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  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack11.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack10.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack08.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack06.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack05.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack04.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack03.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack01.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack12.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack09.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack07.jpg
  • Great White tries to attack Motor on Back of Boat<br />
<br />
Approximately eight kilometers off the coast of Gansbaai, quite close to Dyer Iceland / South Africa, a great white shark tried to attack the outboard motor of our boat.<br />
<br />
The touch-sensitive area of the nose of the shark has unusual consequences: The shark opens its mouth and is relatively far from the water. In slow motion, it remains for a moment, then again to return back to his element ..<br />
©Klaus Jos/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Shark_attack02.jpg
  • I'm in wheely big trouble: Moment a monster truck got stuck trying to take on a fire engine<br />
<br />
This is the moment a monster truck bit off a little more than it could chew trying to crush a full-sized fire engine. <br />
Driver Lewis Cook, 45, was left red faced after his huge vehicle 'Crusher' failed to clear the obstacle during a freestyle car-crushing competition.<br />
Instead of munching the stationary fire engine beneath its huge tyres, the £100,000 bright yellow truck ended up stranded on its rear end and suffered the indignity of having to be helped down with a crane.<br />
Lewis, who runs a distribution company in East Sussex, had to sit helplessly as flammable liquid leaked on to the piping hot exhaust system.<br />
<br />
He said: 'We were taking part in the freestyle event where drivers have 90 seconds to do whatever they want in front of the judging crowd - burnouts, donuts, those sorts of things.<br />
'There was also a bus to smash over and the fire engine, which everyone was a bit sceptical about but I fired myself up and decided to go for it.<br />
<br />
'I hit the fire engine perfectly but it was much harder than I imagined and it didn't 'give' so the next thing I find is that I'm completely vertical and there's nothing I can do about it.'<br />
The truck, which has a 1,800bhp engine and tyres costing £8,000 a set, was stuck for six minutes as crowed watched with anticipation.<br />
Emergency crews then strapped a chain around the front axle to prevent it falling on its roof before slowly pulling it backwards, successfully dislodging it.<br />
The incident, the first of its kind in the UK, took place in front of 10,000 fans on Sunday at the Monster Truck Nationals at the Santa Pod Raceway in Northamptonshire.<br />
Santa Pod, which has been entertaining petrol heads for 45 years, also hosts the FIA European Drag Racing Championships from September 8 to September 11.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Moment_monster_truck_go...jpg
  • I'm in wheely big trouble: Moment a monster truck got stuck trying to take on a fire engine<br />
<br />
This is the moment a monster truck bit off a little more than it could chew trying to crush a full-sized fire engine. <br />
Driver Lewis Cook, 45, was left red faced after his huge vehicle 'Crusher' failed to clear the obstacle during a freestyle car-crushing competition.<br />
Instead of munching the stationary fire engine beneath its huge tyres, the £100,000 bright yellow truck ended up stranded on its rear end and suffered the indignity of having to be helped down with a crane.<br />
Lewis, who runs a distribution company in East Sussex, had to sit helplessly as flammable liquid leaked on to the piping hot exhaust system.<br />
<br />
He said: 'We were taking part in the freestyle event where drivers have 90 seconds to do whatever they want in front of the judging crowd - burnouts, donuts, those sorts of things.<br />
'There was also a bus to smash over and the fire engine, which everyone was a bit sceptical about but I fired myself up and decided to go for it.<br />
<br />
'I hit the fire engine perfectly but it was much harder than I imagined and it didn't 'give' so the next thing I find is that I'm completely vertical and there's nothing I can do about it.'<br />
The truck, which has a 1,800bhp engine and tyres costing £8,000 a set, was stuck for six minutes as crowed watched with anticipation.<br />
Emergency crews then strapped a chain around the front axle to prevent it falling on its roof before slowly pulling it backwards, successfully dislodging it.<br />
The incident, the first of its kind in the UK, took place in front of 10,000 fans on Sunday at the Monster Truck Nationals at the Santa Pod Raceway in Northamptonshire.<br />
Santa Pod, which has been entertaining petrol heads for 45 years, also hosts the FIA European Drag Racing Championships from September 8 to September 11.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Moment_monster_truck_go...jpg
  • I'm in wheely big trouble: Moment a monster truck got stuck trying to take on a fire engine<br />
<br />
This is the moment a monster truck bit off a little more than it could chew trying to crush a full-sized fire engine. <br />
Driver Lewis Cook, 45, was left red faced after his huge vehicle 'Crusher' failed to clear the obstacle during a freestyle car-crushing competition.<br />
Instead of munching the stationary fire engine beneath its huge tyres, the £100,000 bright yellow truck ended up stranded on its rear end and suffered the indignity of having to be helped down with a crane.<br />
Lewis, who runs a distribution company in East Sussex, had to sit helplessly as flammable liquid leaked on to the piping hot exhaust system.<br />
<br />
He said: 'We were taking part in the freestyle event where drivers have 90 seconds to do whatever they want in front of the judging crowd - burnouts, donuts, those sorts of things.<br />
'There was also a bus to smash over and the fire engine, which everyone was a bit sceptical about but I fired myself up and decided to go for it.<br />
<br />
'I hit the fire engine perfectly but it was much harder than I imagined and it didn't 'give' so the next thing I find is that I'm completely vertical and there's nothing I can do about it.'<br />
The truck, which has a 1,800bhp engine and tyres costing £8,000 a set, was stuck for six minutes as crowed watched with anticipation.<br />
Emergency crews then strapped a chain around the front axle to prevent it falling on its roof before slowly pulling it backwards, successfully dislodging it.<br />
The incident, the first of its kind in the UK, took place in front of 10,000 fans on Sunday at the Monster Truck Nationals at the Santa Pod Raceway in Northamptonshire.<br />
Santa Pod, which has been entertaining petrol heads for 45 years, also hosts the FIA European Drag Racing Championships from September 8 to September 11.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Moment_monster_truck_go...jpg
  • 25/08/2011<br />
Housing worker kills monster, 3ft rat in New York project ... and says there are more<br />
<br />
<br />
A huge rat has been speared to death by a pitchfork at a sprawling New York housing project.<br />
Jose Rivera, a Housing Authority worker, was clearing a rat hole at the Marcy Houses in Brooklyn when three of the mutants popped out.<br />
He was only able to nab one. It appears to be almost three feet long, including the tail, is covered in white fur and looks well-fed.<br />
Mr Rivera, 48, said: 'I hit it one time and it was still moving.<br />
<br />
'I hit it another time and that's when it died. I'm not scared of rats but I was scared of being bitten.'<br />
Naomi Colon, head of the Marcy Houses Tenant Association, said there have been sightings of the outsize rat for at least six years.<br />
She said: 'The residents have told me that they've seen it running around with other rats.<br />
'She lived with them. She ran into the same hole they ran in.'<br />
Animal experts have identified the monster rodent as a Gambian pouched rat, which is a fairly common pet rat.<br />
They are nocturnal, can grow to three feet and weigh four pounds or more and live seven or eight years, the New York Daily News reports.<br />
Imports have been banned since 2003, when they were blamed for a monkeypox outbreak that sickened 100 people in the U.S.<br />
Dr Paul Calle, director of zoological health at the Wildlife Conservation Society, said the Marcy Houses specimen was probably an escaped or discarded pet who decided to join the regular rats.<br />
He said: 'They are a very social animal and live in big groups in the wild.<br />
'Our Norway rats are the closest big rodents it could accompany.'<br />
He said they can be trained to sniff out landmines,adding that 'they're pretty remarkable animals.'<br />
Tenants fear that the Gambian rat has been breeding with the Norway rats and spawning a super-breed of rodents.<br />
But Mr Calle said the imported rat probably would not mate with local rats, and it couldn't reproduce if it did, because each is from a different genus.<br />
One Marcy Hou
    Exclusivepix_Housing_worker_kills_mo...jpg
  • julia roberts after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • julia roberts after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • julia roberts after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • julia roberts after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • julia roberts after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • julia roberts after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • GEORGE CLOONEY after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • GEORGE CLOONEY after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • GEORGE CLOONEY after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • GEORGE CLOONEY after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • JULIA ROBERTS, JODIE FOSTER after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • JULIA ROBERTS  after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • JODIE FOSTER after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • JODIE FOSTER  after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • JULIA ROBERTS   after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • JULIA ROBERTS   after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • GEORGE CLOONEY after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • GEORGE CLOONEY after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • julia roberts after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • julia roberts after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • julia roberts after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • julia roberts after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • GEORGE CLOONEY after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • JODIE FOSTER after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • JODIE FOSTER  after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • JODIE FOSTER  after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • GEORGE CLOONEY after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • GEORGE CLOONEY after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • GEORGE CLOONEY after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • GEORGE CLOONEY after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • GEORGE CLOONEY after the money monster movie photocall during the sixty ninth cannes film festival Thursday, May 12, 2016<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_After_the_money_monster_Cannes...jpg
