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Friday, December 23, 2011

Pencil vs Camera

Watch This Awesome Art



























Source: Internet.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Treat for Eye

Sedona, Arizona

Bazaar Tents, Turkey

Cornfield, São Paulo, Brazil

Dente del Gigante, Italy

Diwali Festival, India

Food Truck, Hawaii

Green Sea Turtle, Hawaii

Hazrat Ali Mosque, Afghanistan

Hong Kong Cityscape, China

Istiqlal Mosque, Indonesia

Pantanal, Brazil


Samburu Wedding, Kenya



Surfer, Hawaii

Terraced Rice Field, China

Thai Flood 2011

Terrified and with nowhere to go but the small areas of dry land that remain, these are the animal victims of the flooding that has devastated Thailand.
In Ayutthaya, a distressed group of elephants is facing its second month cut off by the stagnant waters as they shelter on a concrete island at an animal sanctuary.
The group of 17 include seven animals aged under four years who were too small to flee when the rest of their herd were led to safety in the city north of Bangkok.


Sad sight: An elephant drinks floodwater at the deluged site north of Bangkok

No room on the boat: Elephants are stranded on the concrete island at the conservation park in Ayutthaya where they are facing a second month cut off

Car pool: An aerial view of submerged cars at the Honda Motor factory in Ayutthaya province, Thailand, which h as been caught up in the country's flooding

A spokesman for the plant said: 'We don't know when work will resume.'
The floods have killed more than 380 in Thailand with areas of the country cut off from food and aid supplies

In the worst floods in half a century, many of Bangkok's government-run shelters sit largely empty, even as the submerged streets in some of the city's hardest-hit areas are still bustling with a constant stream of people wading, floating and boating in and out.

Driven out: An aerial view of the Honda motor factory buildings submerged by floodwaters at Rojana Industrial Estate in Ayutthaya province

High and dry: Aerial view shows cars standing on a bridge surrounded by floodwaters at the Honda motor factory in Ayutthaya province, Thailand


Life buoy: Thai flood victim in a small bath tub shaped bucket paddling with flip-flop sandals past a flooded Toyota dealership in Bangkok

Saved: A leopard kitten is bottle fed in a wildlife rescue centre in Phnom Tamao zoo near Phnom Penh, Cambodia, afte r the region also suffered flooding. The tiny leopard was found with another by a fisherman near floodwaters

Not bad for everything! These wading birds were in their element at the Bangkok Safari World

Distressed: Deer stand in the floodwaters at the wildlife park Safari World in Bangkok after half of it was submerged last night

The adults among them - including two males and a pregnant female - can frolic in the water, stretch their limbs and cool down. But the little ones cannot because they would drown if they stepped into the 6-foot-deep water.

Water-logged: Z ebras plough through the waters at Safari World in Minburi District, Bangkok, Thailand, which has been inundated by flooding

Gimme shelter: The zebras wander around Safari World where they were forced to flee even deeper water

Elsewhere, hundreds of animals living in Safari World, Bangkok, were rescued and moved to higher ground after their enclosures were flooded overnight. Zebras and deer were among the animals affected.

Elsewhere in Thailand, flooding at the Honda motor factory at Ayutthaya province has caused immense damage to the local industry.

But it has also led to a shortage of essential car parts to UK, U.S. and Canada Honda plants resulting in production being halved in those countries.

A spokesman for the plant said: 'We don't know when work will resume.'
The floods have killed more than 380 in Thailand with areas of the country cut off from food and aid supplies

In the worst floods in half a century, many of Bangkok's government-run shelters sit largely empty, even as the submerged streets in some of the city's hardest-hit areas are still bustling with a constant stream of people wading, floating and boating in and out.
The city says it has no estimate for the actual number of Bangkok's nine million residents affected by the deluge, but population figures suggest they have impacted a far greater number than the 11,000 who have moved into the city's evacuation centers.