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  • An Unusual Cloud Phenomenon Above the Skies of Victoria, Australia<br />
<br />
This extremely unusual weather event above the skies of Victoria, Australia. Apparently the unusual event is called a Fallstreak Hole (or commonly a ‘hole punch cloud’):<br />
<br />
    Such holes are formed when the water temperature in the clouds is below freezing but the water has not frozen yet due to the lack of ice nucleation (see supercooled water). When ice crystals do form it will set off a domino effect, due to the Bergeron process, causing the water droplets around the crystals to evaporate: this leaves a large, often circular, hole in the cloud.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Unusual_Cloud1.jpg
  • Crabzilla! Photo appears to show giant CRAB measuring at least 50ft across lurking in the waters off Whitstable <br />
<br />
The seaside town might be famed for its oysters, but this incredible image could soon have visitors flocking to Whistable in the hope of catching Britain's biggest crab.<br />
<br />
The photograph, which has been shared online, appears to show a crustacean that is at least 50ft-wide lurking in shallow water.<br />
<br />
While some insist it is proof of 'Crabzilla', others argue that the shadowy figure is nothing more than an unusually-shaped sandbank - or is simply a playful hoax.<br />
<br />
The image shows the outline of a crab in the mouth of the Kent harbour - dwarfing the fishing boats resting on the nearby pier. <br />
<br />
It is shaped like an edible crab, a species that is commonly found in British water and grows to an average of five inches.<br />
<br />
The photograph was posted on a website called Weird Whitstable - an online collection of strange and unusual sightings in the town.<br />
<br />
Its curator, Quinton Winter, said that at first he thought the image - sent to him by a follower - showed an unusual sand formation, but that he is now convinced it is a monster of the deep.<br />
He said: 'At first all I could see was some faint movement, then as it rose from the water I thought, "that’s a funny looking bit of driftwood".<br />
'It had glazed blank eyes on stalks, swivelling wildly and it clearly was a massive crab with crushing claws.<br />
<br />
'Before this incident I thought the aerial photo showed an odd-shaped sand bank. Now I know better.'<br />
<br />
The largest known species of crab is the Japanese spider crab, which can measure more than 12ft<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Giant_Crab1.jpg
  • Crabzilla! Photo appears to show giant CRAB measuring at least 50ft across lurking in the waters off Whitstable <br />
<br />
The seaside town might be famed for its oysters, but this incredible image could soon have visitors flocking to Whistable in the hope of catching Britain's biggest crab.<br />
<br />
The photograph, which has been shared online, appears to show a crustacean that is at least 50ft-wide lurking in shallow water.<br />
<br />
While some insist it is proof of 'Crabzilla', others argue that the shadowy figure is nothing more than an unusually-shaped sandbank - or is simply a playful hoax.<br />
<br />
The image shows the outline of a crab in the mouth of the Kent harbour - dwarfing the fishing boats resting on the nearby pier. <br />
<br />
It is shaped like an edible crab, a species that is commonly found in British water and grows to an average of five inches.<br />
<br />
The photograph was posted on a website called Weird Whitstable - an online collection of strange and unusual sightings in the town.<br />
<br />
Its curator, Quinton Winter, said that at first he thought the image - sent to him by a follower - showed an unusual sand formation, but that he is now convinced it is a monster of the deep.<br />
He said: 'At first all I could see was some faint movement, then as it rose from the water I thought, "that’s a funny looking bit of driftwood".<br />
'It had glazed blank eyes on stalks, swivelling wildly and it clearly was a massive crab with crushing claws.<br />
<br />
'Before this incident I thought the aerial photo showed an odd-shaped sand bank. Now I know better.'<br />
<br />
The largest known species of crab is the Japanese spider crab, which can measure more than 12ft<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Giant_Crab2.jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Woman knitted life-size replica of her teenage son because he didn't want to cuddle her any more <br />
<br />
A Dutch woman has knitted a life-sized replica of her teenage son as he no longer wants to hug and and instead spends time hanging out with his friends. <br />
Marieke Voorsluijs from Amsterdam is well known in The Netherlands for making unusual creations out of wool. <br />
So when her young son said he no longer wanted to hug her all the time, she decided to put her skills to use and create a replica. <br />
<br />
Ms Voorsluijs said: 'My son is reaching puberty. We used to cuddle all the time, but those days are becoming scarce. Now he rather hangs with friends, plays with his phone and listens to his ipod. Exactly according to nature’s plan. I am a good mother, so of course I accept this and I am happy he is a healthy kid.<br />
'We laugh a lot about the stretching gap between his needs and mine. Him needing more of his own space and my covert needs to keep on smothering him with maternal love. I am a textiles designer and he often helps me and has great creative ideas. So we started to fantasize how we could visualize this puberty gap. So I suggested to make a cuddly version of him!<br />
<br />
<br />
We are always making and creating stuff and I love to knit unknittable things. My husband is a designer too, so my son is very familiar with the process. My two sons love the project and helped with the making of the cap and, of course, posing. They always help with the projects I make for my work and private. And we help them back of course with their creative ideas.<br />
Ms Voorsluijs can create almost any idea using her knitting skills and has made cuddly bottles of champagne. <br />
Other designs feature oysters, cheese boards and even a giant joint of ham. <br />
Ms Voorsluijs, who has two sons, said they were both fine with her creation, which took approximately two months to complete.  <br />
©clubgeluk/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_knitted_life_size_Son6.jpg
  • Slow moo-tion: The farm that lets visitors saddle up on COWS rather than horses (but treks can take a while as the bovines love to graze)<br />
<br />
Visitors to a farm in the Swiss Alps may be surprised to find that instead of saddling up on a horse - they get to ride cows.<br />
Bolderhof Farm offers guests the chance to clamber onto the back of one of the hoofed creatures for treks lasting up to half a day.<br />
The owner of the farm says that unlike horses, dairy cows are less likely to react to scenarios around them, meaning the risk of falling off is slim.<br />
<br />
Guests are able to get acquainted with their bovine in a short meet and greet, according to Smithsonian, before putting on a helmet and saddling up for the unusual experience.<br />
Despite their large size, the herbivores' speed ranges from 'slow to very slow' - perfect for enjoying the woods and rivers of the Rhine lowlands.<br />
In fact their pace is so glacial that rides in the past have been delayed by cows whose attention is more preoccupied with grazing rather than completing the journey.<br />
<br />
But what the experience does offer is a peaceful and stress-free amble through the beautiful rolling Swiss Alps. <br />
'If something happens around you, the cow stands still and looks,' Bolderhof Farm owner Heinz Morgenegg told the Smithsonian. <br />
After a slow trek through the countryside, wannabe cowboys can enjoy a picnic spread of organic meat, cheese, bread and wine.<br />
<br />
The cow trekking experience started after Morgenegg queried what would happen if he climbed onto the back of one of his herd.<br />
As the bovine lay on the ground he clambered on, with the cow barely reacting to his rider. <br />
Years later, and the farm has cow trekking as a permanent attraction with people from all over the globe flocking to stroll on his prized animals.<br />
<br />
For those who aren't keen to hop on a cow, there are a range of other activities available on the farm. <br />
Guests can make cheese, milk cows,  saw wood, try farmhand skills and see the on-site water buffalo. <br />
After a day on the
    Exclusivepix_visitors_saddle_up_on_C...jpg
  • Slow moo-tion: The farm that lets visitors saddle up on COWS rather than horses (but treks can take a while as the bovines love to graze)<br />
<br />
Visitors to a farm in the Swiss Alps may be surprised to find that instead of saddling up on a horse - they get to ride cows.<br />
Bolderhof Farm offers guests the chance to clamber onto the back of one of the hoofed creatures for treks lasting up to half a day.<br />
The owner of the farm says that unlike horses, dairy cows are less likely to react to scenarios around them, meaning the risk of falling off is slim.<br />
<br />
Guests are able to get acquainted with their bovine in a short meet and greet, according to Smithsonian, before putting on a helmet and saddling up for the unusual experience.<br />
Despite their large size, the herbivores' speed ranges from 'slow to very slow' - perfect for enjoying the woods and rivers of the Rhine lowlands.<br />
In fact their pace is so glacial that rides in the past have been delayed by cows whose attention is more preoccupied with grazing rather than completing the journey.<br />
<br />
But what the experience does offer is a peaceful and stress-free amble through the beautiful rolling Swiss Alps. <br />
'If something happens around you, the cow stands still and looks,' Bolderhof Farm owner Heinz Morgenegg told the Smithsonian. <br />
After a slow trek through the countryside, wannabe cowboys can enjoy a picnic spread of organic meat, cheese, bread and wine.<br />
<br />
The cow trekking experience started after Morgenegg queried what would happen if he climbed onto the back of one of his herd.<br />
As the bovine lay on the ground he clambered on, with the cow barely reacting to his rider. <br />
Years later, and the farm has cow trekking as a permanent attraction with people from all over the globe flocking to stroll on his prized animals.<br />
<br />
For those who aren't keen to hop on a cow, there are a range of other activities available on the farm. <br />
Guests can make cheese, milk cows,  saw wood, try farmhand skills and see the on-site water buffalo. <br />
After a day on the
    Exclusivepix_visitors_saddle_up_on_C...jpg
  • Slow moo-tion: The farm that lets visitors saddle up on COWS rather than horses (but treks can take a while as the bovines love to graze)<br />
<br />
Visitors to a farm in the Swiss Alps may be surprised to find that instead of saddling up on a horse - they get to ride cows.<br />
Bolderhof Farm offers guests the chance to clamber onto the back of one of the hoofed creatures for treks lasting up to half a day.<br />