  • 'I like doing donuts, driving over cars and wheelies': Meet the world's youngest monster truck driver at just EIGHT years old<br />
<br />
He may be too young to have a driver's license but eight-year-old Kaid Jaret Olson-Weston has been entertaining Americans as the world's youngest monster truck driver for years.<br />
The third-grader, who got his first monster truck when he was just six years old, has become an internet sensation thanks to the videos he and his school-age fans have uploaded on YouTube.<br />
'I like doing donuts. I like going over the cars. My favorite is doing the wheelies. My truck has so much power,'<br />
The Fort Lauderdale youngster's love of the niche sport began at the tender age of three, when he attended his first monster truck show at Sun Life Stadium with his dad, Tod Weston, an avid fan.<br />
'When he came back, he said, 'I want to be a monster truck driver,' Weston said. 'He was pretty much set on what he wanted to do.'<br />
Weston and wife Nancy, who also has her own monster truck, the Fancy Nancy, started Kaid off on a go-cart that looked like a monster truck at age four but pretty soon he was driving the real thing - almost.<br />
<br />
At 11 feet long, 7 feet high and weighing just under 3,000 pounds, Kaid's truck, called Monster Bear, is half the size of a full-size monster truck, which is about 20 feet long, 13 feet high and 10,000 pounds.<br />
The bright-blue-and-green beast has as a harness, neck restraints and a roll cage that keep Kid KJ, as his followers affectionately call him, tightly strapped in and he also wears a fire suit.<br />
His parents have a remote ignition-interrupt system that can stop the truck during shows if something goes wrong.<br />
<br />
'It's an extreme sport, but it's extremely safe. We made it safe,' Weston said. 'I see the passion in him. I see him doing what he loves, and I see him doing it well. It's a gleam from ear to ear.'<br />
During the week, Kaid is an ordinary third-grader at Westminster Academy but he spends his weekends touring the country, performing for fans a
    Exclusivepix_youngest_ truck_driver0...jpg
  • 'I like doing donuts, driving over cars and wheelies': Meet the world's youngest monster truck driver at just EIGHT years old<br />
<br />
He may be too young to have a driver's license but eight-year-old Kaid Jaret Olson-Weston has been entertaining Americans as the world's youngest monster truck driver for years.<br />
The third-grader, who got his first monster truck when he was just six years old, has become an internet sensation thanks to the videos he and his school-age fans have uploaded on YouTube.<br />
'I like doing donuts. I like going over the cars. My favorite is doing the wheelies. My truck has so much power,'<br />
The Fort Lauderdale youngster's love of the niche sport began at the tender age of three, when he attended his first monster truck show at Sun Life Stadium with his dad, Tod Weston, an avid fan.<br />
'When he came back, he said, 'I want to be a monster truck driver,' Weston said. 'He was pretty much set on what he wanted to do.'<br />
Weston and wife Nancy, who also has her own monster truck, the Fancy Nancy, started Kaid off on a go-cart that looked like a monster truck at age four but pretty soon he was driving the real thing - almost.<br />
<br />
At 11 feet long, 7 feet high and weighing just under 3,000 pounds, Kaid's truck, called Monster Bear, is half the size of a full-size monster truck, which is about 20 feet long, 13 feet high and 10,000 pounds.<br />
The bright-blue-and-green beast has as a harness, neck restraints and a roll cage that keep Kid KJ, as his followers affectionately call him, tightly strapped in and he also wears a fire suit.<br />
His parents have a remote ignition-interrupt system that can stop the truck during shows if something goes wrong.<br />
<br />
'It's an extreme sport, but it's extremely safe. We made it safe,' Weston said. 'I see the passion in him. I see him doing what he loves, and I see him doing it well. It's a gleam from ear to ear.'<br />
During the week, Kaid is an ordinary third-grader at Westminster Academy but he spends his weekends touring the country, performing for fans a
    Exclusivepix_youngest_ truck_driver0...jpg
  • 'I like doing donuts, driving over cars and wheelies': Meet the world's youngest monster truck driver at just EIGHT years old<br />
<br />
He may be too young to have a driver's license but eight-year-old Kaid Jaret Olson-Weston has been entertaining Americans as the world's youngest monster truck driver for years.<br />
The third-grader, who got his first monster truck when he was just six years old, has become an internet sensation thanks to the videos he and his school-age fans have uploaded on YouTube.<br />
'I like doing donuts. I like going over the cars. My favorite is doing the wheelies. My truck has so much power,'<br />
The Fort Lauderdale youngster's love of the niche sport began at the tender age of three, when he attended his first monster truck show at Sun Life Stadium with his dad, Tod Weston, an avid fan.<br />
'When he came back, he said, 'I want to be a monster truck driver,' Weston said. 'He was pretty much set on what he wanted to do.'<br />
Weston and wife Nancy, who also has her own monster truck, the Fancy Nancy, started Kaid off on a go-cart that looked like a monster truck at age four but pretty soon he was driving the real thing - almost.<br />
<br />
At 11 feet long, 7 feet high and weighing just under 3,000 pounds, Kaid's truck, called Monster Bear, is half the size of a full-size monster truck, which is about 20 feet long, 13 feet high and 10,000 pounds.<br />
The bright-blue-and-green beast has as a harness, neck restraints and a roll cage that keep Kid KJ, as his followers affectionately call him, tightly strapped in and he also wears a fire suit.<br />
His parents have a remote ignition-interrupt system that can stop the truck during shows if something goes wrong.<br />
<br />
'It's an extreme sport, but it's extremely safe. We made it safe,' Weston said. 'I see the passion in him. I see him doing what he loves, and I see him doing it well. It's a gleam from ear to ear.'<br />
During the week, Kaid is an ordinary third-grader at Westminster Academy but he spends his weekends touring the country, performing for fans a
    Exclusivepix_youngest_ truck_driver1...jpg
  • 'I like doing donuts, driving over cars and wheelies': Meet the world's youngest monster truck driver at just EIGHT years old<br />
<br />
He may be too young to have a driver's license but eight-year-old Kaid Jaret Olson-Weston has been entertaining Americans as the world's youngest monster truck driver for years.<br />
The third-grader, who got his first monster truck when he was just six years old, has become an internet sensation thanks to the videos he and his school-age fans have uploaded on YouTube.<br />
'I like doing donuts. I like going over the cars. My favorite is doing the wheelies. My truck has so much power,'<br />
The Fort Lauderdale youngster's love of the niche sport began at the tender age of three, when he attended his first monster truck show at Sun Life Stadium with his dad, Tod Weston, an avid fan.<br />
'When he came back, he said, 'I want to be a monster truck driver,' Weston said. 'He was pretty much set on what he wanted to do.'<br />
Weston and wife Nancy, who also has her own monster truck, the Fancy Nancy, started Kaid off on a go-cart that looked like a monster truck at age four but pretty soon he was driving the real thing - almost.<br />
<br />
At 11 feet long, 7 feet high and weighing just under 3,000 pounds, Kaid's truck, called Monster Bear, is half the size of a full-size monster truck, which is about 20 feet long, 13 feet high and 10,000 pounds.<br />
The bright-blue-and-green beast has as a harness, neck restraints and a roll cage that keep Kid KJ, as his followers affectionately call him, tightly strapped in and he also wears a fire suit.<br />
His parents have a remote ignition-interrupt system that can stop the truck during shows if something goes wrong.<br />
<br />
'It's an extreme sport, but it's extremely safe. We made it safe,' Weston said. 'I see the passion in him. I see him doing what he loves, and I see him doing it well. It's a gleam from ear to ear.'<br />
During the week, Kaid is an ordinary third-grader at Westminster Academy but he spends his weekends touring the country, performing for fans a
    Exclusivepix_youngest_ truck_driver1...jpg
  • 'I like doing donuts, driving over cars and wheelies': Meet the world's youngest monster truck driver at just EIGHT years old<br />
<br />
He may be too young to have a driver's license but eight-year-old Kaid Jaret Olson-Weston has been entertaining Americans as the world's youngest monster truck driver for years.<br />
The third-grader, who got his first monster truck when he was just six years old, has become an internet sensation thanks to the videos he and his school-age fans have uploaded on YouTube.<br />
'I like doing donuts. I like going over the cars. My favorite is doing the wheelies. My truck has so much power,'<br />
The Fort Lauderdale youngster's love of the niche sport began at the tender age of three, when he attended his first monster truck show at Sun Life Stadium with his dad, Tod Weston, an avid fan.<br />
'When he came back, he said, 'I want to be a monster truck driver,' Weston said. 'He was pretty much set on what he wanted to do.'<br />
Weston and wife Nancy, who also has her own monster truck, the Fancy Nancy, started Kaid off on a go-cart that looked like a monster truck at age four but pretty soon he was driving the real thing - almost.<br />
<br />
At 11 feet long, 7 feet high and weighing just under 3,000 pounds, Kaid's truck, called Monster Bear, is half the size of a full-size monster truck, which is about 20 feet long, 13 feet high and 10,000 pounds.<br />
The bright-blue-and-green beast has as a harness, neck restraints and a roll cage that keep Kid KJ, as his followers affectionately call him, tightly strapped in and he also wears a fire suit.<br />
His parents have a remote ignition-interrupt system that can stop the truck during shows if something goes wrong.<br />
<br />
'It's an extreme sport, but it's extremely safe. We made it safe,' Weston said. 'I see the passion in him. I see him doing what he loves, and I see him doing it well. It's a gleam from ear to ear.'<br />
