies are taken to a neighbouring island for burial, as there’s no room for a cemetery.

But despite the squeeze, locals love the lifestyle, with one telling the Star “It’s a glorious life.”

Source….www.news.com.au

Natarajan

This Video Clip will Make Your Day … Have a Cheerful Day !!!

A fishing trip in Alaska’s Day Harbor turned into the whale-watching trip of a lifetime.

Brad Rich, an Alaskan fisherman, caught an amazing display of humpback whales feeding on video.

It started out looking pretty calm:

Then Rich says, “I hear ’em,” and the whales erupt from the water, mouths agape and blowholes spouting:

Throughout the incredible encounter Rich’s uncontrollable laughter and sometimes profanity-laced exclamations are priceless.

“I was just in awe,” Rich told KTVA Alaska, “I knew that humpbacks do this group feeding. So I knew what was happening as soon as it happened. But to be in the middle of that, to actually experience that as to just watching it, it was the most awe-inspiring thing, it’s the most amazing thing to have ever happened to me.”

The humpbacks, which migrate to Alaska in the summer and fall, are engaging in a unique feeding behavior called “bubble net feeding.”

The whales swim below schools of little fish or krill and blow a circle of air bubbles out of their blowholes as they spiral upwards towards the surface. These bubbles surround their prey and form a type of net. The bubbles push their food into a small ball that makes easy pickings for the whales as they surge upward with mouths wide open.

Brad Rich was lucky enough to see it firsthand, and we were lucky that he shared it on YouTube. Check out the video:

Source……Cody Sullivan in ….www.businessinsider .in  and http://www.you tube.com

Natarajan

” இது துவைக்கற கல் இல்லை….லிங்கம் …சிவலிங்கம் …”

 

