Thundersnow: The Sound And The Flurry

December 13, 2011 by thegreenchildrenfoundation · View Comments 

[ By Steve in History & Trivia & Nature & Ecosystems & Science & Research. ]


Thundersnow… if there’s a more awesome-sounding meteorological phenomenon, then bring it on! While the name “Thundersnow” is eminently suitable for a Marvel superhero, a WWE wrestler or a heavy metal band, it’s actually an easily explainable (though rare and unusual) aspect of wild winter weather.

Thundersnow, The Other White Noise

(images via: To Be Sugarfree and Anokarina/Picasaweb)

Thundersnow is one of those odd occurrences that, while fully natural, just seem somehow “not right.” You’ve got your thunderstorms, which we associate with hot and humid summer days. You’ve got your snow, either blown forcefully by howling winter winds or delicately falling in silent flotillas of frilly flakes. But thunder? In my snowstorm? It’s not only less likely than you think, it’s not likely period.

(image via: Night Sky Hunter)

Not likely perhaps but far from impossible, when one considers the same basic “weather physics” that spawn thunder and lightning can occur any time of the year, in any temperature range. What’s required above all is a powerful storm system that features significant vertical mixing of air masses resulting in a separation of positive and negative electrical charges.

(images via: Rance Rizzutto and FamousDC)

Ice crystals are also seen as a catalyst for lightning formation; even in summer thunderstorms. A severe winter storm creates more than enough ice crystals to go around and their presence in cold-weather supercell systems may act to promote lightning strikes regardless of the lower degree (pun intended) of heat energy in winter storm clouds.

(images via: The Courier, Scientific American and IMWX)

Though thundersnow isn’t a component of every blizzard, the aforementioned conditions that are most conducive to thundersnow also frequently produce high winds, heavy snowfalls, severe drifting and whiteouts. If you can hear thundersnow, be thankful you’re indoors or feel anxious if you aren’t. An erstwhile cameraman from Dundee, Scotland managed to capture multiple thundersnow lightning strikes on a wind turbine outside the city’s Michelin works. Image at above top, video goodness below:

Dundee lightning strikes 28/11/10 11:45am, via Thegameof1

Shocks and Awe

(images via: Baird’s Travel, BolgerNow and Deadspin)

The fact that thundersnow often accompanies strong storms producing heavy snowfalls – up to 4 inches per hour in some cases – means that the phenomenon is occasionally observed inadvertently by weathermen (weatherpeople?) who are familiar with the phenomenon… or should we say, “should” be familiar.

(images via: Daily Mail UK)

Take Jim Cantore (above), for instance. The long-time Weather Channel on-air personality and storm tracker has acquired a reputation for really getting into his work, usually on live TV broadcasts. You’d think nothing weather-wise could faze Cantore but a 1996 thundersnow event in Worcester, MA, definitely threw him for a loop. It even made his “Best of Cantore” 25-year video retrospective. Here, check this out:

Jim Cantore: Thunder Snow, via Illinoisfury

(images via: CityRag and HipHopStan.com)

Fifteen years later, thundersnow still has the ability to astound the so-called “Thundersnow King” but Cantore’s thermodynamic theatrics aside, thundersnow is indeed rare if one goes by the official stats. A variety of sources referencing the NOAA note that between 1961 and 1990, only 375 occurrences of thundersnow were officially recorded with the state of Utah accounting for 36 of those events.

(image via: Zazzle)

Thundersnow’s rarity may be somewhat of an illusion, however. Meteorological research has uncovered the fact that falling snow acts as an acoustic suppressor. That is, sounds emanating from within or behind a curtain of snow are effectively muffled. It’s estimated that thundersnow can be heard up to 3 miles from an individual lightning strike while in run-of-the-mill rainy thunderstorms the hearing distance is roughly double. So then, if a lightning bolt falls from a winter thunderstorm and no one is within 3 to 6 miles to hear it, does it make a sound?

Thanks, It’s Been A Wintery Blast

(images via: NovelTP, Web2txt and BearsEatPeople)

“Thunder shook loose hail on the outhouse again…” The eerie opening lyric from Magazine’s disturbing 1979 track “Permafrost” may be the only musical reference to thundersnow, albeit indirectly as hail often falls during summer thunderstorms. What’s worse, sitting in an outhouse during a hailstorm or while thundersnow rattles the walls? Perhaps being in an outhouse in winter, under ANY circumstances, is frightening enough in itself.