During the week, Kaid is an ordinary third-grader at Westminster Academy but he spends his weekends touring the country, performing for fans a
    Exclusivepix_youngest_ truck_driver1...jpg
  • 'I like doing donuts, driving over cars and wheelies': Meet the world's youngest monster truck driver at just EIGHT years old<br />
<br />
He may be too young to have a driver's license but eight-year-old Kaid Jaret Olson-Weston has been entertaining Americans as the world's youngest monster truck driver for years.<br />
The third-grader, who got his first monster truck when he was just six years old, has become an internet sensation thanks to the videos he and his school-age fans have uploaded on YouTube.<br />
'I like doing donuts. I like going over the cars. My favorite is doing the wheelies. My truck has so much power,'<br />
The Fort Lauderdale youngster's love of the niche sport began at the tender age of three, when he attended his first monster truck show at Sun Life Stadium with his dad, Tod Weston, an avid fan.<br />
'When he came back, he said, 'I want to be a monster truck driver,' Weston said. 'He was pretty much set on what he wanted to do.'<br />
Weston and wife Nancy, who also has her own monster truck, the Fancy Nancy, started Kaid off on a go-cart that looked like a monster truck at age four but pretty soon he was driving the real thing - almost.<br />
<br />
At 11 feet long, 7 feet high and weighing just under 3,000 pounds, Kaid's truck, called Monster Bear, is half the size of a full-size monster truck, which is about 20 feet long, 13 feet high and 10,000 pounds.<br />
The bright-blue-and-green beast has as a harness, neck restraints and a roll cage that keep Kid KJ, as his followers affectionately call him, tightly strapped in and he also wears a fire suit.<br />
His parents have a remote ignition-interrupt system that can stop the truck during shows if something goes wrong.<br />
<br />
'It's an extreme sport, but it's extremely safe. We made it safe,' Weston said. 'I see the passion in him. I see him doing what he loves, and I see him doing it well. It's a gleam from ear to ear.'<br />
During the week, Kaid is an ordinary third-grader at Westminster Academy but he spends his weekends touring the country, performing for fans a
    Exclusivepix_youngest_ truck_driver1...jpg
  • 'I like doing donuts, driving over cars and wheelies': Meet the world's youngest monster truck driver at just EIGHT years old<br />
<br />
He may be too young to have a driver's license but eight-year-old Kaid Jaret Olson-Weston has been entertaining Americans as the world's youngest monster truck driver for years.<br />
The third-grader, who got his first monster truck when he was just six years old, has become an internet sensation thanks to the videos he and his school-age fans have uploaded on YouTube.<br />
'I like doing donuts. I like going over the cars. My favorite is doing the wheelies. My truck has so much power,'<br />
The Fort Lauderdale youngster's love of the niche sport began at the tender age of three, when he attended his first monster truck show at Sun Life Stadium with his dad, Tod Weston, an avid fan.<br />
'When he came back, he said, 'I want to be a monster truck driver,' Weston said. 'He was pretty much set on what he wanted to do.'<br />
Weston and wife Nancy, who also has her own monster truck, the Fancy Nancy, started Kaid off on a go-cart that looked like a monster truck at age four but pretty soon he was driving the real thing - almost.<br />
<br />
At 11 feet long, 7 feet high and weighing just under 3,000 pounds, Kaid's truck, called Monster Bear, is half the size of a full-size monster truck, which is about 20 feet long, 13 feet high and 10,000 pounds.<br />
The bright-blue-and-green beast has as a harness, neck restraints and a roll cage that keep Kid KJ, as his followers affectionately call him, tightly strapped in and he also wears a fire suit.<br />
His parents have a remote ignition-interrupt system that can stop the truck during shows if something goes wrong.<br />
<br />
'It's an extreme sport, but it's extremely safe. We made it safe,' Weston said. 'I see the passion in him. I see him doing what he loves, and I see him doing it well. It's a gleam from ear to ear.'<br />
During the week, Kaid is an ordinary third-grader at Westminster Academy but he spends his weekends touring the country, performing for fans a
    Exclusivepix_youngest_ truck_driver1...jpg
  • 'I like doing donuts, driving over cars and wheelies': Meet the world's youngest monster truck driver at just EIGHT years old<br />
<br />
He may be too young to have a driver's license but eight-year-old Kaid Jaret Olson-Weston has been entertaining Americans as the world's youngest monster truck driver for years.<br />
The third-grader, who got his first monster truck when he was just six years old, has become an internet sensation thanks to the videos he and his school-age fans have uploaded on YouTube.<br />
'I like doing donuts. I like going over the cars. My favorite is doing the wheelies. My truck has so much power,'<br />
The Fort Lauderdale youngster's love of the niche sport began at the tender age of three, when he attended his first monster truck show at Sun Life Stadium with his dad, Tod Weston, an avid fan.<br />
'When he came back, he said, 'I want to be a monster truck driver,' Weston said. 'He was pretty much set on what he wanted to do.'<br />
Weston and wife Nancy, who also has her own monster truck, the Fancy Nancy, started Kaid off on a go-cart that looked like a monster truck at age four but pretty soon he was driving the real thing - almost.<br />
<br />
At 11 feet long, 7 feet high and weighing just under 3,000 pounds, Kaid's truck, called Monster Bear, is half the size of a full-size monster truck, which is about 20 feet long, 13 feet high and 10,000 pounds.<br />
The bright-blue-and-green beast has as a harness, neck restraints and a roll cage that keep Kid KJ, as his followers affectionately call him, tightly strapped in and he also wears a fire suit.<br />
His parents have a remote ignition-interrupt system that can stop the truck during shows if something goes wrong.<br />
<br />
'It's an extreme sport, but it's extremely safe. We made it safe,' Weston said. 'I see the passion in him. I see him doing what he loves, and I see him doing it well. It's a gleam from ear to ear.'<br />
During the week, Kaid is an ordinary third-grader at Westminster Academy but he spends his weekends touring the country, performing for fans a
    Exclusivepix_youngest_ truck_driver0...jpg
  • 'I like doing donuts, driving over cars and wheelies': Meet the world's youngest monster truck driver at just EIGHT years old<br />
<br />
He may be too young to have a driver's license but eight-year-old Kaid Jaret Olson-Weston has been entertaining Americans as the world's youngest monster truck driver for years.<br />
The third-grader, who got his first monster truck when he was just six years old, has become an internet sensation thanks to the videos he and his school-age fans have uploaded on YouTube.<br />
'I like doing donuts. I like going over the cars. My favorite is doing the wheelies. My truck has so much power,'<br />
The Fort Lauderdale youngster's love of the niche sport began at the tender age of three, when he attended his first monster truck show at Sun Life Stadium with his dad, Tod Weston, an avid fan.<br />
'When he came back, he said, 'I want to be a monster truck driver,' Weston said. 'He was pretty much set on what he wanted to do.'<br />
Weston and wife Nancy, who also has her own monster truck, the Fancy Nancy, started Kaid off on a go-cart that looked like a monster truck at age four but pretty soon he was driving the real thing - almost.<br />
<br />
At 11 feet long, 7 feet high and weighing just under 3,000 pounds, Kaid's truck, called Monster Bear, is half the size of a full-size monster truck, which is about 20 feet long, 13 feet high and 10,000 pounds.<br />
The bright-blue-and-green beast has as a harness, neck restraints and a roll cage that keep Kid KJ, as his followers affectionately call him, tightly strapped in and he also wears a fire suit.<br />
His parents have a remote ignition-interrupt system that can stop the truck during shows if something goes wrong.<br />
<br />
'It's an extreme sport, but it's extremely safe. We made it safe,' Weston said. 'I see the passion in him. I see him doing what he loves, and I see him doing it well. It's a gleam from ear to ear.'<br />
During the week, Kaid is an ordinary third-grader at Westminster Academy but he spends his weekends touring the country, performing for fans a
    Exclusivepix_youngest_ truck_driver0...jpg
  • 'I like doing donuts, driving over cars and wheelies': Meet the world's youngest monster truck driver at just EIGHT years old<br />
<br />
He may be too young to have a driver's license but eight-year-old Kaid Jaret Olson-Weston has been entertaining Americans as the world's youngest monster truck driver for years.<br />
The third-grader, who got his first monster truck when he was just six years old, has become an internet sensation thanks to the videos he and his school-age fans have uploaded on YouTube.<br />
'I like doing donuts. I like going over the cars. My favorite is doing the wheelies. My truck has so much power,'<br />
The Fort Lauderdale youngster's love of the niche sport began at the tender age of three, when he attended his first monster truck show at Sun Life Stadium with his dad, Tod Weston, an avid fan.<br />
'When he came back, he said, 'I want to be a monster truck driver,' Weston said. 'He was pretty much set on what he wanted to do.'<br />
Weston and wife Nancy, who also has her own monster truck, the Fancy Nancy, started Kaid off on a go-cart that looked like a monster truck at age four but pretty soon he was driving the real thing - almost.<br />
<br />
At 11 feet long, 7 feet high and weighing just under 3,000 pounds, Kaid's truck, called Monster Bear, is half the size of a full-size monster truck, which is about 20 feet long, 13 feet high and 10,000 pounds.<br />
The bright-blue-and-green beast has as a harness, neck restraints and a roll cage that keep Kid KJ, as his followers affectionately call him, tightly strapped in and he also wears a fire suit.<br />
His parents have a remote ignition-interrupt system that can stop the truck during shows if something goes wrong.<br />
<br />
'It's an extreme sport, but it's extremely safe. We made it safe,' Weston said. 'I see the passion in him. I see him doing what he loves, and I see him doing it well. It's a gleam from ear to ear.'<br />
During the week, Kaid is an ordinary third-grader at Westminster Academy but he spends his weekends touring the country, performing for fans a
    Exclusivepix_youngest_ truck_driver0...jpg
  • 'I like doing donuts, driving over cars and wheelies': Meet the world's youngest monster truck driver at just EIGHT years old<br />
<br />