The owner of the farm says that unlike horses, dairy cows are less likely to react to scenarios around them, meaning the risk of falling off is slim.<br />
<br />
Guests are able to get acquainted with their bovine in a short meet and greet, according to Smithsonian, before putting on a helmet and saddling up for the unusual experience.<br />
Despite their large size, the herbivores' speed ranges from 'slow to very slow' - perfect for enjoying the woods and rivers of the Rhine lowlands.<br />
In fact their pace is so glacial that rides in the past have been delayed by cows whose attention is more preoccupied with grazing rather than completing the journey.<br />
<br />
But what the experience does offer is a peaceful and stress-free amble through the beautiful rolling Swiss Alps. <br />
'If something happens around you, the cow stands still and looks,' Bolderhof Farm owner Heinz Morgenegg told the Smithsonian. <br />
After a slow trek through the countryside, wannabe cowboys can enjoy a picnic spread of organic meat, cheese, bread and wine.<br />
<br />
The cow trekking experience started after Morgenegg queried what would happen if he climbed onto the back of one of his herd.<br />
As the bovine lay on the ground he clambered on, with the cow barely reacting to his rider. <br />
Years later, and the farm has cow trekking as a permanent attraction with people from all over the globe flocking to stroll on his prized animals.<br />
<br />
For those who aren't keen to hop on a cow, there are a range of other activities available on the farm. <br />
Guests can make cheese, milk cows,  saw wood, try farmhand skills and see the on-site water buffalo. <br />
After a day on the
    Exclusivepix_visitors_saddle_up_on_C...jpg
  • Indian boy, 10, claims his sense of smell is so strong he can identify colours, ride a bike and walk unaided while blindfolded<br />
<br />
A ten-year-old Indian boy claims to have taught himself the ability recognise colours through his sense of smell with 'mind-training'. <br />
Vikas Panchal, from Delhi, says he has also learned how to ride a bike, walk around unaided, and picking out a particular classmate from a line of fellow pupils, all while blindfolded. <br />
He claims to have developed his unusual skills by spending two hours per day practising a particular type of mind exercise technique. <br />
<br />
A video of Vikas demonstrating his abilities shows him picking up different colour balls and beads while having his eyes completely covered.<br />
After smelling them for a few seconds, he then describes the colour, even differentiating between two different shades.<br />
<br />
Other footage shows him blindfolded and riding a bicycle around his school playground and wandering around his local neighbourhood in Delhi  wearing a blindfold while dodging potholes and pedestrians.<br />
Vikas says his skills have been developed through a mind-training technique known as Midbrain Activation.<br />
It targets the stimulation of a small part of the brain that acts as a relay centre for information gathered from the body's visual, auditory and motor systems.<br />
<br />
It is claimed that people who develop their midbrain will never forget what they have seen or heard just once previously.<br />
As a result, then are said to be able to carry out everyday tasks quite literally with their eyes closed.<br />
Vikas spends two hours each day practising the technique and says it has also transformed his schooling and seen him rise to the top of his class.<br />
His trainer Shri Bhagwan, said: 'His training is like meditation. We sit in a silent place and shut our eyes.<br />
'Everyone's mind has two parts. One part is the left side and other part is the right side.<br />
'Our right side is more active than the left side. With this technique we activate the lazy side of our mi
    Exclusivepix_Indian_Boy_Smell_Walk_b...jpg
  • A collection of  funny images showing animals with very unusual markings!<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Animals_With_Unusal_mar...jpg
  • A collection of  funny images showing animals with very unusual markings!<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Animals_With_Unusal_mar...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Woman knitted life-size replica of her teenage son because he didn't want to cuddle her any more <br />
<br />
A Dutch woman has knitted a life-sized replica of her teenage son as he no longer wants to hug and and instead spends time hanging out with his friends. <br />
Marieke Voorsluijs from Amsterdam is well known in The Netherlands for making unusual creations out of wool. <br />
So when her young son said he no longer wanted to hug her all the time, she decided to put her skills to use and create a replica. <br />
<br />
Ms Voorsluijs said: 'My son is reaching puberty. We used to cuddle all the time, but those days are becoming scarce. Now he rather hangs with friends, plays with his phone and listens to his ipod. Exactly according to nature’s plan. I am a good mother, so of course I accept this and I am happy he is a healthy kid.<br />
'We laugh a lot about the stretching gap between his needs and mine. Him needing more of his own space and my covert needs to keep on smothering him with maternal love. I am a textiles designer and he often helps me and has great creative ideas. So we started to fantasize how we could visualize this puberty gap. So I suggested to make a cuddly version of him!<br />
<br />
<br />
We are always making and creating stuff and I love to knit unknittable things. My husband is a designer too, so my son is very familiar with the process. My two sons love the project and helped with the making of the cap and, of course, posing. They always help with the projects I make for my work and private. And we help them back of course with their creative ideas.<br />
Ms Voorsluijs can create almost any idea using her knitting skills and has made cuddly bottles of champagne. <br />
Other designs feature oysters, cheese boards and even a giant joint of ham. <br />
Ms Voorsluijs, who has two sons, said they were both fine with her creation, which took approximately two months to complete.  <br />
©clubgeluk/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_knitted_life_size_Son5.jpg
  • Woman knitted life-size replica of her teenage son because he didn't want to cuddle her any more <br />
<br />
A Dutch woman has knitted a life-sized replica of her teenage son as he no longer wants to hug and and instead spends time hanging out with his friends. <br />
Marieke Voorsluijs from Amsterdam is well known in The Netherlands for making unusual creations out of wool. <br />
So when her young son said he no longer wanted to hug her all the time, she decided to put her skills to use and create a replica. <br />
<br />
Ms Voorsluijs said: 'My son is reaching puberty. We used to cuddle all the time, but those days are becoming scarce. Now he rather hangs with friends, plays with his phone and listens to his ipod. Exactly according to nature’s plan. I am a good mother, so of course I accept this and I am happy he is a healthy kid.<br />
'We laugh a lot about the stretching gap between his needs and mine. Him needing more of his own space and my covert needs to keep on smothering him with maternal love. I am a textiles designer and he often helps me and has great creative ideas. So we started to fantasize how we could visualize this puberty gap. So I suggested to make a cuddly version of him!<br />
<br />
<br />
We are always making and creating stuff and I love to knit unknittable things. My husband is a designer too, so my son is very familiar with the process. My two sons love the project and helped with the making of the cap and, of course, posing. They always help with the projects I make for my work and private. And we help them back of course with their creative ideas.<br />
Ms Voorsluijs can create almost any idea using her knitting skills and has made cuddly bottles of champagne. <br />
Other designs feature oysters, cheese boards and even a giant joint of ham. <br />
Ms Voorsluijs, who has two sons, said they were both fine with her creation, which took approximately two months to complete.  <br />
©clubgeluk/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_knitted_life_size_Son4.jpg
  • Woman knitted life-size replica of her teenage son because he didn't want to cuddle her any more <br />
<br />
A Dutch woman has knitted a life-sized replica of her teenage son as he no longer wants to hug and and instead spends time hanging out with his friends. <br />
Marieke Voorsluijs from Amsterdam is well known in The Netherlands for making unusual creations out of wool. <br />
So when her young son said he no longer wanted to hug her all the time, she decided to put her skills to use and create a replica. <br />
<br />
Ms Voorsluijs said: 'My son is reaching puberty. We used to cuddle all the time, but those days are becoming scarce. Now he rather hangs with friends, plays with his phone and listens to his ipod. Exactly according to nature’s plan. I am a good mother, so of course I accept this and I am happy he is a healthy kid.<br />
'We laugh a lot about the stretching gap between his needs and mine. Him needing more of his own space and my covert needs to keep on smothering him with maternal love. I am a textiles designer and he often helps me and has great creative ideas. So we started to fantasize how we could visualize this puberty gap. So I suggested to make a cuddly version of him!<br />
<br />
<br />
We are always making and creating stuff and I love to knit unknittable things. My husband is a designer too, so my son is very familiar with the process. My two sons love the project and helped with the making of the cap and, of course, posing. They always help with the projects I make for my work and private. And we help them back of course with their creative ideas.<br />
Ms Voorsluijs can create almost any idea using her knitting skills and has made cuddly bottles of champagne. <br />
Other designs feature oysters, cheese boards and even a giant joint of ham. <br />
Ms Voorsluijs, who has two sons, said they were both fine with her creation, which took approximately two months to complete.  <br />
©clubgeluk/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_knitted_life_size_Son3.jpg
  • Woman knitted life-size replica of her teenage son because he didn't want to cuddle her any more <br />
<br />
A Dutch woman has knitted a life-sized replica of her teenage son as he no longer wants to hug and and instead spends time hanging out with his friends. <br />
Marieke Voorsluijs from Amsterdam is well known in The Netherlands for making unusual creations out of wool. <br />
So when her young son said he no longer wanted to hug her all the time, she decided to put her skills to use and create a replica. <br />
<br />
Ms Voorsluijs said: 'My son is reaching puberty. We used to cuddle all the time, but those days are becoming scarce. Now he rather hangs with friends, plays with his phone and listens to his ipod. Exactly according to nature’s plan. I am a good mother, so of course I accept this and I am happy he is a healthy kid.<br />