இது துவக்கற கல் இல்லே… சிவலிங்கம்! — மகாபெரியவா
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சென்னை மீனம்பாக்கம் பகுதிக்கு வரும்போதெல்லாம், பழவந்தாங்கலில் தான் முகாமிடுவார் காஞ்சி மகாபெரியவா. அப்படித் தங்குகிறபோது, அந்த ஊரின் மையத்தில் உள்ள குளத்தில் நீராடுவதை வழக்கமாகக் கொண்டிருந்தார்.
ஒருநாள்… அதிகாலைப் பொழுதில், குளத்தில் ஸ்நானம் செய்வதற்கு மகாபெரியவா வந்தபோது, அங்கே சிலர் துணி துவைத்துக் கொண் டிருந்தனர். அவர்களில் ஒருவர், அங்கேயிருந்த கல்லில் துணிகளை அடித்துத் துவைத்துக் கொண்டிருக்க, அதைக் கண்ட காஞ்சி மகான் நெக்குருகியவராய், ‘இது துவைக்கற கல் இல்லே; லிங்கம்… சிவ லிங்கம். இதுல துவைக்காதீங்கோ’ என்று சொன்னார்.
அவ்வளவுதான்… குளத்தைச் சுற்றியிருந்தவர்கள் தபதபவெனக் கூடினர்; சிவலிங்கத் திருமேனியைச் சுற்றி நின்றனர். இதையறிந்த ஊர் மக்கள் பலரும் விழுந்தடித்துக்கொண்டு, குளக்கரைக்கு வந்தனர். அடுத்து காஞ்சி மகான் என்ன சொல்லப்போகிறார் என்று அவரையே மிகுந்த பவ்யத்துடன் பார்த்துக் கொண்டிருந்தனர்.
மெள்ளக் கண்மூடியபடி இருந்த மகாபெரியவா, விறுவிறுவெனக் குளத்தில் இறங்கிக் குளித்தார். அங்கேயே ஜபத்தில் ஈடுபட்டார். பிறகு கரைக்கு வந்தவர், சிவலிங்கத்துக்கு அருகில் வந்தார். “இது அர்த்த நாரீஸ்வர சொரூபம். சின்னதா கோயில் கட்டி, அபிஷேகம் பண்ணி, புஷ்பத்தால அர்ச்சனை பண்ணுங்கோ! இந்த ஊர் இன்னும் செழிக்கப் போறது” என்று கைதூக்கி ஆசீர்வதித்துச் சென்றார்.
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பெரியவாளின் திருவுளப்படி, குளத்துக்கு அருகில் சின்னதாகக் குடிசை அமைத்து, சிவலிங்க பூஜை செய்யப்பட்டது. பிறகு கோயில் வளர வளர… ஊரும் வளர்ந்தது. பழவந்தாங்கலின் ஒரு பகுதி, இன்னொரு ஊராயிற்று. அந்த ஊர் நங்கைநல்லூர் எனப்பட்டு, தற்போது நங்கநல்லூர் என அழைக்கப்படுகிறது.
சென்னை, பழவந்தாங்கல் ரயில்வே ஸ்டேஷனில் இருந்து சுமார் 1 கி.மீ. தொலைவில் உள்ளது ஸ்ரீஅர்த்தநாரீஸ்வரர் திருக்கோயில். காஞ்சி மகாபெரியவாள் சுட்டிக்காட்டிய இடத்தில் அற்புதமாக அமைந் திருக்கிறது ஆலயம். சுமார் 50 வருடங்களுக்கு முன்பு, பெரியவா அருளியதால் உருவான இந்தக் கோயில், இன்றைக்கு ஸ்ரீநடராஜர் சந்நிதி, பட்டீஸ்வரத்தைப் போலவே அமைந்துள்ள ஸ்ரீதுர்கை, அர்த்த நாரீஸ்வர மூர்த்தத்துக்கு இணையாக, ஸ்ரீஅர்த்தநாரீஸ்வரி திருவிக்கிரகம் எனச் சிறப்புற அமைந்துள்ளது.
பிரதோஷம், சிவராத்திரியில் நவக்கிரக ஹோமம், புஷ்ப ஊஞ்சல், சுமங்கலிகளுக்கு மஞ்சள் சரடு, வசந்த நவராத்திரி விழா, சிறப்பு ஹோமங்கள், விஜயதசமியில் சண்டி ஹோமம் என ஆலயத்தில் கொண்டாட்டங்களுக்கும் வைபவங்களுக்கும் குறைவில்லை! இன்னொரு சிறப்பு… மகாபெரியவாளின் திருநட்சத்திரமான அனுஷ நட்சத்திர நாளில் (மாதந்தோறும்) சிறப்பு பஜனைகள், ஜயந்தியின் போது பிரமாண்ட பூஜை மற்றும் பஜனைகள் ஆகியன விமரிசையாக நடைபெறுகின்றன. நங்கநல்லூருக்கு வந்து ஸ்ரீஅர்த்தநாரீஸ்வரரை வணங்குங்கள்; குருவருளும் திருவருளும் கிடைக்கப் பெறுவீர்கள்!
–நன்றி சக்தி விகடன்
Source…..www.knramesh.blogspot.in
Natarajan

This Epic Image of Earth will Floor You….

NASA’s Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera captures stunning view of the entire sun-lit side of Earth.

This colour image of Earth, taken by NASA's Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera (EPIC), a four megapixel CCD camera and telescope on July 6, 2015, shows Earth as seen on July 6, 2015 from a distance of one million miles.

This colour image of Earth, taken by NASA’s Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera (EPIC), a four megapixel CCD camera and telescope on July 6, 2015, shows Earth as seen on July 6, 2015 from a distance of one million miles.

Clicked from 1.6 million km away in space, a NASA camera on the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) satellite has returned its first stunning view of the entire sun-lit side of Earth.

DSCOVR is equipped with the Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera (EPIC) that took the new photo on July 6.

EPIC captures a series of 10 different images in a variety of wavelengths, from near infrared to ultraviolet light, which can be analyzed in a number of different ways.