He may be too young to have a driver's license but eight-year-old Kaid Jaret Olson-Weston has been entertaining Americans as the world's youngest monster truck driver for years.<br />
The third-grader, who got his first monster truck when he was just six years old, has become an internet sensation thanks to the videos he and his school-age fans have uploaded on YouTube.<br />
'I like doing donuts. I like going over the cars. My favorite is doing the wheelies. My truck has so much power,'<br />
The Fort Lauderdale youngster's love of the niche sport began at the tender age of three, when he attended his first monster truck show at Sun Life Stadium with his dad, Tod Weston, an avid fan.<br />
'When he came back, he said, 'I want to be a monster truck driver,' Weston said. 'He was pretty much set on what he wanted to do.'<br />
Weston and wife Nancy, who also has her own monster truck, the Fancy Nancy, started Kaid off on a go-cart that looked like a monster truck at age four but pretty soon he was driving the real thing - almost.<br />
<br />
At 11 feet long, 7 feet high and weighing just under 3,000 pounds, Kaid's truck, called Monster Bear, is half the size of a full-size monster truck, which is about 20 feet long, 13 feet high and 10,000 pounds.<br />
The bright-blue-and-green beast has as a harness, neck restraints and a roll cage that keep Kid KJ, as his followers affectionately call him, tightly strapped in and he also wears a fire suit.<br />
His parents have a remote ignition-interrupt system that can stop the truck during shows if something goes wrong.<br />
<br />
'It's an extreme sport, but it's extremely safe. We made it safe,' Weston said. 'I see the passion in him. I see him doing what he loves, and I see him doing it well. It's a gleam from ear to ear.'<br />
During the week, Kaid is an ordinary third-grader at Westminster Academy but he spends his weekends touring the country, performing for fans a
    Exclusivepix_youngest_ truck_driver0...jpg
  • 'I like doing donuts, driving over cars and wheelies': Meet the world's youngest monster truck driver at just EIGHT years old<br />
<br />
He may be too young to have a driver's license but eight-year-old Kaid Jaret Olson-Weston has been entertaining Americans as the world's youngest monster truck driver for years.<br />
The third-grader, who got his first monster truck when he was just six years old, has become an internet sensation thanks to the videos he and his school-age fans have uploaded on YouTube.<br />
'I like doing donuts. I like going over the cars. My favorite is doing the wheelies. My truck has so much power,'<br />
The Fort Lauderdale youngster's love of the niche sport began at the tender age of three, when he attended his first monster truck show at Sun Life Stadium with his dad, Tod Weston, an avid fan.<br />
'When he came back, he said, 'I want to be a monster truck driver,' Weston said. 'He was pretty much set on what he wanted to do.'<br />
Weston and wife Nancy, who also has her own monster truck, the Fancy Nancy, started Kaid off on a go-cart that looked like a monster truck at age four but pretty soon he was driving the real thing - almost.<br />
<br />
At 11 feet long, 7 feet high and weighing just under 3,000 pounds, Kaid's truck, called Monster Bear, is half the size of a full-size monster truck, which is about 20 feet long, 13 feet high and 10,000 pounds.<br />
The bright-blue-and-green beast has as a harness, neck restraints and a roll cage that keep Kid KJ, as his followers affectionately call him, tightly strapped in and he also wears a fire suit.<br />
His parents have a remote ignition-interrupt system that can stop the truck during shows if something goes wrong.<br />
<br />
'It's an extreme sport, but it's extremely safe. We made it safe,' Weston said. 'I see the passion in him. I see him doing what he loves, and I see him doing it well. It's a gleam from ear to ear.'<br />
During the week, Kaid is an ordinary third-grader at Westminster Academy but he spends his weekends touring the country, performing for fans a
    Exclusivepix_youngest_ truck_driver0...jpg
  • 'I like doing donuts, driving over cars and wheelies': Meet the world's youngest monster truck driver at just EIGHT years old<br />
<br />
He may be too young to have a driver's license but eight-year-old Kaid Jaret Olson-Weston has been entertaining Americans as the world's youngest monster truck driver for years.<br />
The third-grader, who got his first monster truck when he was just six years old, has become an internet sensation thanks to the videos he and his school-age fans have uploaded on YouTube.<br />
'I like doing donuts. I like going over the cars. My favorite is doing the wheelies. My truck has so much power,'<br />
The Fort Lauderdale youngster's love of the niche sport began at the tender age of three, when he attended his first monster truck show at Sun Life Stadium with his dad, Tod Weston, an avid fan.<br />
'When he came back, he said, 'I want to be a monster truck driver,' Weston said. 'He was pretty much set on what he wanted to do.'<br />
Weston and wife Nancy, who also has her own monster truck, the Fancy Nancy, started Kaid off on a go-cart that looked like a monster truck at age four but pretty soon he was driving the real thing - almost.<br />
<br />
At 11 feet long, 7 feet high and weighing just under 3,000 pounds, Kaid's truck, called Monster Bear, is half the size of a full-size monster truck, which is about 20 feet long, 13 feet high and 10,000 pounds.<br />
The bright-blue-and-green beast has as a harness, neck restraints and a roll cage that keep Kid KJ, as his followers affectionately call him, tightly strapped in and he also wears a fire suit.<br />
His parents have a remote ignition-interrupt system that can stop the truck during shows if something goes wrong.<br />
<br />
'It's an extreme sport, but it's extremely safe. We made it safe,' Weston said. 'I see the passion in him. I see him doing what he loves, and I see him doing it well. It's a gleam from ear to ear.'<br />
During the week, Kaid is an ordinary third-grader at Westminster Academy but he spends his weekends touring the country, performing for fans a
    Exclusivepix_youngest_ truck_driver0...jpg
  • 'I like doing donuts, driving over cars and wheelies': Meet the world's youngest monster truck driver at just EIGHT years old<br />
<br />
He may be too young to have a driver's license but eight-year-old Kaid Jaret Olson-Weston has been entertaining Americans as the world's youngest monster truck driver for years.<br />
The third-grader, who got his first monster truck when he was just six years old, has become an internet sensation thanks to the videos he and his school-age fans have uploaded on YouTube.<br />
'I like doing donuts. I like going over the cars. My favorite is doing the wheelies. My truck has so much power,'<br />
The Fort Lauderdale youngster's love of the niche sport began at the tender age of three, when he attended his first monster truck show at Sun Life Stadium with his dad, Tod Weston, an avid fan.<br />
'When he came back, he said, 'I want to be a monster truck driver,' Weston said. 'He was pretty much set on what he wanted to do.'<br />
Weston and wife Nancy, who also has her own monster truck, the Fancy Nancy, started Kaid off on a go-cart that looked like a monster truck at age four but pretty soon he was driving the real thing - almost.<br />
<br />
At 11 feet long, 7 feet high and weighing just under 3,000 pounds, Kaid's truck, called Monster Bear, is half the size of a full-size monster truck, which is about 20 feet long, 13 feet high and 10,000 pounds.<br />
The bright-blue-and-green beast has as a harness, neck restraints and a roll cage that keep Kid KJ, as his followers affectionately call him, tightly strapped in and he also wears a fire suit.<br />
His parents have a remote ignition-interrupt system that can stop the truck during shows if something goes wrong.<br />
<br />
'It's an extreme sport, but it's extremely safe. We made it safe,' Weston said. 'I see the passion in him. I see him doing what he loves, and I see him doing it well. It's a gleam from ear to ear.'<br />
During the week, Kaid is an ordinary third-grader at Westminster Academy but he spends his weekends touring the country, performing for fans a
    Exclusivepix_youngest_ truck_driver0...jpg
  • May 20, 2010 - Ontario, Canada - <br />
<br />
New Montauk Monster Sighting? Bizarre Creature Washes Up In Small Ontario Town<br />
<br />
Locals in a small Canadian town have been stumped by the appearance of a bizarre creature, which was dragged from a lake. The animal, which has a long hairy body with bald skin on its head, feet and face, has prompted wild internet speculation that it is a more evolved version of the famous 'Montauk monster'.<br />
The creature was discovered by two nurses in the town of Kitchenuhmaykoosib in Ontario, Canada, while out on a walk with their dog. When the dog began sniffing in the lake, the two women started investigating, before the dog pulled the dead animal out. After taking some photographs of the odd animal, the nurses left it alone. When locals decided to go back and retrieve the body, it has disappeared. The photographs have now been posted on a local website, with an explanation which reads: 'This creature was first discovered by Sam the Dog, a local dog.<br />
'It was discovered first week of May in the creek section of town, hikers noticed Sam sniffing something in the water and they approached to see in what the Sam had detected and they noticed the creature in the water face down.<br />
The dog jumped in the lake and pulled the creature to the rocks and dragged it out for the hikers to see and these are the photos they took.  'The creature's tail is like a rat's tail and it is a foot long.' There has been much speculation about what kind of species the animal is. Photo Shows: The animal, which has a long hairy body with bald skin on its head, feet and face, has prompted wild internet speculation that it is a more evolved version of the famous 'Montauk monster'<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Bizarre_Creature_Washes...jpg
  • May 20, 2010 - Ontario, Canada - <br />
<br />
New Montauk Monster Sighting? Bizarre Creature Washes Up In Small Ontario Town<br />
<br />
Locals in a small Canadian town have been stumped by the appearance of a bizarre creature, which was dragged from a lake. The animal, which has a long hairy body with bald skin on its head, feet and face, has prompted wild internet speculation that it is a more evolved version of the famous 'Montauk monster'.<br />
The creature was discovered by two nurses in the town of Kitchenuhmaykoosib in Ontario, Canada, while out on a walk with their dog. When the dog began sniffing in the lake, the two women started investigating, before the dog pulled the dead animal out. After taking some photographs of the odd animal, the nurses left it alone. When locals decided to go back and retrieve the body, it has disappeared. The photographs have now been posted on a local website, with an explanation which reads: 'This creature was first discovered by Sam the Dog, a local dog.<br />