(images via: Cerebraleye/DeviantArt, Everyday Odyssey and DatPiff)

Thundersnow, as awesome and unexpected as it is, surprisingly hasn’t made much impact on pop culture. When the writers of 1987′s The Running Man needed a name for an especially chilling villain, they picked Sub-Zero… isn’t that a refrigerator? Sub-Zero later inspired the creation of SubZero, who appears in the Mortal Combat universe.

(images via: Bat-Mania, FoodCourtLunch and Gothamist)

Even Batman blew it, bringing in Mr. Freeze when “Thundersnow!” was a much better bet to finally kick the Caped Crusader’s ice. Then there’s Thundersnow Ice Cream Cone Guy… talk about yer 15 seconds of fame.

(image via: Texas A&M News)

Perhaps thundersnow’s time to shine has yet to come. Weather channels the world over are pumping the Storm Chaser gig for all it’s worth, while at the same time the popularity of YouTube and the improving attributes of mobile phone cameras have turned almost anyone into an amateur weather reporter. With that said, thundersnow may indeed come out of the dark someday… but it’ll never come in from the cold.


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14 Unbelievably Unique Parks & Botanical Gardens

October 28, 2011 by admin · View Comments 

[ By Steph in Geography & Travel & Home & Garden & Nature & Ecosystems. ]

Intricately shaped topiaries, ponds full of lily pads and koi, greenhouses brimming with dazzling arrays of exotic flowers, strange and fascinating sculptures – these 14 botanical gardens, private gardens and parks around the world show off the beauty of cultivated nature. Representing a fusion of the wild, untamed natural world and the architectural genius of humans, these parks are the closest to paradise that we can craft with our own hands.

Claude Monet Foundation at Giverny, Normandy, France

(images via: ell brown)

Immerse yourself in the landscape that inspired some of French Impressionist painter Claude Monet’s most beautiful and celebrated works at the artist’s former estate. Walking through these gardens, it’s almost as if time has stood still, as you can view what seem to be the very same lily pads that the artist saw and painted. Giverny is located 50 miles outside Paris, on the banks of the River Seine.

Kirtenbosch National Botanical Garden, Western Cape, South Africa

(images via: wikimedia commons)

Founded in 1913, South Africa’s Kirtenbosch National Botanical Garden may just be the most beautiful botanical garden in the entire world. In this preserve you can view live samples of plants that grow in five out of South Africa’s six biomes and a stunning selection of ‘protea‘ flowering plants, all within view of Table Mountain.

Villa Lante, Bagnaia, Italy

(images via: wikimedia commons, ineedaholiday.com.au, awesome-places)

One of the most important gardens in Italy, Villa Lante was in the possession of the Lante family from the 17th century, when it was already 100 years old, until the 20th century, when it was opened to the public. Bordered by two nearly identical homes, the garden is characterized by beautiful stone fountains, lush grottoes and intricate patterns of hedges.

Jardin Botanique de Montreal, Quebec, Canada

(images via: chris dlugosz, abdallah, wikimedia commons)

The Montreal Botanical Garden has such extensive collections and facilities, it’s considered one of the most important botanical gardens in the world. An indoor greenhouse holds a wide variety of labeled plants, and four themed outdoor gardens including the Chinese Garden, the Japanese Garden, the First Nations Garden and the Alpine Garden showcase the indigenous flora of various cultures and locales. In fact, Montreal boasts the largest Chinese garden in the world, outside of China.

The Lost Gardens of Heligan, Mevagissey, UK

(images via: heligan.com)

A part of the Heligan estate in Cornall, England, these gardens fell into disuse in the 1970s and were forgotten for decades – hence the name. But when ownership of the estate transferred to a trust, a group of enthusiasts revitalized them, planting hundreds of varieties of plants, a vegetable garden, a walled garden and a ‘jungle’. A stroll through the gardens will reveal fanciful ‘creatures’ covered in grass and moss including ‘The Mud Maid’ and a ‘Giant’s Head’.

Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney, Australia

(images via: chromolux, louise docker, brian giesen, renata)

View both downtown Sydney and the infamous Sydney Opera House from the Royal Botanic Gardens, located on the site of Australia’s first ever farm, which was established in 1788. Centuries of improvements to the soil have enabled a gorgeous array of plants to flourish, including many that grow inside the Pyramid Glasshouse. Up until May 2011, a colony of over 22,000 flying foxes – a large species of fruitbat – called the gardens home, but the bats killed dozens of trees and were eventually driven out.

Byodo-in Temple, Oahu, Hawaii

(images via: timothy tolle, alan light, horschmology)

Surrounded by Oahu’s greenery-cloaked mountains, the Byodo-in Temple is a replica of a historic Kyoto, Japan, temple of the same name, but it has many merits of its own – especially its gardens, which include two acres of koi ponds. Stone paths cut through emerald-green lawns and Zen-style gardens.

Parco dei Mostri (Park of the Monsters), Bomarzo, Italy

(images via: wikimedia commons)

A large monster, referred to as the ‘Door of Hell’, opens its mouth to admit you into a  dark, cramped space with a small table. A watchtower tilts at a rather disturbing angle. Mythological creatures and unidentified monsters leer at passersby. The Parco die Mostri (Park of the Monsters) in Bomarzo, Italy is so surreal it is said to have greatly inspired the artists Salvador Dali and Jean Cocteau. The chaotic style of the gardens, which were created in the 16th century by Pier Francesco Orsini in honor of his beloved deceased wife Giulia Farnese, may be an intentional contrast to the orderly symmetry of the nearby Villa Lante.

Monte Palace Garden, Madeira, Portugal

(images via: montepalace.com, lukegordon1)

The Monte Palace Tropical Garden is a surprising glimpse of Asia found in Madeira, Portugal. Once a hotel, the gardens have been open to the public since 1989 and include a collection of ceramic tiles from the 15th – 20th centuries and various gardens that highlight both indigenous and exotic species. A group of educational panels explain the reason for the oriental gardens, telling of “The adventures of the Portuguese in Japan.”

Kew Gardens, London, UK

(images via: neiljs, paul friel, jim linwood, dan taylor, laura nolte)

More than 30,000 live species of plants can be viewed at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew in southwest London, England – and if you think that’s impressive, consider this: inside the glassed ‘herbarium’ are over seven million preserved specimens. The Kew Gardens are well-deserving of their worldwide fame, thriving despite locally unfavorable growing conditions. In addition to the outdoor gardens and greenhouses are a number of educational and research facilities and architectural features like a treetop walkway and a 49-foot-tall pagoda.

The Gardens of Las Pozas, Xilitla, Mexico

(images via:  lucy nieto, i_amici)

More of a surrealist sculpture park than a garden, Las Pozas is the playground of British poet Edward James, a patron of the arts. James was a passionate supporter of the Surrealist art movement and his love for the stile is evident in Las Pozas (the pools), which includes more than 80 acres of natural waterfalls and pools as well as concrete sculptures. The spindly, strange sculptures were built between 1949 and 1984; the whole project cost James over $5 million, which he raised by selling his considerable collection of Surrealist art.

Brooklyn Botanic Garden, New York

(images via: steve soblick, jose oquendo, elena gaillard)

Manhattan may have a botanical garden of its own, but it’s eclipsed by that of Brooklyn, a 52-acre garden located near the Prospect Heights and Park Slopes neighborhood. Putting on a jaw-dropping display of cherry blooms in the spring, the park also includes climate-themed plant pavilions, an aquatic plant house, a bonsai museum and an art gallery. Themed gardens include the Japanese Hill-and-Pond Garden, constructed in 1915, and the Shakespeare Garden which exhibits over 80 plants mentioned in the bard’s plays and poems.

Francisco Alvarado Park, Zarcero, Costa Rica

(images via: puroticorico, wikimedia commons)

Abstract shapes, arches and the faces of strange creatures grow out of the courtyard at Parque Francisco Alvarado, found in the town center of Zarcero in Costa Rica. The park’s topiary garden has been shaped into these fascinating shapes by the same man since the 1960s.