“Just got this new blue marble photo from @NASA. A beautiful reminder that we need to protect the only planet we have,” US President Barack Obama tweeted on his official @POTUS handle.

The images clearly show desert sand structures, river systems and complex cloud patterns on planet Earth.

“This first DSCOVR image of our planet demonstrates the unique and important benefits of Earth observation from space,” said NASA administrator Charlie Bolden in a statement.

“I want everyone to be able to see and appreciate our planet as an integrated, interacting system,” he added.

The primary objective of DSCOVR is to maintain the nation’s real-time solar wind monitoring capabilities, which are critical to the accuracy and lead time of space weather alerts and forecasts.

“DSCOVR’s observations of Earth, as well as its measurements and early warnings of space weather events caused by the sun, will help every person to monitor the ever-changing Earth, and to understand how our planet fits into its neighbourhood in the solar system, Bolden noted.

NASA will use the camera’s observations to measure ozone levels in Earth’s atmosphere and plant growth on the ground.

It will also help build maps showing the distribution of dust and volcanic ash around the globe, among other things.

“The high quality of the EPIC images exceeded all of our expectations in resolution,” said DSCOVR project scientist Adam Szabo.

“There will be a huge wealth of new data for scientists to explore,” he concluded.

Source…www.the hindu.com

Natarajan

Message for the Day…” The Happiness of the World is the sign of HIS Arrival…”

The road laid out by holy people has to be repaired now and then, either by those who travel through it or by those who claim authority over it. That is what is called ‘teaching (bodha)’. It is for the sake of such repairs that the Lord occasionally sends some authorised individuals, sages, and divine people. Through their good teachings, the path opened by the God-people of the past is again made clear and smooth. But how is one to know the consequence of the soul’s yearning for the Lord’s Advent? Since this can’t be known, one has to pray until the world is established in happiness. The happiness of the world is the sign of His arrival; if this is understood, then it is easy to recognise the Avatar immediately. It is then that the religion of truth(sathya), of compassion (daya), of spiritual wisdom (jnana) and of love (prema) will grow and prosper. So until these are firmly rooted, people must continue their prayers. That is the responsibility of the people.

Sathya Sai Baba

This Date in Science….20 July 1969… First Footsteps of Human on Moon…

This date in science: Apollo 11 and first footsteps on moon

Today is the 46h anniversary of humanity’s historic first steps on the moon. The story in pictures, here.

July 20, 1969. On this date, Apollo 11 astronauts Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong landed their moon module on a broad dark lunar lava flow, called the Sea of Tranquility. Six hours later, Neil Armstrong became the first human being to walk on the surface of a world beyond Earth. Today – July 20, 2015 – is the 46th anniversary of this great achievement. Armstrong and Aldrin spent 21.5 hours on the moon’s surface. They collected 47.5 pounds (21.5 kg) of moon rocks for return to Earth. Then they blasted off in their module from the lunar surface to meet up with Michael Collins in the command module orbiting overhead. They returned safely to Earth and landed in the Pacific Ocean on July 24.

Apollo 11 launch on July 16, 1969.

Apollo 11 launch at 13:32:00 UTC (9:32:00 a.m. EDT local time) on July 16, 1969. Astronauts Neil A. Armstrong, Michael Collins and Edwin E. Aldrin, Jr. were aboard.

The Apollo 11 mission blasted off on July 16, 1969 via this Saturn V space vehicle.  Astronauts Neil A. Armstrong, Michael Collins and Edwin E. Aldrin, Jr. were aboard.

Apollo 11 left Earth via a type of rocket now no longer used, called a Saturn V. The giant Saturn V rocket was 111 meters (363 feet) tall, about the height of a 36-story-tall building. Read more about the Saturn V rocket.

A view of Earth from Apollo 11, shortly after leaving Earth orbit and being placed on a path that would take it to the moon.