'We laugh a lot about the stretching gap between his needs and mine. Him needing more of his own space and my covert needs to keep on smothering him with maternal love. I am a textiles designer and he often helps me and has great creative ideas. So we started to fantasize how we could visualize this puberty gap. So I suggested to make a cuddly version of him!<br />
<br />
<br />
We are always making and creating stuff and I love to knit unknittable things. My husband is a designer too, so my son is very familiar with the process. My two sons love the project and helped with the making of the cap and, of course, posing. They always help with the projects I make for my work and private. And we help them back of course with their creative ideas.<br />
Ms Voorsluijs can create almost any idea using her knitting skills and has made cuddly bottles of champagne. <br />
Other designs feature oysters, cheese boards and even a giant joint of ham. <br />
Ms Voorsluijs, who has two sons, said they were both fine with her creation, which took approximately two months to complete.  <br />
©clubgeluk/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_knitted_life_size_Son2.jpg
  • Woman knitted life-size replica of her teenage son because he didn't want to cuddle her any more <br />
<br />
A Dutch woman has knitted a life-sized replica of her teenage son as he no longer wants to hug and and instead spends time hanging out with his friends. <br />
Marieke Voorsluijs from Amsterdam is well known in The Netherlands for making unusual creations out of wool. <br />
So when her young son said he no longer wanted to hug her all the time, she decided to put her skills to use and create a replica. <br />
<br />
Ms Voorsluijs said: 'My son is reaching puberty. We used to cuddle all the time, but those days are becoming scarce. Now he rather hangs with friends, plays with his phone and listens to his ipod. Exactly according to nature’s plan. I am a good mother, so of course I accept this and I am happy he is a healthy kid.<br />
'We laugh a lot about the stretching gap between his needs and mine. Him needing more of his own space and my covert needs to keep on smothering him with maternal love. I am a textiles designer and he often helps me and has great creative ideas. So we started to fantasize how we could visualize this puberty gap. So I suggested to make a cuddly version of him!<br />
<br />
<br />
We are always making and creating stuff and I love to knit unknittable things. My husband is a designer too, so my son is very familiar with the process. My two sons love the project and helped with the making of the cap and, of course, posing. They always help with the projects I make for my work and private. And we help them back of course with their creative ideas.<br />
Ms Voorsluijs can create almost any idea using her knitting skills and has made cuddly bottles of champagne. <br />
Other designs feature oysters, cheese boards and even a giant joint of ham. <br />
Ms Voorsluijs, who has two sons, said they were both fine with her creation, which took approximately two months to complete.  <br />
©clubgeluk/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_knitted_life_size_Son1.jpg
  • Slow moo-tion: The farm that lets visitors saddle up on COWS rather than horses (but treks can take a while as the bovines love to graze)<br />
<br />
Visitors to a farm in the Swiss Alps may be surprised to find that instead of saddling up on a horse - they get to ride cows.<br />
Bolderhof Farm offers guests the chance to clamber onto the back of one of the hoofed creatures for treks lasting up to half a day.<br />
The owner of the farm says that unlike horses, dairy cows are less likely to react to scenarios around them, meaning the risk of falling off is slim.<br />
<br />
Guests are able to get acquainted with their bovine in a short meet and greet, according to Smithsonian, before putting on a helmet and saddling up for the unusual experience.<br />
Despite their large size, the herbivores' speed ranges from 'slow to very slow' - perfect for enjoying the woods and rivers of the Rhine lowlands.<br />
In fact their pace is so glacial that rides in the past have been delayed by cows whose attention is more preoccupied with grazing rather than completing the journey.<br />
<br />
But what the experience does offer is a peaceful and stress-free amble through the beautiful rolling Swiss Alps. <br />
'If something happens around you, the cow stands still and looks,' Bolderhof Farm owner Heinz Morgenegg told the Smithsonian. <br />
After a slow trek through the countryside, wannabe cowboys can enjoy a picnic spread of organic meat, cheese, bread and wine.<br />
<br />
The cow trekking experience started after Morgenegg queried what would happen if he climbed onto the back of one of his herd.<br />
As the bovine lay on the ground he clambered on, with the cow barely reacting to his rider. <br />
Years later, and the farm has cow trekking as a permanent attraction with people from all over the globe flocking to stroll on his prized animals.<br />
<br />
For those who aren't keen to hop on a cow, there are a range of other activities available on the farm. <br />
Guests can make cheese, milk cows,  saw wood, try farmhand skills and see the on-site water buffalo. <br />
After a day on the
    Exclusivepix_visitors_saddle_up_on_C...jpg
  • Slow moo-tion: The farm that lets visitors saddle up on COWS rather than horses (but treks can take a while as the bovines love to graze)<br />
<br />
Visitors to a farm in the Swiss Alps may be surprised to find that instead of saddling up on a horse - they get to ride cows.<br />
Bolderhof Farm offers guests the chance to clamber onto the back of one of the hoofed creatures for treks lasting up to half a day.<br />
The owner of the farm says that unlike horses, dairy cows are less likely to react to scenarios around them, meaning the risk of falling off is slim.<br />
<br />
Guests are able to get acquainted with their bovine in a short meet and greet, according to Smithsonian, before putting on a helmet and saddling up for the unusual experience.<br />
Despite their large size, the herbivores' speed ranges from 'slow to very slow' - perfect for enjoying the woods and rivers of the Rhine lowlands.<br />
In fact their pace is so glacial that rides in the past have been delayed by cows whose attention is more preoccupied with grazing rather than completing the journey.<br />
<br />
But what the experience does offer is a peaceful and stress-free amble through the beautiful rolling Swiss Alps. <br />
'If something happens around you, the cow stands still and looks,' Bolderhof Farm owner Heinz Morgenegg told the Smithsonian. <br />
After a slow trek through the countryside, wannabe cowboys can enjoy a picnic spread of organic meat, cheese, bread and wine.<br />
<br />
The cow trekking experience started after Morgenegg queried what would happen if he climbed onto the back of one of his herd.<br />
As the bovine lay on the ground he clambered on, with the cow barely reacting to his rider. <br />
Years later, and the farm has cow trekking as a permanent attraction with people from all over the globe flocking to stroll on his prized animals.<br />
<br />
For those who aren't keen to hop on a cow, there are a range of other activities available on the farm. <br />
Guests can make cheese, milk cows,  saw wood, try farmhand skills and see the on-site water buffalo. <br />
After a day on the
    Exclusivepix_visitors_saddle_up_on_C...jpg
  • Slow moo-tion: The farm that lets visitors saddle up on COWS rather than horses (but treks can take a while as the bovines love to graze)<br />
<br />
Visitors to a farm in the Swiss Alps may be surprised to find that instead of saddling up on a horse - they get to ride cows.<br />
Bolderhof Farm offers guests the chance to clamber onto the back of one of the hoofed creatures for treks lasting up to half a day.<br />
The owner of the farm says that unlike horses, dairy cows are less likely to react to scenarios around them, meaning the risk of falling off is slim.<br />
<br />
Guests are able to get acquainted with their bovine in a short meet and greet, according to Smithsonian, before putting on a helmet and saddling up for the unusual experience.<br />
Despite their large size, the herbivores' speed ranges from 'slow to very slow' - perfect for enjoying the woods and rivers of the Rhine lowlands.<br />
In fact their pace is so glacial that rides in the past have been delayed by cows whose attention is more preoccupied with grazing rather than completing the journey.<br />
<br />
But what the experience does offer is a peaceful and stress-free amble through the beautiful rolling Swiss Alps. <br />
'If something happens around you, the cow stands still and looks,' Bolderhof Farm owner Heinz Morgenegg told the Smithsonian. <br />
After a slow trek through the countryside, wannabe cowboys can enjoy a picnic spread of organic meat, cheese, bread and wine.<br />
<br />
The cow trekking experience started after Morgenegg queried what would happen if he climbed onto the back of one of his herd.<br />
As the bovine lay on the ground he clambered on, with the cow barely reacting to his rider. <br />
Years later, and the farm has cow trekking as a permanent attraction with people from all over the globe flocking to stroll on his prized animals.<br />
<br />
For those who aren't keen to hop on a cow, there are a range of other activities available on the farm. <br />
Guests can make cheese, milk cows,  saw wood, try farmhand skills and see the on-site water buffalo. <br />
After a day on the
    Exclusivepix_visitors_saddle_up_on_C...jpg
  • Indian boy, 10, claims his sense of smell is so strong he can identify colours, ride a bike and walk unaided while blindfolded<br />
<br />
A ten-year-old Indian boy claims to have taught himself the ability recognise colours through his sense of smell with 'mind-training'. <br />
Vikas Panchal, from Delhi, says he has also learned how to ride a bike, walk around unaided, and picking out a particular classmate from a line of fellow pupils, all while blindfolded. <br />
He claims to have developed his unusual skills by spending two hours per day practising a particular type of mind exercise technique. <br />
<br />
A video of Vikas demonstrating his abilities shows him picking up different colour balls and beads while having his eyes completely covered.<br />
After smelling them for a few seconds, he then describes the colour, even differentiating between two different shades.<br />
<br />
Other footage shows him blindfolded and riding a bicycle around his school playground and wandering around his local neighbourhood in Delhi  wearing a blindfold while dodging potholes and pedestrians.<br />
Vikas says his skills have been developed through a mind-training technique known as Midbrain Activation.<br />
It targets the stimulation of a small part of the brain that acts as a relay centre for information gathered from the body's visual, auditory and motor systems.<br />
<br />
It is claimed that people who develop their midbrain will never forget what they have seen or heard just once previously.<br />
As a result, then are said to be able to carry out everyday tasks quite literally with their eyes closed.<br />
