Tue 14 Aug 2007

Breaking Giant Manta Ray News

Filed under: BEASTS, GROSS, MONSTERS, UNDERSEA WORLD — Alec @ 1843PM

Yikes! Somebody found a dead five-to-six hundred pound manta ray, with a wingspan of 11 feet, on a beach in Salem, MA. Apparently it took six guys to haul the thing onto a dock so scientists could poke at it. The picture in the Local 6 News article is sort of disappointing, so here is a better one (link):

 Giant Manta Ray!!

Damn, that thing is big! There are some more pictures here

Via Local 6 News

Fri 27 Apr 2007

And Furthermore

Filed under: BEASTS, CATS, SCI-FI — Alec @ 1000AM

Cat Horse

From Alexis Via Redkemp.com

OMG Otters

Filed under: BEASTS, UNDERSEA WORLD — Alec @ 0932AM

Thanks, Jess!

The "Comments" section for this video is worth looking into, if only for this glib little nugget:

  • WHAT WE FEEL

    5/5 stars
    04/27/2007by
    dawnpaz54@sbcglobal.net

    IT
    DOES NT MATTER WHAT ANY ONE SAYS ABOUT THIS , ITS HOW IT MAKES US FEEL
    AS PEOPLE AND INDIVIDUALS, SOME TIMES WE SEPPERATE FROM WHATEVER IT
    MIGHT BE, BUT WE ALWAYS RETURN TO WHATS RIGHT.

I feel you, bro.
 

Thu 26 Apr 2007

Meow

Filed under: BEASTS, CATS — Alec @ 1212PM

Neko

 

Via Frank Käfer

See also Web Neko

Tue 24 Apr 2007

He’s Using the Neigh-T-M! Har!

Filed under: BEASTS, HI-LARIOUS — Alec @ 1441PM

Drunk man rides horse into bank, falls asleep. Investigative journalism at its best:

[…]bank staff were less than impressed when they arrived and had to clean
up after the horse, who had left a deposit of his own on the foyer floor.

Via metro.co.uk

Thu 19 Apr 2007

Dolphin VS. Dog

Filed under: BEASTS, PUPS, UNDERSEA WORLD — Alec @ 1041AM

 

Dolphin vs. Dog

Photo credit Paul Riley, Via Indianapolis Zoo Dolphin Adventure Online Media Kit

Wed 18 Apr 2007

Whale in the Gowanus Canal

Filed under: BEASTS, NEW YORK, UNDERSEA WORLD — Alec @ 1028AM

Whale in the Gowanus 

According to the New York Times, a young whale somehow wandered into the Gowanus Canal here in Brooklyn:

The animal, described as a juvenile minke whale about 15 feet long, was
cruising around Gowanus Bay, the outlet from the mile-long Gowanus
Canal in Brooklyn. It appeared to be in good health and not distressed,
said Kim Durham, rescue program director for the Riverhead Foundation
for Marine Research and Preservation.

 Apparently the whale is OK, despite all of the pollution in the canal. And it’s really, really polluted, so polluted that the Whole Foods supermarket planned for the area (still!) can’t be built until an extensive cleanup occurs. Gowanus Lounge has more on the whale, as well as links to some video footage.

 Aah, beautiful Gowanus.

 

Via NYT & Gowanus Lounge
 

Fri 13 Apr 2007

Monster Toxic Toad Alert

Filed under: BEASTS, GROSS, MONSTERS, YIKES — Alec @ 1652PM

Monster Toxic Toad

Alexis: that toad is big

 

Via National Geographic

Thu 12 Apr 2007

Best Shirt Ever

Filed under: ART, COSTUMES, SQUIDS, UNDERSEA WORLD — Alec @ 0837AM

Squid T-Shirt

 

Buy at MULE Design

Wed 11 Apr 2007

Squids Infest California

Filed under: BEASTS, MONSTERS, SCI-FI, SQUIDS, UNDERSEA WORLD — Alec @ 0814AM

Giant Squid from 20,000 Leagues Unter the Sea 

 

According to this article (San Jose Mercury News) giant "Humboldt" squid are infesting the waters of southern California:

It has probing arms and
tooth-lined tentacles, a raptor-like beak and an insatiable craving for flesh - any kind of flesh, even that of humans. It shows up briefly off California every four or five years, spurred by a warm current or some other anomaly, providing a boon for sportfishing businesses.

But amid this latest influx, to points as far north as Bodega Bay, there is a deepening concern among scientists that Humboldt squid are
entrenching themselves off California, and may expand northward, eating their way through fisheries as they go. The same thing is happening in the Southern Hemisphere, where squid are being blamed for depleting the hake fishery off Chile.

 From National Geographic:


Elusive and cannibalistic, the Humboldt, or jumbo, squid (Dosidicus gigas) has a reputation so fearsome that it has earned the nickname "red devil." […] Known as aggressive predators, Humboldt squid have powerful arms and tentacles, excellent underwater vision and a razor-sharp beak that easily tears through the flesh of their prey. They can also rapidly change their skin color in what appears to be a complex communication system.

Amazing!  


 

Via San Jose Mercury News

Image is from the First edition (1807) of "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea" by Jules Verne. Via the National Maritime Museum, Royal Observatory, Greenwich.