'It was discovered first week of May in the creek section of town, hikers noticed Sam sniffing something in the water and they approached to see in what the Sam had detected and they noticed the creature in the water face down.<br />
The dog jumped in the lake and pulled the creature to the rocks and dragged it out for the hikers to see and these are the photos they took.  'The creature's tail is like a rat's tail and it is a foot long.' There has been much speculation about what kind of species the animal is. Photo Shows: The animal, which has a long hairy body with bald skin on its head, feet and face, has prompted wild internet speculation that it is a more evolved version of the famous 'Montauk monster'<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Bizarre_Creature_Washes...jpg
  • May 20, 2010 - Ontario, Canada - <br />
<br />
New Montauk Monster Sighting? Bizarre Creature Washes Up In Small Ontario Town<br />
<br />
Locals in a small Canadian town have been stumped by the appearance of a bizarre creature, which was dragged from a lake. The animal, which has a long hairy body with bald skin on its head, feet and face, has prompted wild internet speculation that it is a more evolved version of the famous 'Montauk monster'.<br />
The creature was discovered by two nurses in the town of Kitchenuhmaykoosib in Ontario, Canada, while out on a walk with their dog. When the dog began sniffing in the lake, the two women started investigating, before the dog pulled the dead animal out. After taking some photographs of the odd animal, the nurses left it alone. When locals decided to go back and retrieve the body, it has disappeared. The photographs have now been posted on a local website, with an explanation which reads: 'This creature was first discovered by Sam the Dog, a local dog.<br />
'It was discovered first week of May in the creek section of town, hikers noticed Sam sniffing something in the water and they approached to see in what the Sam had detected and they noticed the creature in the water face down.<br />
The dog jumped in the lake and pulled the creature to the rocks and dragged it out for the hikers to see and these are the photos they took.  'The creature's tail is like a rat's tail and it is a foot long.' There has been much speculation about what kind of species the animal is. Photo Shows: The animal, which has a long hairy body with bald skin on its head, feet and face, has prompted wild internet speculation that it is a more evolved version of the famous 'Montauk monster'<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Bizarre_Creature_Washes...jpg
  • Princess leia topless art class<br />
Its the ultimate art class for geeks  the chance to sketch Princess Leia from Star Wars in and OUT of her gold slave bikini. The scene where she is chained up by Jabba the Hutt was made immortal by Carrie Fisher and shocked fans at the time. Since then, the look has been copied millions of times, but one art class decided Star Wars fans should get the chance to get under the skin of the scene, by showing, well, a lot more skin. It was the brainchild of Molly Crabapple, the founder of Dr Sketchys Anti-Art School. The 28-year-old from Brooklyn, New York City, said: Hey, Art Wookies! Do you remember that scene in Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi where Leia is captured by Jabba the Hutt and he keeps her on a chain in a metal bikini? Yes you do! Don't even try to lie to me! It's a perfectly normal and natural part of every nerd's sexual development and is nothing to be ashamed of. Anyway, to make a long story short, Leia strangles Jabba to death with the chain so instead of being chained to a bloated slug monster, she's chained to the corpse of a bloated slug monster until R2D2 cuts her free and she makes her escape. But then what happened? The next time we see her, she's aboard the Millenium Falcon. So what happened on the way from Jabba's lair to the Millenium Falcon? I bet you never even asked that question! Well, luckily for you, we did and as it turns out, before she made it into space and changed out of her slave outfit, she posed for a life drawing class. Now you can see this lost chapter from the Original Trilogy, with the incomparable Justine Joli as Leia Organa. Justin Lussier took the pictures. Geek heaven indeed.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Princess_leia_topless_a...jpg
  • Princess leia topless art class<br />
Its the ultimate art class for geeks  the chance to sketch Princess Leia from Star Wars in and OUT of her gold slave bikini. The scene where she is chained up by Jabba the Hutt was made immortal by Carrie Fisher and shocked fans at the time. Since then, the look has been copied millions of times, but one art class decided Star Wars fans should get the chance to get under the skin of the scene, by showing, well, a lot more skin. It was the brainchild of Molly Crabapple, the founder of Dr Sketchys Anti-Art School. The 28-year-old from Brooklyn, New York City, said: Hey, Art Wookies! Do you remember that scene in Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi where Leia is captured by Jabba the Hutt and he keeps her on a chain in a metal bikini? Yes you do! Don't even try to lie to me! It's a perfectly normal and natural part of every nerd's sexual development and is nothing to be ashamed of. Anyway, to make a long story short, Leia strangles Jabba to death with the chain so instead of being chained to a bloated slug monster, she's chained to the corpse of a bloated slug monster until R2D2 cuts her free and she makes her escape. But then what happened? The next time we see her, she's aboard the Millenium Falcon. So what happened on the way from Jabba's lair to the Millenium Falcon? I bet you never even asked that question! Well, luckily for you, we did and as it turns out, before she made it into space and changed out of her slave outfit, she posed for a life drawing class. Now you can see this lost chapter from the Original Trilogy, with the incomparable Justine Joli as Leia Organa. Justin Lussier took the pictures. Geek heaven indeed.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Princess_leia_topless_a...jpg
  • Princess leia topless art class<br />
Its the ultimate art class for geeks  the chance to sketch Princess Leia from Star Wars in and OUT of her gold slave bikini. The scene where she is chained up by Jabba the Hutt was made immortal by Carrie Fisher and shocked fans at the time. Since then, the look has been copied millions of times, but one art class decided Star Wars fans should get the chance to get under the skin of the scene, by showing, well, a lot more skin. It was the brainchild of Molly Crabapple, the founder of Dr Sketchys Anti-Art School. The 28-year-old from Brooklyn, New York City, said: Hey, Art Wookies! Do you remember that scene in Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi where Leia is captured by Jabba the Hutt and he keeps her on a chain in a metal bikini? Yes you do! Don't even try to lie to me! It's a perfectly normal and natural part of every nerd's sexual development and is nothing to be ashamed of. Anyway, to make a long story short, Leia strangles Jabba to death with the chain so instead of being chained to a bloated slug monster, she's chained to the corpse of a bloated slug monster until R2D2 cuts her free and she makes her escape. But then what happened? The next time we see her, she's aboard the Millenium Falcon. So what happened on the way from Jabba's lair to the Millenium Falcon? I bet you never even asked that question! Well, luckily for you, we did and as it turns out, before she made it into space and changed out of her slave outfit, she posed for a life drawing class. Now you can see this lost chapter from the Original Trilogy, with the incomparable Justine Joli as Leia Organa. Justin Lussier took the pictures. Geek heaven indeed.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Princess_leia_topless_a...jpg
  • Princess leia topless art class<br />
Its the ultimate art class for geeks  the chance to sketch Princess Leia from Star Wars in and OUT of her gold slave bikini. The scene where she is chained up by Jabba the Hutt was made immortal by Carrie Fisher and shocked fans at the time. Since then, the look has been copied millions of times, but one art class decided Star Wars fans should get the chance to get under the skin of the scene, by showing, well, a lot more skin. It was the brainchild of Molly Crabapple, the founder of Dr Sketchys Anti-Art School. The 28-year-old from Brooklyn, New York City, said: Hey, Art Wookies! Do you remember that scene in Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi where Leia is captured by Jabba the Hutt and he keeps her on a chain in a metal bikini? Yes you do! Don't even try to lie to me! It's a perfectly normal and natural part of every nerd's sexual development and is nothing to be ashamed of. Anyway, to make a long story short, Leia strangles Jabba to death with the chain so instead of being chained to a bloated slug monster, she's chained to the corpse of a bloated slug monster until R2D2 cuts her free and she makes her escape. But then what happened? The next time we see her, she's aboard the Millenium Falcon. So what happened on the way from Jabba's lair to the Millenium Falcon? I bet you never even asked that question! Well, luckily for you, we did and as it turns out, before she made it into space and changed out of her slave outfit, she posed for a life drawing class. Now you can see this lost chapter from the Original Trilogy, with the incomparable Justine Joli as Leia Organa. Justin Lussier took the pictures. Geek heaven indeed.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Princess_leia_topless_a...jpg
  • Princess leia topless art class<br />
Its the ultimate art class for geeks  the chance to sketch Princess Leia from Star Wars in and OUT of her gold slave bikini. The scene where she is chained up by Jabba the Hutt was made immortal by Carrie Fisher and shocked fans at the time. Since then, the look has been copied millions of times, but one art class decided Star Wars fans should get the chance to get under the skin of the scene, by showing, well, a lot more skin. It was the brainchild of Molly Crabapple, the founder of Dr Sketchys Anti-Art School. The 28-year-old from Brooklyn, New York City, said: Hey, Art Wookies! Do you remember that scene in Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi where Leia is captured by Jabba the Hutt and he keeps her on a chain in a metal bikini? Yes you do! Don't even try to lie to me! It's a perfectly normal and natural part of every nerd's sexual development and is nothing to be ashamed of. Anyway, to make a long story short, Leia strangles Jabba to death with the chain so instead of being chained to a bloated slug monster, she's chained to the corpse of a bloated slug monster until R2D2 cuts her free and she makes her escape. But then what happened? The next time we see her, she's aboard the Millenium Falcon. So what happened on the way from Jabba's lair to the Millenium Falcon? I bet you never even asked that question! Well, luckily for you, we did and as it turns out, before she made it into space and changed out of her slave outfit, she posed for a life drawing class. Now you can see this lost chapter from the Original Trilogy, with the incomparable Justine Joli as Leia Organa. Justin Lussier took the pictures. Geek heaven indeed.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Princess_leia_topless_a...jpg