Garden of Cosmic Speculation, Scotland

(images via: reckon)

A private garden created by Charles Jencks, the Garden of Cosmic Speculation at Portrack House, near Dumfries in Southwest Scotland is opened to the public for just one day each year. Science and mathematical concepts, like black holes and fractals, inspired the complex arrangements and sculptures contained within the garden.


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Flame On! 10 Amazing Orange Animals

October 18, 2011 by admin · View Comments 

[ By Steve in 7 Wonders Series & Animals & Habitats & Nature & Ecosystems. ]


Just in time for October’s burnished autumn leaves and glowing jack-o-lantern pumpkins, these 10 amazing orange animals seek neither tricks nor treats. Instead, their often brilliant fiery hues serve as warning signs; a wish merely to be left alone.

Julia Butterfly

(images via: Alyce Taylor, Fran-Made-Cards, Science Photo Library and Supersum)

Bet you thought you’d see the Monarch Butterfly here, amiright? Well, the majestic Monarch is indeed orange but its wings are shot through with black. The Julia Butterfly (Dryas iulia), on the other hand (wing?), is mainly orange with a some small regions of contrasting black.

(images via: Profimedia and Max Waugh)

Julia Butterflies are a fast-flying, day active species found in the Western Hemisphere from Brazil north to the southern USA. A wide wingspan averaging 3.5″ or 87mm and their pleasing, sunny orange coloration makes them a popular choice for enclosed butterfly conservatories. Odd trivia fact about Julia Butterflies: they’ve been known to tickle the eyes of tropical caimans, prompting these crocodilians to shed tears which the butterflies then drink!

Orange Baboon Tarantula

(images via: Tarantulas and Other, Shutterstock and Tarantula Keeper)

Pet owners prize the Orange Baboon Tarantula (Pterinochilus murinus) for its bright coloration (understandable) and confrontational personality… wait, what?? So much for ideal pets being docile and friendly. Measuring up to 6″ (15cm) across, this particular tarantula is not to be taken lightly as its bite is said to be extremely painful and often delivered BEFORE the usual threat display. Perhaps “Orange Pitbull Spider” might be a more appropriate name.

(image via: Furryscaly)

Fangs for the memories? Now this is one angry redhead, er, orange-head. The Orange Baboon Tarantula, also known as OBT or “Orange Bitey Thing”, can be found in sub-Saharan Africa – just one more reason to cancel your safari and take a stay-cation instead.

Japanese Spider Crab

(images via: Daily Mail UK, Hardcore Weather and Oregon Coast Aquarium)

The Orange Baboon Tarantula is a mere 6″ across; a full-grown Japanese Spider Crab can straddle a small car… under no circumstances must they be allowed to meet and mate! Thankfully that won’t ever happen: though spiders and crabs are related, the latter dwells in the depths of the ocean and with any luck it’ll stay there throughout its lifespan, which can be as long as a century.

(image via: Ricardipus)

Found in waters around Japan, the Japanese Spider Crab is the world’s largest arthropod only occasionally outweighed by lobsters. The all-time size champion was caught in 1921; a 41-pound (18.6 kg) monster with an extended arm span of 19 feet (5.8 m). Beat that, Time Bandit.

Orange Starfish

(images via: Elasmodiver, 123RF and SSOA)

Starfish are regulars at most any Colorful Animals post due to their oft-intense pigmentation in a wide variety of shades.

(image via: Best Florida Beaches)

Marine starfish can exhibit a stunning range of orange hues from pale, washed out Creamsicle to bold and intense vermilion that could seemingly outshine a sunset… and why? Starfish are typically shallow-water dwellers but even a few feet below the sea’s surface, colors begin to lose their intensity. Perhaps starfish are simply trying to make up for that.

Clownfish

(images via: Nemo’s Great Uncle, Computer Weekly, ThinkQuest)

The oceans are awash with orange fish but only one has achieved the kind of fame even a top Hollywood star would envy: the Clownfish. Thanks to 2003′s Finding Nemo, the pretty but otherwise unremarkable clownfish has found a place in the hearts of an entire generation of kids, some of whom now have pet clownfish to go along with their Harry Potter owls… not the best combination, actually.