Apollo 11 orbited Earth one-and-a-half times. Twelve minutes after launch, it separated from the Saturn V, as a propulsion maneuver sent it on a path toward the moon. Here is a view of Earth from Apollo 11, shortly after it left Earth orbit.

Happy Apollo 11 mission officials in the Launch Control Center following the successful Apollo 11 liftoff on July 16, 1969. Second from left (with binoculars) stands Dr. Wernher von Braun, Director of the Marshall Space Flight Center.

Happy Apollo 11 mission officials in the Launch Control Center following the successful Apollo 11 liftoff on July 16, 1969. The famous German rocket engineer Wernher von Braun is second from left (with binoculars). Read more about Wernher von Braun.

Buzz Aldrin looks into the TV camera during the third broadcast from space on the way to the moon.

Buzz Aldrin looks into a TV camera during the third broadcast from space on the way to the moon.

Earth seen by Apollo 11 astronauts on their way to the moon.

Earth seen by Apollo 11 astronauts on their way to the moon

The Eagle in lunar orbit after separating from Columbia.  The Apollo 11 Lunar Module Eagle, in a landing configuration was photographed in lunar orbit from the Command and Service Module Columbia. Inside the module were Commander Neil A. Armstrong and Lunar Module Pilot Buzz Aldrin. The long rod-like protrusions under the landing pods are lunar surface sensing probes. Upon contact with the lunar surface, the probes sent a signal to the crew to shut down the descent engine.

Here is the Apollo 11 lunar module – the vehicle that would carry Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin to the moon’s surface. It was called “Eagle.” This photo shows the module in a landing configuration, photographed in lunar orbit from the command module, which was called “Columbia.” Astronauts Michael Collins, alone aboard Columbia, inspected Eagle as it pirouetted before him to ensure the craft was not damaged.

The Eagle lunar module captured this image of the Columbia command module in lunar orbit.

The Eagle lunar module captured this image of the Columbia command module in lunar orbit. Columbia stayed in lunar orbit with Michael Collins aboard during Eagle’s descent and landing.

An early concern of space engineers had been that the lunar regolith, the fine soil covering the moon, would be soft like quicksand. There was some fear that the Eagle lunar module would sink after landing. Hence Armstrong’s comment about the depth of the footpads in the lunar soil as he descended the ladder before stepping onto the moon.

Neil Armstrong descending to the moon's surface on July 20, 1969.

The world watched on television as Neil Armstrong took the first steps on the moon’s surface on July 20, 1969. It was the first time humans walked another world. As he stepped onto the lunar surface, Armstrong said, “That is one small step for [a] man, one giant leap for mankind.”

Buzz Aldrin descends the steps of the lunar module ladder as he becomes the second human being to walk on the moon.

Buzz Aldrin descends the steps of the lunar module ladder as he becomes the second human being to walk on the moon.

Armstrong and Aldrin at work on the moon.  They deployed an U.S. flag and several science experiments, and collected moon rocks.

Armstrong and Aldrin at work on the moon. They deployed an U.S. flag and several science experiments, and collected moon rocks.

Here is Buzz Aldrin,  who piloted the lunar module to the moon's surface, with the LR-3, a reflecting array designed to bounce laser beams fired from Earth back to Earth.  This experiment, which helped refine our knowledge of the moon's distance and the shape of its orbit around Earth, is still returning data from the moon.

Here is Buzz Aldrin, who piloted the lunar module Eagle to the moon’s surface, with the LR-3, a reflecting array designed to bounce laser beams fired from Earth back to Earth. This experiment, which helped refine our knowledge of the moon’s distance and the shape of its orbit around Earth, is still returning data from the moon.

The lunar module Eagle on the surface of the moon.

The lunar module Eagle on the surface of the moon.

Neil Armstrong in the lunar module Eagle shortly after his historic first moonwalk, when he became the first human to set foot on a world besides Earth.

Neil Armstrong in the lunar module Eagle shortly after his historic first moonwalk, when he became the first human to set foot on a world besides Earth.