Vikas spends two hours each day practising the technique and says it has also transformed his schooling and seen him rise to the top of his class.<br />
His trainer Shri Bhagwan, said: 'His training is like meditation. We sit in a silent place and shut our eyes.<br />
'Everyone's mind has two parts. One part is the left side and other part is the right side.<br />
'Our right side is more active than the left side. With this technique we activate the lazy side of our mi
    Exclusivepix_Indian_Boy_Smell_Walk_b...jpg
  • Indian boy, 10, claims his sense of smell is so strong he can identify colours, ride a bike and walk unaided while blindfolded<br />
<br />
A ten-year-old Indian boy claims to have taught himself the ability recognise colours through his sense of smell with 'mind-training'. <br />
Vikas Panchal, from Delhi, says he has also learned how to ride a bike, walk around unaided, and picking out a particular classmate from a line of fellow pupils, all while blindfolded. <br />
He claims to have developed his unusual skills by spending two hours per day practising a particular type of mind exercise technique. <br />
<br />
A video of Vikas demonstrating his abilities shows him picking up different colour balls and beads while having his eyes completely covered.<br />
After smelling them for a few seconds, he then describes the colour, even differentiating between two different shades.<br />
<br />
Other footage shows him blindfolded and riding a bicycle around his school playground and wandering around his local neighbourhood in Delhi  wearing a blindfold while dodging potholes and pedestrians.<br />
Vikas says his skills have been developed through a mind-training technique known as Midbrain Activation.<br />
It targets the stimulation of a small part of the brain that acts as a relay centre for information gathered from the body's visual, auditory and motor systems.<br />
<br />
It is claimed that people who develop their midbrain will never forget what they have seen or heard just once previously.<br />
As a result, then are said to be able to carry out everyday tasks quite literally with their eyes closed.<br />
Vikas spends two hours each day practising the technique and says it has also transformed his schooling and seen him rise to the top of his class.<br />
His trainer Shri Bhagwan, said: 'His training is like meditation. We sit in a silent place and shut our eyes.<br />
'Everyone's mind has two parts. One part is the left side and other part is the right side.<br />
'Our right side is more active than the left side. With this technique we activate the lazy side of our mi
    Exclusivepix_Indian_Boy_Smell_Walk_b...jpg
  • Indian boy, 10, claims his sense of smell is so strong he can identify colours, ride a bike and walk unaided while blindfolded<br />
<br />
A ten-year-old Indian boy claims to have taught himself the ability recognise colours through his sense of smell with 'mind-training'. <br />
Vikas Panchal, from Delhi, says he has also learned how to ride a bike, walk around unaided, and picking out a particular classmate from a line of fellow pupils, all while blindfolded. <br />
He claims to have developed his unusual skills by spending two hours per day practising a particular type of mind exercise technique. <br />
<br />
A video of Vikas demonstrating his abilities shows him picking up different colour balls and beads while having his eyes completely covered.<br />
After smelling them for a few seconds, he then describes the colour, even differentiating between two different shades.<br />
<br />
Other footage shows him blindfolded and riding a bicycle around his school playground and wandering around his local neighbourhood in Delhi  wearing a blindfold while dodging potholes and pedestrians.<br />
Vikas says his skills have been developed through a mind-training technique known as Midbrain Activation.<br />
It targets the stimulation of a small part of the brain that acts as a relay centre for information gathered from the body's visual, auditory and motor systems.<br />
<br />
It is claimed that people who develop their midbrain will never forget what they have seen or heard just once previously.<br />
As a result, then are said to be able to carry out everyday tasks quite literally with their eyes closed.<br />
Vikas spends two hours each day practising the technique and says it has also transformed his schooling and seen him rise to the top of his class.<br />
His trainer Shri Bhagwan, said: 'His training is like meditation. We sit in a silent place and shut our eyes.<br />
'Everyone's mind has two parts. One part is the left side and other part is the right side.<br />
'Our right side is more active than the left side. With this technique we activate the lazy side of our mi
    Exclusivepix_Indian_Boy_Smell_Walk_b...jpg
  • Indian boy, 10, claims his sense of smell is so strong he can identify colours, ride a bike and walk unaided while blindfolded<br />
<br />
A ten-year-old Indian boy claims to have taught himself the ability recognise colours through his sense of smell with 'mind-training'. <br />
Vikas Panchal, from Delhi, says he has also learned how to ride a bike, walk around unaided, and picking out a particular classmate from a line of fellow pupils, all while blindfolded. <br />
He claims to have developed his unusual skills by spending two hours per day practising a particular type of mind exercise technique. <br />
<br />
A video of Vikas demonstrating his abilities shows him picking up different colour balls and beads while having his eyes completely covered.<br />
After smelling them for a few seconds, he then describes the colour, even differentiating between two different shades.<br />
<br />
Other footage shows him blindfolded and riding a bicycle around his school playground and wandering around his local neighbourhood in Delhi  wearing a blindfold while dodging potholes and pedestrians.<br />
Vikas says his skills have been developed through a mind-training technique known as Midbrain Activation.<br />
It targets the stimulation of a small part of the brain that acts as a relay centre for information gathered from the body's visual, auditory and motor systems.<br />
<br />
It is claimed that people who develop their midbrain will never forget what they have seen or heard just once previously.<br />
As a result, then are said to be able to carry out everyday tasks quite literally with their eyes closed.<br />
Vikas spends two hours each day practising the technique and says it has also transformed his schooling and seen him rise to the top of his class.<br />
His trainer Shri Bhagwan, said: 'His training is like meditation. We sit in a silent place and shut our eyes.<br />
'Everyone's mind has two parts. One part is the left side and other part is the right side.<br />
'Our right side is more active than the left side. With this technique we activate the lazy side of our mi
    Exclusivepix_Indian_Boy_Smell_Walk_b...jpg
  • Indian boy, 10, claims his sense of smell is so strong he can identify colours, ride a bike and walk unaided while blindfolded<br />
<br />
A ten-year-old Indian boy claims to have taught himself the ability recognise colours through his sense of smell with 'mind-training'. <br />
Vikas Panchal, from Delhi, says he has also learned how to ride a bike, walk around unaided, and picking out a particular classmate from a line of fellow pupils, all while blindfolded. <br />
He claims to have developed his unusual skills by spending two hours per day practising a particular type of mind exercise technique. <br />
<br />
A video of Vikas demonstrating his abilities shows him picking up different colour balls and beads while having his eyes completely covered.<br />
After smelling them for a few seconds, he then describes the colour, even differentiating between two different shades.<br />
<br />
Other footage shows him blindfolded and riding a bicycle around his school playground and wandering around his local neighbourhood in Delhi  wearing a blindfold while dodging potholes and pedestrians.<br />
Vikas says his skills have been developed through a mind-training technique known as Midbrain Activation.<br />
It targets the stimulation of a small part of the brain that acts as a relay centre for information gathered from the body's visual, auditory and motor systems.<br />
<br />
It is claimed that people who develop their midbrain will never forget what they have seen or heard just once previously.<br />
As a result, then are said to be able to carry out everyday tasks quite literally with their eyes closed.<br />
Vikas spends two hours each day practising the technique and says it has also transformed his schooling and seen him rise to the top of his class.<br />
His trainer Shri Bhagwan, said: 'His training is like meditation. We sit in a silent place and shut our eyes.<br />
'Everyone's mind has two parts. One part is the left side and other part is the right side.<br />
'Our right side is more active than the left side. With this technique we activate the lazy side of our mi
    Exclusivepix_Indian_Boy_Smell_Walk_b...jpg
  • Indian boy, 10, claims his sense of smell is so strong he can identify colours, ride a bike and walk unaided while blindfolded<br />
<br />
A ten-year-old Indian boy claims to have taught himself the ability recognise colours through his sense of smell with 'mind-training'. <br />
Vikas Panchal, from Delhi, says he has also learned how to ride a bike, walk around unaided, and picking out a particular classmate from a line of fellow pupils, all while blindfolded. <br />
He claims to have developed his unusual skills by spending two hours per day practising a particular type of mind exercise technique. <br />
<br />
A video of Vikas demonstrating his abilities shows him picking up different colour balls and beads while having his eyes completely covered.<br />
After smelling them for a few seconds, he then describes the colour, even differentiating between two different shades.<br />
<br />
Other footage shows him blindfolded and riding a bicycle around his school playground and wandering around his local neighbourhood in Delhi  wearing a blindfold while dodging potholes and pedestrians.<br />
Vikas says his skills have been developed through a mind-training technique known as Midbrain Activation.<br />
It targets the stimulation of a small part of the brain that acts as a relay centre for information gathered from the body's visual, auditory and motor systems.<br />
<br />
It is claimed that people who develop their midbrain will never forget what they have seen or heard just once previously.<br />
As a result, then are said to be able to carry out everyday tasks quite literally with their eyes closed.<br />
Vikas spends two hours each day practising the technique and says it has also transformed his schooling and seen him rise to the top of his class.<br />
His trainer Shri Bhagwan, said: 'His training is like meditation. We sit in a silent place and shut our eyes.<br />
'Everyone's mind has two parts. One part is the left side and other part is the right side.<br />
'Our right side is more active than the left side. With this technique we activate the lazy side of our mi
    Exclusivepix_Indian_Boy_Smell_Walk_b...jpg