  • Princess leia topless art class<br />
Its the ultimate art class for geeks  the chance to sketch Princess Leia from Star Wars in and OUT of her gold slave bikini. The scene where she is chained up by Jabba the Hutt was made immortal by Carrie Fisher and shocked fans at the time. Since then, the look has been copied millions of times, but one art class decided Star Wars fans should get the chance to get under the skin of the scene, by showing, well, a lot more skin. It was the brainchild of Molly Crabapple, the founder of Dr Sketchys Anti-Art School. The 28-year-old from Brooklyn, New York City, said: Hey, Art Wookies! Do you remember that scene in Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi where Leia is captured by Jabba the Hutt and he keeps her on a chain in a metal bikini? Yes you do! Don't even try to lie to me! It's a perfectly normal and natural part of every nerd's sexual development and is nothing to be ashamed of. Anyway, to make a long story short, Leia strangles Jabba to death with the chain so instead of being chained to a bloated slug monster, she's chained to the corpse of a bloated slug monster until R2D2 cuts her free and she makes her escape. But then what happened? The next time we see her, she's aboard the Millenium Falcon. So what happened on the way from Jabba's lair to the Millenium Falcon? I bet you never even asked that question! Well, luckily for you, we did and as it turns out, before she made it into space and changed out of her slave outfit, she posed for a life drawing class. Now you can see this lost chapter from the Original Trilogy, with the incomparable Justine Joli as Leia Organa. Justin Lussier took the pictures. Geek heaven indeed.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Princess_leia_topless_a...jpg
  • Princess leia topless art class<br />
Its the ultimate art class for geeks  the chance to sketch Princess Leia from Star Wars in and OUT of her gold slave bikini. The scene where she is chained up by Jabba the Hutt was made immortal by Carrie Fisher and shocked fans at the time. Since then, the look has been copied millions of times, but one art class decided Star Wars fans should get the chance to get under the skin of the scene, by showing, well, a lot more skin. It was the brainchild of Molly Crabapple, the founder of Dr Sketchys Anti-Art School. The 28-year-old from Brooklyn, New York City, said: Hey, Art Wookies! Do you remember that scene in Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi where Leia is captured by Jabba the Hutt and he keeps her on a chain in a metal bikini? Yes you do! Don't even try to lie to me! It's a perfectly normal and natural part of every nerd's sexual development and is nothing to be ashamed of. Anyway, to make a long story short, Leia strangles Jabba to death with the chain so instead of being chained to a bloated slug monster, she's chained to the corpse of a bloated slug monster until R2D2 cuts her free and she makes her escape. But then what happened? The next time we see her, she's aboard the Millenium Falcon. So what happened on the way from Jabba's lair to the Millenium Falcon? I bet you never even asked that question! Well, luckily for you, we did and as it turns out, before she made it into space and changed out of her slave outfit, she posed for a life drawing class. Now you can see this lost chapter from the Original Trilogy, with the incomparable Justine Joli as Leia Organa. Justin Lussier took the pictures. Geek heaven indeed.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Princess_leia_topless_a...jpg
  • 'I looked like a monster': Teen model burnt and swollen following eyebrow tint now faces permanent scarring<br />
<br />
These days it's no big deal for most young women to pop into a beauty salon for a quick treatment to keep up their polished appearance.<br />
But for Beautiful Harleigh Kay, 17, a drop-in salon appointment ended disaster when was rushed to hospital with burns and was unable to open her eyes after getting her eyebrows tinted.<br />
The parents of the young model are now campaigning for better safety regulations in the beauty industry after their daughter could be left permanently scarred.<br />
Harleigh was left in agony and her eyebrows were weeping with a pus-like substance following the beauty treatment at American Nails salon in Luton.<br />
At hospital, she had to be fed a cocktail of medication to combat the reaction. She was intravenously-fed steroids and antihistimines as well as a strong course of antibiotics.<br />
Harleigh, who studies hairdressing at Barnfield College, recounted her ordeal: ‘I looked like a monster and it was hideous. I didn’t recognise myself in the mirror and I was horrendous to look at. It left me feeling traumatised.<br />
‘The pain was excruciating and the discharge was weeping into my eyes. It felt like my whole face was on fire. I couldn’t see properly and doctors told me I couldn’t drive or do anything other than stay at home.’<br />
The teenager, who has modelled for MOT Berkshire since the age of four, said she popped into the salon for a quick treatment before meeting a friend.<br />
‘It’s quite upsetting to think I could be left with scars. I just wanted to treat myself to a little treatment but instead it’s been a disaster,’ Harleigh explained.<br />
‘Modelling is something I’ve done whilst growing up and I love it. I’d like to continue to do it, but this could jeopardise it.’<br />
Harleigh, who is currently on a break from modelling to focus on her studies, came out of the shop looking a bit red, but by the following day her face had flared up and
    Exclusivepix_burnt_By_Eyebrow_Tint1.jpg
  • 'I looked like a monster': Teen model burnt and swollen following eyebrow tint now faces permanent scarring<br />
<br />
These days it's no big deal for most young women to pop into a beauty salon for a quick treatment to keep up their polished appearance.<br />
But for Beautiful Harleigh Kay, 17, a drop-in salon appointment ended disaster when was rushed to hospital with burns and was unable to open her eyes after getting her eyebrows tinted.<br />
The parents of the young model are now campaigning for better safety regulations in the beauty industry after their daughter could be left permanently scarred.<br />
Harleigh was left in agony and her eyebrows were weeping with a pus-like substance following the beauty treatment at American Nails salon in Luton.<br />
At hospital, she had to be fed a cocktail of medication to combat the reaction. She was intravenously-fed steroids and antihistimines as well as a strong course of antibiotics.<br />
Harleigh, who studies hairdressing at Barnfield College, recounted her ordeal: ‘I looked like a monster and it was hideous. I didn’t recognise myself in the mirror and I was horrendous to look at. It left me feeling traumatised.<br />
‘The pain was excruciating and the discharge was weeping into my eyes. It felt like my whole face was on fire. I couldn’t see properly and doctors told me I couldn’t drive or do anything other than stay at home.’<br />
The teenager, who has modelled for MOT Berkshire since the age of four, said she popped into the salon for a quick treatment before meeting a friend.<br />
‘It’s quite upsetting to think I could be left with scars. I just wanted to treat myself to a little treatment but instead it’s been a disaster,’ Harleigh explained.<br />
‘Modelling is something I’ve done whilst growing up and I love it. I’d like to continue to do it, but this could jeopardise it.’<br />
Harleigh, who is currently on a break from modelling to focus on her studies, came out of the shop looking a bit red, but by the following day her face had flared up and
    Exclusivepix_burnt_By_Eyebrow_Tint4.jpg
  • 'I looked like a monster': Teen model burnt and swollen following eyebrow tint now faces permanent scarring<br />
<br />
These days it's no big deal for most young women to pop into a beauty salon for a quick treatment to keep up their polished appearance.<br />
But for Beautiful Harleigh Kay, 17, a drop-in salon appointment ended disaster when was rushed to hospital with burns and was unable to open her eyes after getting her eyebrows tinted.<br />
The parents of the young model are now campaigning for better safety regulations in the beauty industry after their daughter could be left permanently scarred.<br />
Harleigh was left in agony and her eyebrows were weeping with a pus-like substance following the beauty treatment at American Nails salon in Luton.<br />
At hospital, she had to be fed a cocktail of medication to combat the reaction. She was intravenously-fed steroids and antihistimines as well as a strong course of antibiotics.<br />
Harleigh, who studies hairdressing at Barnfield College, recounted her ordeal: ‘I looked like a monster and it was hideous. I didn’t recognise myself in the mirror and I was horrendous to look at. It left me feeling traumatised.<br />
‘The pain was excruciating and the discharge was weeping into my eyes. It felt like my whole face was on fire. I couldn’t see properly and doctors told me I couldn’t drive or do anything other than stay at home.’<br />
The teenager, who has modelled for MOT Berkshire since the age of four, said she popped into the salon for a quick treatment before meeting a friend.<br />
‘It’s quite upsetting to think I could be left with scars. I just wanted to treat myself to a little treatment but instead it’s been a disaster,’ Harleigh explained.<br />
‘Modelling is something I’ve done whilst growing up and I love it. I’d like to continue to do it, but this could jeopardise it.’<br />
Harleigh, who is currently on a break from modelling to focus on her studies, came out of the shop looking a bit red, but by the following day her face had flared up and
    Exclusivepix_burnt_By_Eyebrow_Tint2.jpg
  • Princess leia topless art class<br />