(image via: Just Animals)

Clownfish did have one pre-Nemo claim to fame: they exploit their immunity to sea anemone toxins by hiding out in the oceanic invertebrates’ poisonous tentacles. Depending on the color of the anemone, this attribute provides nature photographers with a goldmine of imaging opportunities.

Red Eft

(images via: Michaelrighi, URI, Marietta College and Ohio Birds and Biodiversity)

Red Efts are amphibians, Newts to be exact. The bright orange, red-spotted, land-dwelling creature found in moist eastern American forests is, surprisingly, not the creature’s adult stage but rather its juvenile iteration. Born in water as gill-breathing larva, Red Efts will eventually return to an aquatic lifestyle for the balance of their unusually long lifespan – up to 15 years!

(image via: WallPapersArt)

Red Efts are often mistaken for small lizards, which is understandable as they share the same basic body plan. There ARE orange lizards, however, such as the unidentified example above. Why would a rainforest-dwelling creature evolve to be a color contrasting with the green vegetation that surrounds and shelters it? A worthy question to be sure, but the sleepy-eyed beastie above ain’t answering.

Gila Monster

(images via: ABC News, Wikipedia and Greg Newbold (Picture-Book))

The boldly patterned, orange & black Gila Monster is one of America’s only two venomous lizards, and much like bees and wasps its color combo serves as a warning to “back off or else!” Native to the Mojave Desert and surrounding areas, Gila Monsters can grow to around 2ft (60cm) in length, quite a bit smaller than the lizards who “devoured people as if they were flies” in the 1959 b-movie, The Giant Gila Monster.

(image via: Cryptomundo)

If you survive being bitten by a Gila Monster, chances are good you’ll remember not to get yourself bitten again. Not because of the pain and the whole “almost dying” thing, but because Gila Monster venom has been found to (image via: Cryptomundo)” target=”_blank”>increase memory function as well as ease symptoms of diabetes. The venom is made synthetically nowadays so don’t go pokin’ Gila Monsters before that killer math exam, mmkay?

Cock of the Rock

(images via: Fascinating Peru Travel, CuscoPeru and The Animal Files)

There are actually two Cock-of-the-Rocks (Cocks-of-the-Rock?): the Andean Cock-of-the-Rock (Rupicola Peruvianus) which is the national bird of Peru, and the Guianan Cock-of-the-Rock (Rupicola Rupicola). It’s only the males of either species that boast such brilliantly orange feathers, and the Guianan Cock-of-the-Rock is more orange top to bottom.

(image via: Pete Morris/Surfbirds)

The Cock-of-the-Rock inhabits rocky areas (no surprise there) in parts of western South America where the Amazonian rainforest begins to give way to a the foothills of the Andes mountains. The birds utilize their dazzling coloration and manipulate fan-like crests on their heads to try and impress potential mates, who are blandly brown-feathered for the most part and should be impressed irregardless.

Orangutan

(images via: Guardian UK, Bioweb and Forbidden Zone)

Though it’s the world’s most orange ape, the name “orangutan” has no connection to the color orange – it’s purely a fortuitous coincidence for English-speakers. Instead, this pumpkin-hued “man of the forest” has a moniker originating in the Malay words for “man” (orang) and “forest” (utan). We have no idea where the name “Dr. Zaius” came from.

(images via: Primates.com and ScienceBlogs)

IUCN has designated orangutans as an Endangered Species, with the total population standing at a mere 14 percent of the estimated figure 10,000 years ago. Habitat loss and human activity are the main threats to orangutans, with additional pressure coming from an illegal trade in procuring young orangutans as pets. Several large and many small rehabilitation centers have been active in helping rescued orangutans re-adapt to the wild. These centers also add to our knowledge of these very intelligent primates and have observed some remarkable behaviors such as tool using and spear-fishing.

Tiger

(images via: Beautiful Sceneries, The Grocer UK and Daily Cuteness)

Though orange is just one of the tiger’s three main colors (along with black and white), it’s the one that makes the largest of the four recognized “big cats” extra special in our minds. Like hornets and Gila Monsters, tigers display a typical “warning sign” color code though in the case of tigers, the intent is purely one of camouflage in sun-dappled forests and grasslands.