  • A collection of  funny images showing animals with very unusual markings!<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Animals_With_Unusal_mar...jpg
  • A collection of  funny images showing animals with very unusual markings!<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Animals_With_Unusal_mar...jpg
  • A collection of  funny images showing animals with very unusual markings!<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Animals_With_Unusal_mar...jpg
  • A collection of  funny images showing animals with very unusual markings!<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Animals_With_Unusal_mar...jpg
  • A collection of  funny images showing animals with very unusual markings!<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Animals_With_Unusal_mar...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • Slow moo-tion: The farm that lets visitors saddle up on COWS rather than horses (but treks can take a while as the bovines love to graze)<br />
<br />
Visitors to a farm in the Swiss Alps may be surprised to find that instead of saddling up on a horse - they get to ride cows.<br />
Bolderhof Farm offers guests the chance to clamber onto the back of one of the hoofed creatures for treks lasting up to half a day.<br />
The owner of the farm says that unlike horses, dairy cows are less likely to react to scenarios around them, meaning the risk of falling off is slim.<br />
<br />
Guests are able to get acquainted with their bovine in a short meet and greet, according to Smithsonian, before putting on a helmet and saddling up for the unusual experience.<br />
Despite their large size, the herbivores' speed ranges from 'slow to very slow' - perfect for enjoying the woods and rivers of the Rhine lowlands.<br />
In fact their pace is so glacial that rides in the past have been delayed by cows whose attention is more preoccupied with grazing rather than completing the journey.<br />
<br />
But what the experience does offer is a peaceful and stress-free amble through the beautiful rolling Swiss Alps. <br />
'If something happens around you, the cow stands still and looks,' Bolderhof Farm owner Heinz Morgenegg told the Smithsonian. <br />
After a slow trek through the countryside, wannabe cowboys can enjoy a picnic spread of organic meat, cheese, bread and wine.<br />
<br />
The cow trekking experience started after Morgenegg queried what would happen if he climbed onto the back of one of his herd.<br />
As the bovine lay on the ground he clambered on, with the cow barely reacting to his rider. <br />
Years later, and the farm has cow trekking as a permanent attraction with people from all over the globe flocking to stroll on his prized animals.<br />
<br />
For those who aren't keen to hop on a cow, there are a range of other activities available on the farm. <br />
Guests can make cheese, milk cows,  saw wood, try farmhand skills and see the on-site water buffalo. <br />
After a day on the
    Exclusivepix_visitors_saddle_up_on_C...jpg
  • Slow moo-tion: The farm that lets visitors saddle up on COWS rather than horses (but treks can take a while as the bovines love to graze)<br />
<br />
Visitors to a farm in the Swiss Alps may be surprised to find that instead of saddling up on a horse - they get to ride cows.<br />
Bolderhof Farm offers guests the chance to clamber onto the back of one of the hoofed creatures for treks lasting up to half a day.<br />
The owner of the farm says that unlike horses, dairy cows are less likely to react to scenarios around them, meaning the risk of falling off is slim.<br />
<br />
Guests are able to get acquainted with their bovine in a short meet and greet, according to Smithsonian, before putting on a helmet and saddling up for the unusual experience.<br />
Despite their large size, the herbivores' speed ranges from 'slow to very slow' - perfect for enjoying the woods and rivers of the Rhine lowlands.<br />
In fact their pace is so glacial that rides in the past have been delayed by cows whose attention is more preoccupied with grazing rather than completing the journey.<br />
<br />
But what the experience does offer is a peaceful and stress-free amble through the beautiful rolling Swiss Alps. <br />
'If something happens around you, the cow stands still and looks,' Bolderhof Farm owner Heinz Morgenegg told the Smithsonian. <br />
After a slow trek through the countryside, wannabe cowboys can enjoy a picnic spread of organic meat, cheese, bread and wine.<br />
<br />
The cow trekking experience started after Morgenegg queried what would happen if he climbed onto the back of one of his herd.<br />
As the bovine lay on the ground he clambered on, with the cow barely reacting to his rider. <br />
Years later, and the farm has cow trekking as a permanent attraction with people from all over the globe flocking to stroll on his prized animals.<br />
<br />
For those who aren't keen to hop on a cow, there are a range of other activities available on the farm. <br />
Guests can make cheese, milk cows,  saw wood, try farmhand skills and see the on-site water buffalo. <br />
After a day on the
    Exclusivepix_visitors_saddle_up_on_C...jpg
  • Slow moo-tion: The farm that lets visitors saddle up on COWS rather than horses (but treks can take a while as the bovines love to graze)<br />
<br />
Visitors to a farm in the Swiss Alps may be surprised to find that instead of saddling up on a horse - they get to ride cows.<br />
Bolderhof Farm offers guests the chance to clamber onto the back of one of the hoofed creatures for treks lasting up to half a day.<br />
The owner of the farm says that unlike horses, dairy cows are less likely to react to scenarios around them, meaning the risk of falling off is slim.<br />
<br />
Guests are able to get acquainted with their bovine in a short meet and greet, according to Smithsonian, before putting on a helmet and saddling up for the unusual experience.<br />
Despite their large size, the herbivores' speed ranges from 'slow to very slow' - perfect for enjoying the woods and rivers of the Rhine lowlands.<br />
In fact their pace is so glacial that rides in the past have been delayed by cows whose attention is more preoccupied with grazing rather than completing the journey.<br />
<br />
But what the experience does offer is a peaceful and stress-free amble through the beautiful rolling Swiss Alps. <br />
'If something happens around you, the cow stands still and looks,' Bolderhof Farm owner Heinz Morgenegg told the Smithsonian. <br />
After a slow trek through the countryside, wannabe cowboys can enjoy a picnic spread of organic meat, cheese, bread and wine.<br />
<br />
The cow trekking experience started after Morgenegg queried what would happen if he climbed onto the back of one of his herd.<br />
As the bovine lay on the ground he clambered on, with the cow barely reacting to his rider. <br />
Years later, and the farm has cow trekking as a permanent attraction with people from all over the globe flocking to stroll on his prized animals.<br />
<br />
For those who aren't keen to hop on a cow, there are a range of other activities available on the farm. <br />
Guests can make cheese, milk cows,  saw wood, try farmhand skills and see the on-site water buffalo. <br />
After a day on the
    Exclusivepix_visitors_saddle_up_on_C...jpg
  • Indian boy, 10, claims his sense of smell is so strong he can identify colours, ride a bike and walk unaided while blindfolded<br />
<br />
A ten-year-old Indian boy claims to have taught himself the ability recognise colours through his sense of smell with 'mind-training'. <br />
Vikas Panchal, from Delhi, says he has also learned how to ride a bike, walk around unaided, and picking out a particular classmate from a line of fellow pupils, all while blindfolded. <br />
He claims to have developed his unusual skills by spending two hours per day practising a particular type of mind exercise technique. <br />
<br />
A video of Vikas demonstrating his abilities shows him picking up different colour balls and beads while having his eyes completely covered.<br />
After smelling them for a few seconds, he then describes the colour, even differentiating between two different shades.<br />
<br />
Other footage shows him blindfolded and riding a bicycle around his school playground and wandering around his local neighbourhood in Delhi  wearing a blindfold while dodging potholes and pedestrians.<br />
Vikas says his skills have been developed through a mind-training technique known as Midbrain Activation.<br />
It targets the stimulation of a small part of the brain that acts as a relay centre for information gathered from the body's visual, auditory and motor systems.<br />
<br />
It is claimed that people who develop their midbrain will never forget what they have seen or heard just once previously.<br />
As a result, then are said to be able to carry out everyday tasks quite literally with their eyes closed.<br />
Vikas spends two hours each day practising the technique and says it has also transformed his schooling and seen him rise to the top of his class.<br />
His trainer Shri Bhagwan, said: 'His training is like meditation. We sit in a silent place and shut our eyes.<br />
'Everyone's mind has two parts. One part is the left side and other part is the right side.<br />
'Our right side is more active than the left side. With this technique we activate the lazy side of our mi
    Exclusivepix_Indian_Boy_Smell_Walk_b...jpg
  • Indian boy, 10, claims his sense of smell is so strong he can identify colours, ride a bike and walk unaided while blindfolded<br />
<br />
A ten-year-old Indian boy claims to have taught himself the ability recognise colours through his sense of smell with 'mind-training'. <br />
Vikas Panchal, from Delhi, says he has also learned how to ride a bike, walk around unaided, and picking out a particular classmate from a line of fellow pupils, all while blindfolded. <br />
He claims to have developed his unusual skills by spending two hours per day practising a particular type of mind exercise technique. <br />
<br />
A video of Vikas demonstrating his abilities shows him picking up different colour balls and beads while having his eyes completely covered.<br />
After smelling them for a few seconds, he then describes the colour, even differentiating between two different shades.<br />
<br />
Other footage shows him blindfolded and riding a bicycle around his school playground and wandering around his local neighbourhood in Delhi  wearing a blindfold while dodging potholes and pedestrians.<br />
Vikas says his skills have been developed through a mind-training technique known as Midbrain Activation.<br />
It targets the stimulation of a small part of the brain that acts as a relay centre for information gathered from the body's visual, auditory and motor systems.<br />
<br />
It is claimed that people who develop their midbrain will never forget what they have seen or heard just once previously.<br />
As a result, then are said to be able to carry out everyday tasks quite literally with their eyes closed.<br />
Vikas spends two hours each day practising the technique and says it has also transformed his schooling and seen him rise to the top of his class.<br />