Its the ultimate art class for geeks  the chance to sketch Princess Leia from Star Wars in and OUT of her gold slave bikini. The scene where she is chained up by Jabba the Hutt was made immortal by Carrie Fisher and shocked fans at the time. Since then, the look has been copied millions of times, but one art class decided Star Wars fans should get the chance to get under the skin of the scene, by showing, well, a lot more skin. It was the brainchild of Molly Crabapple, the founder of Dr Sketchys Anti-Art School. The 28-year-old from Brooklyn, New York City, said: Hey, Art Wookies! Do you remember that scene in Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi where Leia is captured by Jabba the Hutt and he keeps her on a chain in a metal bikini? Yes you do! Don't even try to lie to me! It's a perfectly normal and natural part of every nerd's sexual development and is nothing to be ashamed of. Anyway, to make a long story short, Leia strangles Jabba to death with the chain so instead of being chained to a bloated slug monster, she's chained to the corpse of a bloated slug monster until R2D2 cuts her free and she makes her escape. But then what happened? The next time we see her, she's aboard the Millenium Falcon. So what happened on the way from Jabba's lair to the Millenium Falcon? I bet you never even asked that question! Well, luckily for you, we did and as it turns out, before she made it into space and changed out of her slave outfit, she posed for a life drawing class. Now you can see this lost chapter from the Original Trilogy, with the incomparable Justine Joli as Leia Organa. Justin Lussier took the pictures. Geek heaven indeed.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Princess_leia_topless_a...jpg
  • 'I looked like a monster': Teen model burnt and swollen following eyebrow tint now faces permanent scarring<br />
<br />
These days it's no big deal for most young women to pop into a beauty salon for a quick treatment to keep up their polished appearance.<br />
But for Beautiful Harleigh Kay, 17, a drop-in salon appointment ended disaster when was rushed to hospital with burns and was unable to open her eyes after getting her eyebrows tinted.<br />
The parents of the young model are now campaigning for better safety regulations in the beauty industry after their daughter could be left permanently scarred.<br />
Harleigh was left in agony and her eyebrows were weeping with a pus-like substance following the beauty treatment at American Nails salon in Luton.<br />
At hospital, she had to be fed a cocktail of medication to combat the reaction. She was intravenously-fed steroids and antihistimines as well as a strong course of antibiotics.<br />
Harleigh, who studies hairdressing at Barnfield College, recounted her ordeal: ‘I looked like a monster and it was hideous. I didn’t recognise myself in the mirror and I was horrendous to look at. It left me feeling traumatised.<br />
‘The pain was excruciating and the discharge was weeping into my eyes. It felt like my whole face was on fire. I couldn’t see properly and doctors told me I couldn’t drive or do anything other than stay at home.’<br />
The teenager, who has modelled for MOT Berkshire since the age of four, said she popped into the salon for a quick treatment before meeting a friend.<br />
‘It’s quite upsetting to think I could be left with scars. I just wanted to treat myself to a little treatment but instead it’s been a disaster,’ Harleigh explained.<br />
‘Modelling is something I’ve done whilst growing up and I love it. I’d like to continue to do it, but this could jeopardise it.’<br />
Harleigh, who is currently on a break from modelling to focus on her studies, came out of the shop looking a bit red, but by the following day her face had flared up and
    Exclusivepix_burnt_By_Eyebrow_Tint3.jpg
  • 'I looked like a monster': Teen model burnt and swollen following eyebrow tint now faces permanent scarring<br />
<br />
These days it's no big deal for most young women to pop into a beauty salon for a quick treatment to keep up their polished appearance.<br />
But for Beautiful Harleigh Kay, 17, a drop-in salon appointment ended disaster when was rushed to hospital with burns and was unable to open her eyes after getting her eyebrows tinted.<br />
The parents of the young model are now campaigning for better safety regulations in the beauty industry after their daughter could be left permanently scarred.<br />
Harleigh was left in agony and her eyebrows were weeping with a pus-like substance following the beauty treatment at American Nails salon in Luton.<br />
At hospital, she had to be fed a cocktail of medication to combat the reaction. She was intravenously-fed steroids and antihistimines as well as a strong course of antibiotics.<br />
Harleigh, who studies hairdressing at Barnfield College, recounted her ordeal: ‘I looked like a monster and it was hideous. I didn’t recognise myself in the mirror and I was horrendous to look at. It left me feeling traumatised.<br />
‘The pain was excruciating and the discharge was weeping into my eyes. It felt like my whole face was on fire. I couldn’t see properly and doctors told me I couldn’t drive or do anything other than stay at home.’<br />
The teenager, who has modelled for MOT Berkshire since the age of four, said she popped into the salon for a quick treatment before meeting a friend.<br />
‘It’s quite upsetting to think I could be left with scars. I just wanted to treat myself to a little treatment but instead it’s been a disaster,’ Harleigh explained.<br />
‘Modelling is something I’ve done whilst growing up and I love it. I’d like to continue to do it, but this could jeopardise it.’<br />
Harleigh, who is currently on a break from modelling to focus on her studies, came out of the shop looking a bit red, but by the following day her face had flared up and
    Exclusivepix_burnt_By_Eyebrow_Tint5.jpg
  • 'We're gonna need a bigger boat': Gator hunters break TWO state records with monster catches on the same day including a 727lb reptile hauled in by a UPS worker<br />
<br />
Within a few hours of alligator hunting season opening, the record for the heaviest and longest reptiles to be caught in Mississippi had been set and broken several times.<br />
The first record was set early on Sunday, with a 10ft reptile, weighing 295.3lb, which took the heaviest and longest titles for a female alligator.<br />
Just a few hours later however, first-time hunter Beth Trammell, of Madison, helped haul in a 723.5lb male alligator. Her catch broke the state record, but only for a few hours.<br />
Later in the day UPS worker Dustin Bockman was part of a three-man team who caught a 13ft long, 727lb beast from the Mississippi. <br />
'We're going to cook it for sure,' he told Gulf Live. 'There's plenty for me and everybody else.'<br />
Alligators had nearly been hunted to extinction in Mississippi in the 1960s but a successful conservation program now means the state needs controlled hunting of the reptiles. <br />
It offers permits to a select number of people each year, who are able to hunt in public waters from August 30 to September 9.<br />
It took Mr Bockman, his brother and a friend, nearly 12 hours to catch the huge gator. <br />
After two hours of trailing it, they got close enough to shoot it with a crossbow, which is where the fight between man and beast began, the Clarion-Ledger reported. <br />
'He would go to the bottom and sit like a log. You couldn’t do nothing with him,' Mr Bockman said. <br />
Compared to what came next, reeling the 727lb beast in was nothing.  <br />
<br />
After it was dead, the hunters were faced with the dilemma of how to get the carcass in their boat. 
It took four hours of tugging before they gave up, and rested their catch on a sandbar as they waited for help. <br />
The three men then waited for more than two hours for reinforcements to arrive. <br />
'Tired, hungry, we’d been pulling on a 700lb gator for four hours, and we rea
    Exclusivepix_Record_Alligator_caught...jpg
  • 'We're gonna need a bigger boat': Gator hunters break TWO state records with monster catches on the same day including a 727lb reptile hauled in by a UPS worker<br />
<br />
Within a few hours of alligator hunting season opening, the record for the heaviest and longest reptiles to be caught in Mississippi had been set and broken several times.<br />
The first record was set early on Sunday, with a 10ft reptile, weighing 295.3lb, which took the heaviest and longest titles for a female alligator.<br />
Just a few hours later however, first-time hunter Beth Trammell, of Madison, helped haul in a 723.5lb male alligator. Her catch broke the state record, but only for a few hours.<br />
Later in the day UPS worker Dustin Bockman was part of a three-man team who caught a 13ft long, 727lb beast from the Mississippi. <br />
'We're going to cook it for sure,' he told Gulf Live. 'There's plenty for me and everybody else.'<br />
Alligators had nearly been hunted to extinction in Mississippi in the 1960s but a successful conservation program now means the state needs controlled hunting of the reptiles. <br />
It offers permits to a select number of people each year, who are able to hunt in public waters from August 30 to September 9.<br />
It took Mr Bockman, his brother and a friend, nearly 12 hours to catch the huge gator. <br />
After two hours of trailing it, they got close enough to shoot it with a crossbow, which is where the fight between man and beast began, the Clarion-Ledger reported. <br />
'He would go to the bottom and sit like a log. You couldn’t do nothing with him,' Mr Bockman said. <br />
Compared to what came next, reeling the 727lb beast in was nothing.  <br />
<br />
After it was dead, the hunters were faced with the dilemma of how to get the carcass in their boat. 
It took four hours of tugging before they gave up, and rested their catch on a sandbar as they waited for help. <br />
The three men then waited for more than two hours for reinforcements to arrive. <br />
'Tired, hungry, we’d been pulling on a 700lb gator for four hours, and we rea
    Exclusivepix_Record_Alligator_caught...jpg
  • 'We're gonna need a bigger boat': Gator hunters break TWO state records with monster catches on the same day including a 727lb reptile hauled in by a UPS worker<br />
<br />
Within a few hours of alligator hunting season opening, the record for the heaviest and longest reptiles to be caught in Mississippi had been set and broken several times.<br />
The first record was set early on Sunday, with a 10ft reptile, weighing 295.3lb, which took the heaviest and longest titles for a female alligator.<br />
Just a few hours later however, first-time hunter Beth Trammell, of Madison, helped haul in a 723.5lb male alligator. Her catch broke the state record, but only for a few hours.<br />
Later in the day UPS worker Dustin Bockman was part of a three-man team who caught a 13ft long, 727lb beast from the Mississippi. <br />
'We're going to cook it for sure,' he told Gulf Live. 'There's plenty for me and everybody else.'<br />
Alligators had nearly been hunted to extinction in Mississippi in the 1960s but a successful conservation program now means the state needs controlled hunting of the reptiles. <br />
It offers permits to a select number of people each year, who are able to hunt in public waters from August 30 to September 9.<br />
It took Mr Bockman, his brother and a friend, nearly 12 hours to catch the huge gator. <br />
After two hours of trailing it, they got close enough to shoot it with a crossbow, which is where the fight between man and beast began, the Clarion-Ledger reported. <br />
'He would go to the bottom and sit like a log. You couldn’t do nothing with him,' Mr Bockman said. <br />
Compared to what came next, reeling the 727lb beast in was nothing.  <br />
<br />
After it was dead, the hunters were faced with the dilemma of how to get the carcass in their boat. 
