Showing posts with label Weird. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weird. Show all posts

Must Have Ninja Themed Products.

Must Have Ninja Themed Products.

Every one of us has a little ninja in us, do you agree with us on this? For those who have difficulty in finding their little ninja in them, these cool ninja themed products are here to give a little needed nudge……..
Ninja Flip T-Shirt: This cool Ninja Flip T-Shirt turns you into a ninja. Buy Now.
Ninja Flip T-Shirt
Weird Museums From Around the World

Weird Museums From Around the World


Some museums feature things that would never normally become an exhibition item, yet people enjoy visiting them. There’s a museum of funeral culture in Russia, a museum of women’s hair in Turkey, and a museum of love in South Korea. When traveling abroad, we all want to have unforgettable experiences, so visiting one of the museums below may be a good idea.
We  decided to show you 15 weird museums around the world that are worth putting on a bucket list.
28 Hilarious Accidents That Will Be Remembered for a Long Time

28 Hilarious Accidents That Will Be Remembered for a Long Time

28 Hilarious Accidents That Will Be Remembered for a Long Time
Photographers sometimes wait for that special moment to take a unique shot. Athletes work out to reach their goals and get their titles and medals. On the other hand, this world is inhabited by some people who never want to do anything outstanding (or even take a picture of something cool). But sometimes fortune smiles on these people. Nevertheless, there’s no reason to envy these people. And sometimes what happened to them can be very instructive.
WE collected 28 hilarious and weird accidents from internet users.

Decorating Fences With Trash, The New Zealander Way


New Zealanders have a unique way of discarding their trash—they hang them on fences. Bras, boots, toothbrushes, bicycles, everything that has had their useful life over gets hung en masse on roadside fences.
Perhaps, the most famous of them is the Cardrona Bra Fence in Central Otago. The fence began one morning in 1999 when four women’s bras were found attached to the wire fence alongside the road and fluttering in the breeze. Rumor is that a group of women were celebrating the new year at the Cardrona Hotel and after leaving the pub late at night, they decided to take off their bras and hang them on the fence. Over the next few weeks, the number of bras on the fence steadily increased until there were sixty more by the end of February 2000. As news about the fence spread, even more bras started appearing. In the following years the bra population multiplied to thousands and the fence became a unique tourist attraction gaining worldwide attention.
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The Cardrona Bra Fence in 2016. Photo credit: Kathrin & Stefan Marks/Flickr

The Hairy Secret Behind Indian Temples


Where do hairs for fashion wigs and hair extensions come from? The answer is: everywhere, but the majority of them come from China and India, where human hair is a lucrative business.
In India, China, and eastern Europe, small agents tour villages coaxing poverty-stricken women to part with their hair for a small payment. Sometimes, husbands would force wives into selling their hair and slum children would be tricked into having their heads shaved in exchange for toys. There was one incident in India where a group of men held down a women, cut off her locks and took off with it.
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A woman gets her head shaved at the Thiruthani Murugan Temple in Tamil Nadu. Photo credit: Allison Joyce

The Floating Fish Farms of China


In the sheltered coastal waters of the Bohai Sea, the Yellow Sea, the East China Sea and the South China Sea, there are large fish farms where marine crustaceans such as shrimps, and molluscs such as oysters, are raised in artificial enclosures. These farms are created by floating netted enclosures from a sprawling network of interconnected wooden pathways and platforms. Over these, fishermen have built wooden houses and huts where entire families live.
These pictures were taken in south-eastern China's Fujian province, where there are numerous floating farms that cultivate the sought-after shellfish, a delicacy that is eaten in Asia at banquets and even exchanged as gifts. The marciulture industry—the specialized branch of aquaculture where marine organisms are cultivated in the open ocean—is so large here that it has attracted its own tourist industry.
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The fish farms of China’s Luoyuan Bay, Fujian Province, China. Photo credit: Edward Burtynsky
China is the world’ largest producer and consumer of fish, accounting for one-third of the world's entire fish production and two-thirds of the world’s aquaculture production. Aquaculture, which is the farming of fish in ponds, lakes and tanks, alone accounts for two-thirds of China's total fish output.
China has a very long history of fish farming, going back by more than 3,000 years, but it really took off as an industry in the 1990s.
In recent years, however, production has fallen due to overfishing, pollution and poor practices as the biodiversity is being irreparably damaged. Every year there is a three-month ban on fishing in order to give fish stocks a chance to breed and recover, but it has done little to balance out the numbers
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Seafood farms cover the surface of Luoyuan Bay in the Fujian province of China. For a sense of scale, this Overview shows approximately 4 square kilometers (1.5 square miles). Photo credit: DigitalGlobe/Daily Overview
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Sources: Wikipedia / NOAA / Daily Mail