His trainer Shri Bhagwan, said: 'His training is like meditation. We sit in a silent place and shut our eyes.<br />
'Everyone's mind has two parts. One part is the left side and other part is the right side.<br />
'Our right side is more active than the left side. With this technique we activate the lazy side of our mi
    Exclusivepix_Indian_Boy_Smell_Walk_b...jpg
  • Indian boy, 10, claims his sense of smell is so strong he can identify colours, ride a bike and walk unaided while blindfolded<br />
<br />
A ten-year-old Indian boy claims to have taught himself the ability recognise colours through his sense of smell with 'mind-training'. <br />
Vikas Panchal, from Delhi, says he has also learned how to ride a bike, walk around unaided, and picking out a particular classmate from a line of fellow pupils, all while blindfolded. <br />
He claims to have developed his unusual skills by spending two hours per day practising a particular type of mind exercise technique. <br />
<br />
A video of Vikas demonstrating his abilities shows him picking up different colour balls and beads while having his eyes completely covered.<br />
After smelling them for a few seconds, he then describes the colour, even differentiating between two different shades.<br />
<br />
Other footage shows him blindfolded and riding a bicycle around his school playground and wandering around his local neighbourhood in Delhi  wearing a blindfold while dodging potholes and pedestrians.<br />
Vikas says his skills have been developed through a mind-training technique known as Midbrain Activation.<br />
It targets the stimulation of a small part of the brain that acts as a relay centre for information gathered from the body's visual, auditory and motor systems.<br />
<br />
It is claimed that people who develop their midbrain will never forget what they have seen or heard just once previously.<br />
As a result, then are said to be able to carry out everyday tasks quite literally with their eyes closed.<br />
Vikas spends two hours each day practising the technique and says it has also transformed his schooling and seen him rise to the top of his class.<br />
His trainer Shri Bhagwan, said: 'His training is like meditation. We sit in a silent place and shut our eyes.<br />
'Everyone's mind has two parts. One part is the left side and other part is the right side.<br />
'Our right side is more active than the left side. With this technique we activate the lazy side of our mi
    Exclusivepix_Indian_Boy_Smell_Walk_b...jpg
  • Indian boy, 10, claims his sense of smell is so strong he can identify colours, ride a bike and walk unaided while blindfolded<br />
<br />
A ten-year-old Indian boy claims to have taught himself the ability recognise colours through his sense of smell with 'mind-training'. <br />
Vikas Panchal, from Delhi, says he has also learned how to ride a bike, walk around unaided, and picking out a particular classmate from a line of fellow pupils, all while blindfolded. <br />
He claims to have developed his unusual skills by spending two hours per day practising a particular type of mind exercise technique. <br />
<br />
A video of Vikas demonstrating his abilities shows him picking up different colour balls and beads while having his eyes completely covered.<br />
After smelling them for a few seconds, he then describes the colour, even differentiating between two different shades.<br />
<br />
Other footage shows him blindfolded and riding a bicycle around his school playground and wandering around his local neighbourhood in Delhi  wearing a blindfold while dodging potholes and pedestrians.<br />
Vikas says his skills have been developed through a mind-training technique known as Midbrain Activation.<br />
It targets the stimulation of a small part of the brain that acts as a relay centre for information gathered from the body's visual, auditory and motor systems.<br />
<br />
It is claimed that people who develop their midbrain will never forget what they have seen or heard just once previously.<br />
As a result, then are said to be able to carry out everyday tasks quite literally with their eyes closed.<br />
Vikas spends two hours each day practising the technique and says it has also transformed his schooling and seen him rise to the top of his class.<br />
His trainer Shri Bhagwan, said: 'His training is like meditation. We sit in a silent place and shut our eyes.<br />
'Everyone's mind has two parts. One part is the left side and other part is the right side.<br />
'Our right side is more active than the left side. With this technique we activate the lazy side of our mi
    Exclusivepix_Indian_Boy_Smell_Walk_b...jpg
  • A collection of  funny images showing animals with very unusual markings!<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Animals_With_Unusal_mar...jpg
  • A collection of  funny images showing animals with very unusual markings!<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Animals_With_Unusal_mar...jpg
  • A collection of  funny images showing animals with very unusual markings!<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Animals_With_Unusal_mar...jpg
  • A collection of  funny images showing animals with very unusual markings!<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Animals_With_Unusal_mar...jpg
  • Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods<br />
<br />
Bruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.<br />
<br />
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.<br />
©www.airplanehome.com/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Man_Lives_In_A_Boeing_727_in_T...jpg
  • A collection of  funny images showing animals with very unusual markings!<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Animals_With_Unusal_mar...jpg
  • Coffee Cone – In Tokyo, this café serves tea and coffee in crispy cones<br />
<br />
This is Coffee in a Cone, a new trend launched by Coffee Cone, based in Tokyo. This Japanese café had the brilliant idea to serve its teas, coffees and other capuchino in ice cream cones decorated with colorful sugar, creating some delicious edible and crispy cups! <br />
©Coffee Cone/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_cafe_serves_tea_coffee_in_cris...jpg
  • HANGZHOU, CHINA - JUNE 06: <br />
<br />
Aerial view of an open space piled up with colorful shared bicycles on June 6, 2017 in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province of China. A total of about one thousand shared bicycles were transported to the open space by working staff of management committee for its adverse effect on environment and traffic safety. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Graveyard_For_Bicycles06.jpg
  • HANGZHOU, CHINA - JUNE 06: <br />
<br />
Aerial view of an open space piled up with colorful shared bicycles on June 6, 2017 in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province of China. A total of about one thousand shared bicycles were transported to the open space by working staff of management committee for its adverse effect on environment and traffic safety. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Graveyard_For_Bicycles02.jpg
  • Thai hospital gives masks to women embarrassed about getting Pap smear<br />
<br />
The women who received a free Pap smear test at a hospital in Kamphaeng Phet province last week didn’t need to feel embarrassed about getting an absolutely normal medical check, because they could hide behind creepy green masks.<br />
<br />
This head-scratching initiative, called “The Mask Pap Smear,” was started by Sa Kaew sub-district office and the Nong Krot Hospital, to decrease the awkwardness between the doctors and patients who are shy about getting a gynecological exam.<br />
<br />
The project was targeted at women aged 30-70.According to sub-district governor Suwan Supakijchareon, the initiative was successful because many women showed up to get free Pap smears, now that they could wear a mask and didn’t need to let the doctors see their faces,<br />
©TipcableTV/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Hospital_gives_masks_to_women_...jpg
  • Thai hospital gives masks to women embarrassed about getting Pap smear<br />
<br />
The women who received a free Pap smear test at a hospital in Kamphaeng Phet province last week didn’t need to feel embarrassed about getting an absolutely normal medical check, because they could hide behind creepy green masks.<br />
<br />
This head-scratching initiative, called “The Mask Pap Smear,” was started by Sa Kaew sub-district office and the Nong Krot Hospital, to decrease the awkwardness between the doctors and patients who are shy about getting a gynecological exam.<br />
<br />
The project was targeted at women aged 30-70.According to sub-district governor Suwan Supakijchareon, the initiative was successful because many women showed up to get free Pap smears, now that they could wear a mask and didn’t need to let the doctors see their faces,<br />
©TipcableTV/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Hospital_gives_masks_to_women_...jpg
  • THE MUDMEN OF THE WESTERN HIGHLANDS<br />
<br />
PAPUA NEW GUINEA is a land of Wig-Schools, Wig-Teachers and WigMen, impenetrable rain-forests, sweet potatoes and pigs. A land of the Cus-Cus, the Cassowary and thirty-eight species of Birds of Paradise.<br />
<br />
A land without sheep, goats, cows or milk. A land where there are no donkeys, horses or mules. No bicycles, mopeds and few cars; virtually no restaurants, bars, shops, electricity or roads. It is a land where there is no recreational sex, where a new-born girl is called a Shovel, a boy an Axe and where many adults have no birth certificates. It is perhaps one of the most untouched lands on earth.<br />
<br />
 This bizarre way of life is found in the Highlands of Papua New Guinea, a country comprising more than 2000 indigeneous clans, including the Mudmen of the Waghi Valley.  To find this clan, you need to travel  to the Highlands town of Mt Hagen. Although it’s the third largest town in the country it has a reputation of being “the wild frontier’ of the Highlands and more often is referred to as simply Hagen, a German name that acknowledges the presence of Lutheran missionaries who settled in the area almost a century ago. Compared with the intense heat and humidity of the coastal region, Hagen has a comfortable alpine climate and though it rains an average of 3800mm a year, there are few mosquitoes and consequently no malaria. Throughout Papua New Guinea, language is an issue. More than 800 different languages are spoken, 12% of the world’s indigeneous languages, and very often adjoining clans are unable to understand the language spoken by their neighbours just a few kilometres away. Some of these languages are spoken by just 5000. <br />
<br />
For centuries the Highlands peoples of Papua New Guinea fought over land, women and pigs. Sorcery and battle skills could elevate a clan to Bigmanship, where the bigger the ‘presentation’, the bigger the man. Clans therefore would paint their bodies and create fearsome masks as part of their psy
    ExPix_The_Mudmen13.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE PICTURE FEATURE<br />
The Living Ghosts of Benin<br />
<br />
*Villagers believe if they are touched by an Egungun, they will die<br />