It took four hours of tugging before they gave up, and rested their catch on a sandbar as they waited for help. <br />
The three men then waited for more than two hours for reinforcements to arrive. <br />
'Tired, hungry, we’d been pulling on a 700lb gator for four hours, and we rea
    Exclusivepix_Record_Alligator_caught...jpg
  • 'We're gonna need a bigger boat': Gator hunters break TWO state records with monster catches on the same day including a 727lb reptile hauled in by a UPS worker<br />
<br />
Within a few hours of alligator hunting season opening, the record for the heaviest and longest reptiles to be caught in Mississippi had been set and broken several times.<br />
The first record was set early on Sunday, with a 10ft reptile, weighing 295.3lb, which took the heaviest and longest titles for a female alligator.<br />
Just a few hours later however, first-time hunter Beth Trammell, of Madison, helped haul in a 723.5lb male alligator. Her catch broke the state record, but only for a few hours.<br />
Later in the day UPS worker Dustin Bockman was part of a three-man team who caught a 13ft long, 727lb beast from the Mississippi. <br />
'We're going to cook it for sure,' he told Gulf Live. 'There's plenty for me and everybody else.'<br />
Alligators had nearly been hunted to extinction in Mississippi in the 1960s but a successful conservation program now means the state needs controlled hunting of the reptiles. <br />
It offers permits to a select number of people each year, who are able to hunt in public waters from August 30 to September 9.<br />
It took Mr Bockman, his brother and a friend, nearly 12 hours to catch the huge gator. <br />
After two hours of trailing it, they got close enough to shoot it with a crossbow, which is where the fight between man and beast began, the Clarion-Ledger reported. <br />
'He would go to the bottom and sit like a log. You couldn’t do nothing with him,' Mr Bockman said. <br />
Compared to what came next, reeling the 727lb beast in was nothing.  <br />
<br />
After it was dead, the hunters were faced with the dilemma of how to get the carcass in their boat. 
It took four hours of tugging before they gave up, and rested their catch on a sandbar as they waited for help. <br />
The three men then waited for more than two hours for reinforcements to arrive. <br />
'Tired, hungry, we’d been pulling on a 700lb gator for four hours, and we rea
    Exclusivepix_Record_Alligator_caught...jpg
  • 'We're gonna need a bigger boat': Gator hunters break TWO state records with monster catches on the same day including a 727lb reptile hauled in by a UPS worker<br />
<br />
Within a few hours of alligator hunting season opening, the record for the heaviest and longest reptiles to be caught in Mississippi had been set and broken several times.<br />
The first record was set early on Sunday, with a 10ft reptile, weighing 295.3lb, which took the heaviest and longest titles for a female alligator.<br />
Just a few hours later however, first-time hunter Beth Trammell, of Madison, helped haul in a 723.5lb male alligator. Her catch broke the state record, but only for a few hours.<br />
Later in the day UPS worker Dustin Bockman was part of a three-man team who caught a 13ft long, 727lb beast from the Mississippi. <br />
'We're going to cook it for sure,' he told Gulf Live. 'There's plenty for me and everybody else.'<br />
Alligators had nearly been hunted to extinction in Mississippi in the 1960s but a successful conservation program now means the state needs controlled hunting of the reptiles. <br />
It offers permits to a select number of people each year, who are able to hunt in public waters from August 30 to September 9.<br />
It took Mr Bockman, his brother and a friend, nearly 12 hours to catch the huge gator. <br />
After two hours of trailing it, they got close enough to shoot it with a crossbow, which is where the fight between man and beast began, the Clarion-Ledger reported. <br />
'He would go to the bottom and sit like a log. You couldn’t do nothing with him,' Mr Bockman said. <br />
Compared to what came next, reeling the 727lb beast in was nothing.  <br />
<br />
After it was dead, the hunters were faced with the dilemma of how to get the carcass in their boat. 
It took four hours of tugging before they gave up, and rested their catch on a sandbar as they waited for help. <br />
The three men then waited for more than two hours for reinforcements to arrive. <br />
'Tired, hungry, we’d been pulling on a 700lb gator for four hours, and we rea
    Exclusivepix_Record_Alligator_caught...jpg
  • 'We're gonna need a bigger boat': Gator hunters break TWO state records with monster catches on the same day including a 727lb reptile hauled in by a UPS worker<br />
<br />
Within a few hours of alligator hunting season opening, the record for the heaviest and longest reptiles to be caught in Mississippi had been set and broken several times.<br />
The first record was set early on Sunday, with a 10ft reptile, weighing 295.3lb, which took the heaviest and longest titles for a female alligator.<br />
Just a few hours later however, first-time hunter Beth Trammell, of Madison, helped haul in a 723.5lb male alligator. Her catch broke the state record, but only for a few hours.<br />
Later in the day UPS worker Dustin Bockman was part of a three-man team who caught a 13ft long, 727lb beast from the Mississippi. <br />
'We're going to cook it for sure,' he told Gulf Live. 'There's plenty for me and everybody else.'<br />
Alligators had nearly been hunted to extinction in Mississippi in the 1960s but a successful conservation program now means the state needs controlled hunting of the reptiles. <br />
It offers permits to a select number of people each year, who are able to hunt in public waters from August 30 to September 9.<br />
It took Mr Bockman, his brother and a friend, nearly 12 hours to catch the huge gator. <br />
After two hours of trailing it, they got close enough to shoot it with a crossbow, which is where the fight between man and beast began, the Clarion-Ledger reported. <br />
'He would go to the bottom and sit like a log. You couldn’t do nothing with him,' Mr Bockman said. <br />
Compared to what came next, reeling the 727lb beast in was nothing.  <br />
<br />
After it was dead, the hunters were faced with the dilemma of how to get the carcass in their boat. 
It took four hours of tugging before they gave up, and rested their catch on a sandbar as they waited for help. <br />
The three men then waited for more than two hours for reinforcements to arrive. <br />
'Tired, hungry, we’d been pulling on a 700lb gator for four hours, and we rea
    Exclusivepix_Record_Alligator_caught...jpg
  • 'We're gonna need a bigger boat': Gator hunters break TWO state records with monster catches on the same day including a 727lb reptile hauled in by a UPS worker<br />
<br />
Within a few hours of alligator hunting season opening, the record for the heaviest and longest reptiles to be caught in Mississippi had been set and broken several times.<br />
The first record was set early on Sunday, with a 10ft reptile, weighing 295.3lb, which took the heaviest and longest titles for a female alligator.<br />
Just a few hours later however, first-time hunter Beth Trammell, of Madison, helped haul in a 723.5lb male alligator. Her catch broke the state record, but only for a few hours.<br />
Later in the day UPS worker Dustin Bockman was part of a three-man team who caught a 13ft long, 727lb beast from the Mississippi. <br />
'We're going to cook it for sure,' he told Gulf Live. 'There's plenty for me and everybody else.'<br />
Alligators had nearly been hunted to extinction in Mississippi in the 1960s but a successful conservation program now means the state needs controlled hunting of the reptiles. <br />
It offers permits to a select number of people each year, who are able to hunt in public waters from August 30 to September 9.<br />
It took Mr Bockman, his brother and a friend, nearly 12 hours to catch the huge gator. <br />
After two hours of trailing it, they got close enough to shoot it with a crossbow, which is where the fight between man and beast began, the Clarion-Ledger reported. <br />
'He would go to the bottom and sit like a log. You couldn’t do nothing with him,' Mr Bockman said. <br />
Compared to what came next, reeling the 727lb beast in was nothing.  <br />
<br />
After it was dead, the hunters were faced with the dilemma of how to get the carcass in their boat. 
It took four hours of tugging before they gave up, and rested their catch on a sandbar as they waited for help. <br />
The three men then waited for more than two hours for reinforcements to arrive. <br />
'Tired, hungry, we’d been pulling on a 700lb gator for four hours, and we rea
    Exclusivepix_Record_Alligator_caught...JPG
  • Storm Chaser: Amazing photos that convey the awesome power and beauty of nature<br />
<br />
Storm chaser Mike Olbinski captures lightning, tornadoes and dramatic cloud formations in stunning images that convey the awesome power and beauty of nature.<br />
<br />
Photographer Mike Olbinski chases storms throughout his native Arizona and further afield, capturing lightning, tornadoes and dramatic cloud formations in images that convey the awesome power and beauty of nature. A new book, Storm Chaser, gathers 100 of his most breathtaking images. He says he had always been interested in storms and would travel thousands of miles every year, chasing the big supercells and tornadoes that appear on the central plains of the United States each spring. "But in 2011 my life changed," he says, "On 5 July I received a text with a photo of a dust storm rolling into the Phoenix area from the southeast. The day before I had just started practising time lapse photography and when I heard about a dust storm heading my way, I grabbed my gear and headed to a parking garage down the street. I thought that a time-lapse of a dust storm over the city would really give people an idea of how large these things can be.<br />
<br />
"As I pulled up to the top of the parking garage, my jaw dropped. The sky before me was unlike anything I'd ever seen. A massive wall of dust was headed my way. Not the normal dust storms you tend to see out here. No, this was like the end of the world. The wall was dense, thick and as tall as the clouds. It looked like a scene from the movie Independence Day. The National Weather Service would later say it was over 100 miles wide and a mile high."  The most amazing moment though for me was the day when I received a phone call from Al Gore's office, asking if they could use the footage in their climate change presentations. I was absolutely blown away.<br />
mikes book is out now "Storm Chaser by Mike Olbinksi", published by Pen & Sword Books.<br />
<br />
Photo shows:A monster shelf cloud moves towards the small com
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  • SHOE INCIDENT TO JULIA ROBERTS AT THE MARKET UP FILM ' MONSTER MONEY ' - 69TH CANNES FILM FESTIVAL<br />
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