Michael Collins caught this photo of the lunar module with Armstrong and Aldrin inside as it ascended from the moon's surface to join the command module. Soon after, the lunar module docked with the orbiting command module, and the astronauts began their journey back to Earth.

Michael Collins caught this photo of the lunar module with Armstrong and Aldrin inside – and with Earth in the distance – as the module ascended from the moon’s surface to rejoin the command module. The lunar module docked with the orbiting command module, and, shortly afterwards, the astronauts began their journey back to Earth.

There were no runway landings in those days.  Splashdown for the three astronauts was in the Pacific Ocean.  Here, they await pickup by a helicopter from the USS Hornet.

There were no runway landings in those days. Splashdown for the three astronauts was in the Pacific Ocean. Here, they await pickup by a helicopter from the USS Hornet.

Celebration at Mission Control as Apollo 11 draws to a successful end.

Celebration at Mission Control as Apollo 11 draws to a successful end.

Ticker-tape parade for the Apollo 11 astronauts in New York City on August 13, 1969.   This section of Broadway is known as the Canyon of Heroes.

Ticker-tape parade for the Apollo 11 astronauts in New York City on August 13, 1969. This section of Broadway is known as the Canyon of Heroes.

Human footprint on the moon.

Human footprint on the moon.

Bottom line: July 20, 1969 is the anniversary of Apollo 11 and the first human footsteps on the moon.

Source…www.earthsky.org

Natarajan

THE SIBERIAN FAMILY WHO DIDN’T SEE ANOTHER HUMAN FOR OVER 40 YEARS….

To this day, the Siberian wilderness is still one of the most isolated places in the world. Known as the Siberian taiga (meaning “forest” in Russian), its harsh, cold climate greatly discourages human habitation. Its steep hills and difficult terrain makes it nearly impossible to travel through it, much less live there. It’s filled with pine and birch trees, nearly undisturbed by humans for centuries. Bears and red foxes wander through the forest during the day, while wolves hunt at night. It’s freezing cold with the average mean yearly temperature at negative five degrees Celsius. Stretching east to west, from the Atlantic Ocean across the continent to the Mediterranean, and extending up north to the Mongolian Arctic border, the Siberian taiga is the largest of Earth’s nearly uninhabited wilderness. Nearly five million square miles of barren land sparsely populated by a few towns containing only a few thousand people.

siberia

In 1978, a team of Russian geologists were sent to explore the deepest, most isolated part of this region. Forest and wilderness that, at the time, have been barely touched by human hands. Traveling there via helicopter, from high above the taiga, they spotted something that seemed quite unusual- a clearing with a garden, clear evidence of human life. This seemed nearly impossible to the geologists. They were nearly 150 miles from the nearest human settlement. Upon landing, the geologists knew they had to investigate, despite their trepidation. One of the geologists, Galina Pismenskaya,  said later that they had “put gifts in our packs for our prospective friends,” but also checked “the pistol that hung at my side.”

They continued on and found more signs of human inhabitants-  a wooden staff, a log bridge across a stream, more gardens, until they saw a hut. They approached the hut with caution. Finally, the makeshift door creaked open and out stepped an old man with tattered clothing and an unkempt long beard.  Despite having “fear in his eyes”, the old man said very softly to his visitors, “Well, since you have traveled this far, you might as well come in.”

As the geologists entered, what they saw astonished them. The dwelling was something out of history books- tree stumps holding up the foundation, floor made out of potato peels and pine-nut shells, everything covered in filth. As they looked closer in the dim-lit, one room shack, they saw this was a home for a family of five, a father and four children, two of which began crying uncontrollably at the sight of humans unknown to them.  As the geologists said,

The silence was suddenly broken by sobs and lamentations. Only then did we see the silhouettes of two women. One was in hysterics, praying: ‘This is for our sins, our sins.’ The other, keeping behind a post… sank slowly to the floor. The light from the little window fell on her wide, terrified eyes, and we realized we had to get out of there as quickly as possible.