<br />
*Having any contact whatsoever with an Egungun can prove deadly for both the Egungun and the other person, so each Egungun is accompanied by a 'minder', also a member of the Egungun society, who carries a long and substantial stick to drive individuals away...<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
BENIN is a small country sandwiched between Nigeria to the East and Ghana and Togo to the West. Formerly a French colony known as Dahomey, little is known about the country prior to around the 15th century when it was occupied first by the Portuguese, then the British, Dutch and lastly French who ousted King Behanzin and took control in 1894. <br />
<br />
The Egungun are one of Benin’s Secret Societies who appear as masked men representing the spirits of the Living Dead. They are Living Ghosts, a conduit to the ancestors. Their role in village society is to settle local disputes, and their knowledge is often consulted in times of trouble within their village. The Egungun speak in a high-pitched and altogether un-human and unsettling falsetto tone, similar to the voices used in a Punch-and-Judy show, and in a language that is not understood by other villagers; they are always accompanied by drummers. Some say they derive their name from the Yoruba (Northern Nigerian) word for "bones" or "skeleton," but in Yoruba, Egungun also means "masquerade.”  Egungun arrive in villages, pass judgements and give advice. Their word is final as their advice is a direct word of the Gods.<br />
<br />
Each Egungun appears as a robed figure - giving the impression that the deceased is making a temporary reappearance on Earth. This impression is enhanced by the voluminous costumes of the Egungun; the cloth and design they use expresses the power of the ancestor. In one village I came across an Egungun with the stature and form of a child. I enquired as to his age (all Egungun are male). As soon as I’d asked I realised that
    ExPix_The_Living_Ghosts26.jpg
  • Cowboy boot-shaped house<br />
<br />
This whimsical boot-shaped home may look like a quirky roadside stop, but it’s actually a fully functioning home available for rent. Designed and built by Dan Phillips of Phoenix Commotion – a firm that specializes in building affordable homes using reclaimed materials – the unique 2 bedroom, 1 bath home comes with custom features, a nice yard, and even a stunning rooftop deck!<br />
©Andrew Stewart/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Cowboy_Boot_House43.jpg
  • Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid<br />
<br />
Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.<br />
The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.<br />
And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them. <br />
<br />
However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.<br />
Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.<br />
But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire. <br />
<br />
In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.<br />
They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.<br />
In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.<br />
A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day. <br />
<br />
Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.<br />
However, not eve
    Exclusivepix_Macbook_Selfies15.jpg
  • ZHENGZHOU, CHINA - FEBRUARY 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
 Aisa's Tallest Man Comes To Zhengzhou in China<br />
<br />
A shop assistant gives food to Zhang Huan on February 17, 2016 in Zhengzhou, Henan Province of China. Zhang Huan was 2.38 meters tall and known to be the tallest man in Asia.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Aisas_Tallest_Man_Comes...jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - FEBRUARY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Pavement Planted With Trees <br />
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Citizens walk on pavement where lots of trees spread near the north road of Jinan University on February 17, 2016 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. The 300-meter-long pavement are planted with dozens of trees and specific reason is unknown.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Pavement_Planted_With_T...jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - FEBRUARY 13: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Slide In Shopping Mall<br />
<br />
General view of a slide built in a five-storey shopping mall on February 13, 2016 in Shanghai, China. The slide will be open to the public at the end of February so shoppers can move quickly around the shopping centre<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Slide_In_Shopping_Mall0...jpg
  • Circular Bridge Built To Slow Down Drivers So That They Would Enjoy The View<br />
<br />
The end of 2015 saw the completion of a round bridge that stretches across Laguna Garzón between the cities of Rocha and Maldonado on the southern coast of Uruguay. Designed by Rafael Viñoly, the bridge took 12 months to complete, and replaces a traditional raft crossing while encouraging drivers to enjoy the view.<br />
“The concept of the Puente Laguna Garzon was to transform a traditional vehicular crossing into an event that reduces the speed of the cars, to provide an opportunity to enjoy panoramic views to an amazing landscape, and at the same time create a pedestrian place in the centre,” said Viñoly.<br />
©Rafael Vinoly Architects/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Circular_Bridge_Built_T...jpg
  • CHANGCHUN, CHINA - NOVEMBER 09: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
A simulated green belt appears along the road on November 9, 2015 in Changchun, Jilin Province of China. The cloth printed plants enclosed the withered trees in the green belt in Changchun.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Simulated_Green_Belt5.jpg
  • RIZHAO, CHINA - OCTOBER 08: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Shi Yanqiang presents his home-made armored vehicle on October 8, 2015 in Rizhao, Shandong Province of China. Shi Yanqiang used to be a soldier and he likes military vehicles very much. Shi bought a scrap light truck this March and spent 7 months and 30,000 yuan (4,700 USD) modifying it. The armored vehicle has attracted many visitors since its completion. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Home_made_Armored_Tank5.jpg
  • QIANXINAN, CHINA - OCTOBER 12: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Thousands Of Tents Appear During The International Camping Congress<br />
<br />
Aerial view of tents on the square beside the Sancha River during the International Camping Congress in Zhenfeng County as a part of The First International Mountain Tourism Conference on October 12, 2015 in Qianxinan Buyei and Miao Autonomous Prefecture, Guizhou Province of China. Campers from all over the world gathered and sent thousands of tents on the square beside the Sancha River in Qianxinan during the International Camping Congress as a part of The First International Mountain Tourism Conference. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Thousands_Of_Tents_Appe...jpg
  • FULFILL YOUR HOBBIT DREAMS BY RENTING OUT THIS AWESOME TREEHOUSE<br />
<br />
In Black Hills, South Dakota, there’s a geeky house that’s been remodeled to look like a Hobbit’s humble abode. Although this one’s not located on the side of a hill, but rather, on top of a tree!<br />
Part of Chateau De Soleil, a six-acre property owned by LOTR fan Gordon Mack, the Hobbit Tree House is perched 16 feet above ground and features Middle Earth-themed items like Elvish-language signs, a mask worn by Sauron, and of course, a round door. Oh, and it even comes with Hobbit slippers if you really want to get into it while having second breakfast.<br />
<br />
No need to be a wizard or a bunch of unwelcome dwarves to stay in this property. You just need to rent out the country house (which is also cool with its own arcade) adjacent to it. <br />
©Lisa Duncan/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_HOBBIT_Tree_House28.jpg
  • We feel the looks and stares': Father of little Jaxon born without most of his skull reveals the horror abuse he and his wife have received from trolls who say they should have had him aborted<br />
<br />
The father of an infant who has celebrated his first birthday despite missing most of his brain and skull has spoken out about the abuse he's received after the inspirational story was shared on social media.<br />
Brandon Buell's son Jaxon was given only days to live at birth because of a rare neural-tube condition called Anencephaly seen while he was developing in the womb.<br />
News of the child's miraculous survival was read by hundreds of thousands after his first birthday in August, though some said that Brandon and his wife Brittany were 'selfish' or should have aborted the child to avoid the pain he will suffer.<br />
<br />
Brandon responded to the criticism in a heartfelt Facebook post Saturday night, saying his wife and his decision to keep their son was 'our choice, and only our choice'.<br />
<br />
Brandon and Brittany, who are devout Christians, were told by doctors that Jaxon would probably not survive the pregnancy.<br />
Doctors gave them the option to abort at 23 weeks, though Brandon said 'no doctor could tell us exactly what was wrong or what to expect'. <br />
About one in 4,859 babies in the United States will be born with Anencephaly and usually die shortly after birth, according to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention.<br />
The father said that he and Brittany asked if the child was suffering in the womb or if there were potential health risks to her during the delivery.<br />
<br />
He said that there would have been a 'different discussion' if the answers to those questions had been yes.<br />
'However, that wasn’t the case, and it was our choice, and only our choice. Jaxon was our baby, and we only had one shot to do everything we could for him,' he said.<br />
Brandon added that he and Brittany didn't want to 'play God'.<br />
The parents had a two-month scare of multiple seizures, and Jaxon was rushed to the emergen
    Exclusivepix_Baby_Born_Missing_his_s...jpg
  • We feel the looks and stares': Father of little Jaxon born without most of his skull reveals the horror abuse he and his wife have received from trolls who say they should have had him aborted<br />
<br />
The father of an infant who has celebrated his first birthday despite missing most of his brain and skull has spoken out about the abuse he's received after the inspirational story was shared on social media.<br />
Brandon Buell's son Jaxon was given only days to live at birth because of a rare neural-tube condition called Anencephaly seen while he was developing in the womb.<br />
News of the child's miraculous survival was read by hundreds of thousands after his first birthday in August, though some said that Brandon and his wife Brittany were 'selfish' or should have aborted the child to avoid the pain he will suffer.<br />
<br />
Brandon responded to the criticism in a heartfelt Facebook post Saturday night, saying his wife and his decision to keep their son was 'our choice, and only our choice'.<br />