(image via: Animal Spot)

Tigers share an unfortunate plight common to many orange creatures: they are a critically endangered species. Of the six recognized tiger subspecies, three are extinct and the tiger’s historical range has shrunk to only 7 percent of what it used to be. It’s estimated that only 3,000 to 5,000 tigers remain in the wild though thousands of others live in zoos or private captivity.


(image via: Amazon.com)

Melissa Stewart has recently released Rainbow of Animals, a series of illustrated childrens’ books featuring creatures of various colors including red, yellow, green, blue, purple and the title above, “Why Are Animals Orange?” Stewart highlights the benefits bestowed on these beasts by being brightly colored but although they’ve evolved to best suit their particular ecological niches, all of these colorful critters have got it made in the shade!


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How to Go Vegetarian: 12 Must-Have Pantry Essentials

October 3, 2011 by thegreenchildrenfoundation · View Comments 

[ By Steph in Food & Health. ]

Want to go vegetarian or vegan? One of the first things you should do to get started is to build a pantry full of flavorful and nutritious ingredients that will make sticking to a plant-based diet easy and totally delicious. The following non-perishable pantry essentials should be combined with lots of fresh produce, tofu, tempeh, dairy products for ovo-lacto vegetarians and a moderate amount of refrigerated or frozen convenience foods as desired. Keep these items stocked and you’ll always have the basis of a fantastic meat-free meal.

Oils and Vinegars

(image via: wordridden)

Good quality extra virgin olive oil can take a salad from tasty to sublime, and supplies many of the healthy fats our bodies need. Coconut oil is delicious in baked goods, and light olive oil, canola oil and peanut oil are great choices for high-heat cooking. Store oils in a cool, dark place to keep them from going rancid. White, apple cider, red wine and balsamic vinegars brighten and deepen flavors in all sorts of dishes like greens and stews, and make simple low-calorie dressings.

Pasta and Grains

(image via: epicbeer)

Grains make up a significant portion of a vegetarian’s daily meals. Be sure to keep staples like pasta, brown rice, white rice, oats and cornmeal stocked in your pantry, and also consider lesser-known grains like bulgur, barley, amaranth, millet and extremely nutritious quinoa. When combined in the same meal with beans, pulses, nuts or seeds, whole grains create a complete vegetarian protein containing all of the amino acids and enzymes needed for a healthy body.

Vegetable Stock or Bullion

(image via: vmiramontes)

While homemade stock simmered from leftover veggies like onions, carrots and celery is undeniably best, packaged stock – or vegetarian bullion cubes – is a great way to add a whole lot of flavor to a wide variety of dishes like soups, stews and sauces. You can also kick up the flavor of rice or pasta by using stock in place of cooking water (or adding a bullion cube).

Nutritional Yeast

(image via: yuko chan)

Yeast as flavoring? If you’ve never tried it, run to the store this instant and get yourself some nutritional yeast, which is sold in shaker canisters and also in bulk bins. Standing in for cheese in many vegan recipes, nutritional yeast is also fantastic as a popcorn topper, in scrambled tofu and as a star ingredient in many vegetarian gravies. It’s packed with B vitamins and amino acids that can be difficult to get from vegetarian sources.

Dried Beans and Lentils

(image via: cookbookman17)

Dried beans are hard to beat as a pantry staple because they’re super cheap, easy to prepare and nutritionally dense. Most vegetarians and vegans find that beans like pintos, great northern, kidney and black beans as well as lentils are an integral part of their daily diet. Pick through dried beans to remove any stones (especially if purchased from bulk bins) and soak overnight before cooking. Pour out the soak water and give them a rinse to cut back on bowel-bending after-effects. Canned beans are also a great pantry supplement for those last-minute meals that need to cook quickly.

Healthy Sweeteners

(image via: fifth world art)

Raw honey is an antibacterial, anti-viral and anti-fungal substance that happens to taste absolutely amazing in tea, on toast and substituted for sugar in breads, cakes and cookies. Agave nectar is another popular natural sweetener, best purchased in the most raw, unaltered state possible, which is a suitable vegan substitute for honey. Other options include zero-calorie stevia, made from the leaves of a naturally sweet plant, as well as raw sugar, which is processed without the use of animal bones.