Karp Lykov, the old man, once lived in a populated part of Russia. He was a member of a fundamentalist Russian Orthodox sect known as the Old Believers, called this because their worship style hasn’t changed since the 17th century. Old Believers had been persecuted in Russia for centuries, even before the Soviets took over. Dating back to Peter the Great’s reign in the late 17th and early 18th centuries, Old Believers, who customarily wore beards, were forced to pay a tax on their facial hair.

When the Soviets took over, Karp thought it was time to retreat to sparsely populated towns that dotted Siberia. One day, in 1936, while working the fields with his brother near their village, a Communist guard came by and shot his brother right in front of him. Karp immediately grabbed his family (which, at the time, only consisted of his wife, his son Savin, and his 2-year old daughter Natalia) and disappeared into the dark Siberian wilderness.

Karp and his wife, Akulina, had two more children in the wild, Dmitry and Agafia, who before they met the Russian geologists, had never seen another human besides their own family. Everything they knew of civilization came from their parents. They were taught how to read and write with the help of an old family Bible. They knew nothing of the world past 1936, including even the existence of World War II or the Cold War. Every member of the family had to learn how to provide for themselves using only the resources found within the wilderness.

As the children grew, they became the hunters and gatherers. Dmitry, for example, learned how to kill animals without guns or bows. He did this by digging traps and chasing the animals until they collapsed from exhaustion. Times became even tougher for the family when Akulina passed away in 1961 (approximately) from starvation. Now, it was just a father and four children struggling to survive.

Realizing how traumatic this must be for the kids, having never met another human before, the geologists retreated out of the hut and set up camp a little ways away. Soon, the family came out and approached the scientists, still scared but curious. At first, they refused everything given to them by the geologists, including clothes, food, and bread (Karp explained that his youngest children had never even seen bread, much less tasted it). Soon, the family and the geologists formed a bond. The geologists told them about what they’d missed in the world since 1936 and showed them modern innovations like cellophane (“Lord, what have they thought up—it is glass, but it crumples!”, exclaimed Karp) and television (which scared and enthralled them at the same time). In turn, the family showed the geologists how to survive in the Siberian taiga, including how to grow crops in such harsh conditions.

The geologists continued to survey the wilderness, co-existing with the family, for several years. On several occasions, the scientists tried to convince the family to move back to civilization, but they refused. Eventually, though, the years of survival in harsh terrain caught up with them. In the fall of 1981, three of the four children (Dmitry, Natalia, and Savin) passed away within several days of another, two from kidney failure and one from pneumonia. The geologists offered to transport the sick members of the family to a hospital, but their offer was staunchly refused.

After the death of the three, the geologists once again tried to convince Karp, now a man in his late 80s, and his youngest daughter, Agafia, to move in with relatives in a village 150 miles away. They still refused. On February 16th, 1988, exactly 27 years to the day after his wife, Karp passed away in his sleep, leaving only Agafia as the surviving member of the family. Insisting on staying, Agafia, as far as I could dig up, to this day now in her 70s, still lives high in the mountains of the Siberian taiga. Alone.

Bonus Facts:

  • At first, the family would accept only one thing from the geologists, salt. Said Karp, “living without it for four decades” had been “true torture.”
  • When the geologists first met the daughters, they wrote in their notebook that they only spoke in a “slow, blurred cooing.” Living in isolation for so long and never needing to interact with other humans, the girls had essentially created their own simple language to compliment their native tongue.
  • Siberia is so large, it covers nearly 10% of the Earth’s land surface.

Source….www.today i foundout.com

Natarajan

” Hamara Bharath …” Incredible India …A Travel Paradise….

Let’s see… there’s history.

(Leh Palace, Leh)

Photograph: Sandeep Kashyap

There’s religion…

(The Golden Temple, Amritsar)

Photograph: Ruturaj Gorakh Mulik

Like everywhere! Even under a few inches of snow!