<br />
Brandon and Brittany, who are devout Christians, were told by doctors that Jaxon would probably not survive the pregnancy.<br />
Doctors gave them the option to abort at 23 weeks, though Brandon said 'no doctor could tell us exactly what was wrong or what to expect'. <br />
About one in 4,859 babies in the United States will be born with Anencephaly and usually die shortly after birth, according to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention.<br />
The father said that he and Brittany asked if the child was suffering in the womb or if there were potential health risks to her during the delivery.<br />
<br />
He said that there would have been a 'different discussion' if the answers to those questions had been yes.<br />
'However, that wasn’t the case, and it was our choice, and only our choice. Jaxon was our baby, and we only had one shot to do everything we could for him,' he said.<br />
Brandon added that he and Brittany didn't want to 'play God'.<br />
The parents had a two-month scare of multiple seizures, and Jaxon was rushed to the emergen
    Exclusivepix_Baby_Born_Missing_his_s...jpg
  • TIANJIN, CHINA - AUGUST 28: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Two-head And Three-ear Piglet Found<br />
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Yang Jinliang, whose friend picks up a piglet with two heads and three ears and gives him, touches piglet in Xiqing District on August 28, 2015 in Tianjin, China. Yang Jinliang, a man who is owner of a sesame oil workshop in Xiqing District of Tianjin, received a piglet from friend on Thursday while curiously the piglet had two heads and three ears. It seemed that its weak body could not afford the laden head so it always bowed. Nobody knew where it came and why it would be like that. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Two_head_Piglet7.jpg
  • CHANGZHI, CHINA - JULY 27: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
80-day-old Baby With No Anus, little baby Guo Enze is seen having a bath, Guo who has no anus at Chuandi Village in Huguan Town, Changzhi City, Shanxi Province of China. <br />
80-day-old Guo Enze born without anus ate a little milk everyday and defecated toughly from penis. A charity project found Guo and donated milk powder to him. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Baby_Born_Without_Anus2.jpg
  • The Surreal World of Neutrino Detectors<br />
<br />
Neutrinos are one of the fundamental particles which make up the universe, but not in the way electrons, protons and neutrons are. These particles are extremely tiny, nearly massless and electrically neutral so they are not affected by electromagnetic forces and react very weakly with other particles of nature. Neutrinos are produced by the decay of radioactive elements in nuclear reactions such as in the core of the sun or exploding stars. Once born, they travel in straight lines at the speed of light passing through solid matter almost entirely unhindered. Although tiny, they carry a colossal amount of energy — some of these carry the same amount of energy as a well hit tennis ball. To detect these particles using the same technology they use at the Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland, one would require a ring of magnets the size of Earth's orbit around the Sun.<br />
Neutrino detectors therefore use entirely different kind of science and technology. Some detectors use large tanks filled with water and surrounded by photomultiplier tubes that watch for radiation emitted when an incoming neutrino creates an electron or muon in the water. Other detectors have tanks filled with chlorine or gallium or other liquids. Neutrino detectors are often built underground, to isolate the detector from cosmic rays and other background radiation.<br />
<br />
<br />
The Super-Kamiokande neutrino detector is located 1,000 meters under Mount Kamioka near the city of Hida, in Japan. The detector consist of a cylindrical stainless steel tank 41 meters by 39 meters holding 50,000 tons of ultra-pure water and surrounded by more than 11,000 photomultiplier tubes (PMT). It is one of the largest detector of its kind.<br />
When a passing neutrino interacts with the electrons or nuclei of water, it can produce a charged particle that moves faster than the speed of light in water. This creates a cone of light known as Cherenkov radiation, which is the optical equivalent to a s
    Exclusivepix_Surreal_World_of_Neutri...JPG
  • 'Rubber Man' smashes bizarre record by breaking CDs between his shoulders - in front of his chest<br />
<br />
Farmers aren't renowned for being particularly supple.<br />
But Rammehar Punia has bucked the trend with record-breaking results.<br />
The 35-year-old has been dubbed 'Rubber Man' thanks to his remarkable ability to make his shoulders meet in front of his chest. <br />
<br />
And he has used this flexibility to smash the Guinness World Record for the number of CDs broken between the shoulders – 60 in just one minute.<br />
<br />
His suppleness also allows him to wrap his left hand around his neck so far that he can grab hold of his left ear.<br />
Mr Punia set himself the challenge of breaking records when he was at school and began training his body to reach the extreme limits he achieves today. <br />
<br />
He broke his first Guinness World Record in 2011 when he cracked 41 CDs in a minute.<br />
<br />
This was later beaten, but he went on to win it back by breaking 60 in as many seconds after training for up to four hours a day while holding down his job as a farmer.<br />
<br />
Mr Punia, from Panipat, India, has performed shows in various cities across his homeland and abroad, including in Italy. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Rubber_man5.jpg
  • Fisherman lands 19 STONE catfish which could be biggest in world to be hooked<br />
<br />
Dino Ferrari hooked the whopper wels catfish, which was 2.67m in length, last week in the Po Delta in Italy <br />
A fisherman has reeled in a monster 19 stone catfish, which could be the biggest in the world caught with a rod and reel.<br />
<br />
Dino Ferrari hooked the whopper wels catfish, which was 2.67m in length, last week in the Po Delta in Italy.<br />
<br />
While the fish might set a new record for the biggest caught on a line, it is far from the heaviest ever landed. The biggest was 22st and 2.78m long, and was also from the Po Delta.<br />
<br />
Wels catfish can grow as long as 4m and up to 62st. However, it is rare to catch one that is over two meters long.<br />
The fish has a ferocious appetite and will consume anything it comes across. They have been filmed eating pigeons that get too close.<br />
©Dino Ferrari/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Big_Catfish_Caught5.jpg
  • Check in, chill out! Stunning igloo hotel opens with private pools, mountain saunas and candle-lit suites ... but no running water<br />
<br />
Every winter, this hotel is carved out of the surrounding snow, with igloo rooms, romantic suites and even an outdoor whirlpool for the bravest guests.<br />
<br />
Iglu-Dorf hotel is rebuilt every season from 3,000 tons of snow at six locations from the Alps to the Pyrenees.<br />
<br />
The Swiss igloos, constructed in the Bernese Oberland and surrounded by 9,000ft mountain peaks, comes with artworks carved into the walls by artists from around the world, candle-lit suites for romantic guests and even saunas among the mountains.<br />
Open from Christmas Day to April, each villages sleeps up to 38 guests, cocooning them in cosy sleeping bags on thick sheepskin rugs, designed to withstand temperatures of minus 40C.<br />
<br />
And in the morning, there’s an enormous buffet of croissants, cooked meats, pastries, cereals, cheese and coffee.<br />
<br />
The cost for one in a standard Iglu-Dorf igloo is 99euros (£68) from Monday to Thursday and 115 euros from Friday to Sunday.<br />
<br />
A tour around the Gstaad site shows the great diversity of works in rooms and common areas of the unique accommodation from traditional Inuit works to artists from Switzerland and much further abroad.  <br />
<br />
Artists armed with no more than an ice pick, motorised saw and shovel, produce life-like animals such as seals, arctic wolves, polar bears and whales, eye-catching designs and patterns, or even super heroes. <br />
<br />
It's an elaborate and classy scene compared to the basic igloo Gunter first constructed with friends on a mountain in a bid to be first on the slopes in the morning.  <br />
<br />
The company says 99 per cent of their guests stay one night only. <br />
<br />
'We don't generally recommend [more than one night] as we neither have running water, nor showers,' the company says.  <br />
<br />
Each village caters for 38 guests a night, all of who bed down on a thick sheepskin rug in cosy sleeping bags equipped for minus-40 degrees celsius. <br />
<br />
Nigh
    Exclusivepix_Snow_Hotel8.jpg
  • Check in, chill out! Stunning igloo hotel opens with private pools, mountain saunas and candle-lit suites ... but no running water<br />
<br />
Every winter, this hotel is carved out of the surrounding snow, with igloo rooms, romantic suites and even an outdoor whirlpool for the bravest guests.<br />
<br />
Iglu-Dorf hotel is rebuilt every season from 3,000 tons of snow at six locations from the Alps to the Pyrenees.<br />
<br />
The Swiss igloos, constructed in the Bernese Oberland and surrounded by 9,000ft mountain peaks, comes with artworks carved into the walls by artists from around the world, candle-lit suites for romantic guests and even saunas among the mountains.<br />
Open from Christmas Day to April, each villages sleeps up to 38 guests, cocooning them in cosy sleeping bags on thick sheepskin rugs, designed to withstand temperatures of minus 40C.<br />
<br />
And in the morning, there’s an enormous buffet of croissants, cooked meats, pastries, cereals, cheese and coffee.<br />
<br />
The cost for one in a standard Iglu-Dorf igloo is 99euros (£68) from Monday to Thursday and 115 euros from Friday to Sunday.<br />
<br />
A tour around the Gstaad site shows the great diversity of works in rooms and common areas of the unique accommodation from traditional Inuit works to artists from Switzerland and much further abroad.  <br />
<br />
Artists armed with no more than an ice pick, motorised saw and shovel, produce life-like animals such as seals, arctic wolves, polar bears and whales, eye-catching designs and patterns, or even super heroes. <br />
<br />
It's an elaborate and classy scene compared to the basic igloo Gunter first constructed with friends on a mountain in a bid to be first on the slopes in the morning.  <br />
<br />
The company says 99 per cent of their guests stay one night only. <br />
<br />
'We don't generally recommend [more than one night] as we neither have running water, nor showers,' the company says.  <br />
<br />
Each village caters for 38 guests a night, all of who bed down on a thick sheepskin rug in cosy sleeping bags equipped for minus-40 degrees celsius. <br />
<br />
Nigh
    Exclusivepix_Snow_Hotel21.jpg
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