(Solang Valley, Himachal Pradesh)

Photograph: Ruturaj Gorakh Mulik

 

Fancy a drive in the snow? You got it!

(Solang Valley, Himachal Pradesh)

Photograph: Ruturaj Gorakh Mulik

Or maybe zorbing? No sweat You can have that too!

(Solang Valley, Himachal Pradesh)

Photograph: Ruturaj Gorakh Mulik

Are you a hills person?

(Manali)

Photograph: Ruturaj Gorakh Mulik

Are you a beach bum?

(Kovalam beach, Kerala)

Photograph: Shounak Pal

Or could you do with just a lake?

Photograph: Piyush Goel

(Tawang, Arunachal Pradesh)

Do you fancy a road trip?

Photograph: Sandeep Kashyap

(Leh-Manali Highway, Ladakh, Jammu and Kashmir)

One packed with adventure? 🙂

(Manali, Himachal Pradesh)

Photograph: Ruturaj Gorakh Mulik

 

Why go away from India?

Because even though there may not be a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow…

(Nainital, Uttarakhand)

Photograph: Rahul Kumar

every cloud does have a silver lining! 🙂

(Dhanaulti, Uttarakhand)

Photograph: Rahul Kumar

Source….www.rediff.com

Natarajan

Images of the Day…With a Message Behind…!!!

happy facts

Squirrels plant thousands of new trees each year simply by forgetting where they put their acorns.  To those who have ever asked themselves if squirrels play a part in our ecological system – here’s your answer. Every animal has its place, and squirrels have been planting trees with their acorns for countless generations. Thank you Mr. Squirrel!

happy facts

In a famous study, cattle were penned on their own, with their best friend or with another cow they did not know. They stayed with them for 30 minutes. During that time, their heart rates were measured at 15-second intervals.  The research showed that the heart rates of cows that got a friend to ‘hang out’ with, were significantly lower than when they were with a stranger.

 

The voices of Mickey Mouse and Minnie Mouse got married in real life. 

happy facts

Wayne Allwine and Russi Taylores were married for 20 years together (and probably made some funny noises at home) until Wayne unfortunately passed away in 2009.

Source….www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

 

Pictures of the Day….

Asiatic lion cubs sit near their den in the Khutani area of the sanctuary in the Junagadh region of Gujarat.

Asiatic lion cubs sit near their den at a sanctuary in the Khutani area of the Junagadh region of GujaratPicture: AFP

Two Palestinian men rides their horses on Gaza beach before breaking fast during the holy month of Ramadan to the west of Gaza City

Two men ride their horses on Gaza beach before breaking fast during the holy month of RamadanPicture: EPA/MOHAMMED SABER

Mother elephant Yashoda with her unnamed newborn baby at Hagenbeck Zoo, Hamburg

Mother elephant Yashoda with her unnamed newborn baby at Hagenbeck Zoo, Hamburg

Picture: Action Press/REX Shutterstock

A policeman helps ducks cross road, in Catford, south east London

A policeman helps ducks cross the road in Catford, south east LondonPicture: Lewisham MPS/REX Shutterstock

Eagle with seagull in talons and other seagull attempting to free its friend) A photographer has captured a once-in-a-lifetime shot of an epic mid-air battle between an eagle and two seagulls. After initially stalking its prey, the eagle quickly latched onto an unsuspecting gull and flew off with it tightly in its talons. But a brave gull gave chase - frantically pecking at the predators back in a fearless attempt to free its friend. After a pursuit that lasted a few seconds, the other gull eventually gave up, leaving the eagle to fly a further 200 yards to have its feast.

A bald eagle flies off with its seagull dinner clamped firmly between its talons in Prince William Sound in Alaska. But a brave gull gave chase – frantically pecking at the predators back in a fearless attempt to free its friend.

Picture: DAVID CANALES / CATERS NEWS

Source…..www.telegraph.co.uk

Natarajan