Nuts, Seeds and Nut Butters

(image via: katerha)

Peanuts, almonds, cashews, pumpkin seeds, sesame seeds and walnuts are just a few examples of the healthy nuts and seeds that can be added to a vegetarian diet for protein, minerals, vitamins, fiber and essential fatty acids. A quarter-cup of almonds contains more protein than an egg, and flaxseeds have the omega-3 fatty acids normally found mostly in meat sources. Nuts do tend to be high in fat, but that doesn’t make them unhealthy – just eat them in moderation. Roasted or raw nuts and seeds can be added to all kinds of foods like granola, cereal, oatmeal, salads and baked goods.

Tamari and Miso

(image via: reynolds.james.e)

Among the basic tastes registered by our tongues – in addition to sweet, sour, bitter and salty – is ‘umami’, a rich flavor most often associated with meat. This flavor is what many new vegetarians miss most about their old diet, not realizing that they can still achieve that highly desirable depth of flavor with vegetarian ingredients like soy sauce and miso, a traditional fermented Japanese flavoring. Seaweed and the popular Bragg’s Liquid Aminos (a liquid protein concentrate) are additional ways to work this flavor into practically any savory dish.

Canned Vegetables and Jarred Sauces

(image via: iboy_daniel)

As a vegetarian or vegan, nearly half of your daily food intake should be comprised of fresh fruits and vegetables. However, there will occasionally be times when fresh produce isn’t convenient, like the heart of winter when good-tasting fresh tomatoes are difficult to come by. Keep some canned tomatoes, pureed pumpkin or winter squash, pasta sauce and artichoke hearts in the pantry and add any other veggies that appeal.

Dried Fruit

(image via: zieak)

Dried fruit makes a great snack and adds a pop of bright sweetness to savory dishes. It’s also an excellent source of iron, which many vegetarians lack in sufficient quantities. Raisins, cranberries, cherries, pineapple, apple slices and banana chips are commonly available as well as more exotic offerings like papaya and kiwi.

Baking Supplies

(image via: mel b.)

Becoming vegetarian doesn’t necessarily mean you suddenly have to be a whiz at baking, but if you’re already an experienced cook, making your own bread, muffins, pizza crust and other baked goods is a natural step. If you’re vegan, however, knowing how to bake can be a crucial skill that will enable you to avoid sneaky dairy products like eggs, milk and butter. Flour, sugar, baking powder, baking soda and yeast are a few basic items that you’ll need to get started. Vegan bakers will also find that applesauce and egg replacer are common ingredients in many recipes.

A Range of Spices

(image via: srqpix)

Spices are truly the trick to any memorable meal, whether meat-based or entirely vegan.  Experiment to find the varieties and combinations that you like best, but some staples include dried herbs like parsley, sage, thyme, tarragon and basil as well as spicy cayenne pepper, paprika, turmeric, garlic powder and chili powder.


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Squeal Wheels Tour: The Top 10 Cutest Electric Cars

September 20, 2011 by admin · View Comments 

[ By Steve in Art & Design & Energy & Fuel & Geography & Travel. ]


Electric cars are good for the environment, inexpensive to operate and are an ideal choice for busy city commuters. They’re often small due to the need for light rolling weight but do they have to be so cute? These 10 electric cars and electric car concepts add a fluffy dollop of squeal appeal to your sustainable, pollution-free driving experience.

The Electric One Person Car

(images via: Miikka Skaffari, Brilliant Michael and My Desultory Blog)

That’s it, “The Electric One Person Car”? Considering the $36,000 price luxury retailer Hammacher-Schlemmer has stickered this single-seat three-wheeler with, you’d think they would at least pay a marketing consultant a few bucks to come up with an attractive name to match its undeniably cute styling.

(image via: Yeeeeee)

The Electric One Person Car is made by Myers Motors of northern Ohio and is also known as the the NmG (No More Gas, duh). You may have seen a gaggle of them in Austin Powers in Goldmember. They’re available in your choice of White, Coral, Magenta, Red, Orange, Yellow, Lime Green, Green, Aqua, Dark Aqua, Teal, Blue, Lilac, and Purple… just like Skittles! Why just taste the rainbow when you can drive it?

Peugeot’s 1001 Nimble

(images via: AutoMotto)

Looking like an extra-large motorcycle helmet and not a whole lot larger, the Peugeot 1001 Nimble rolls along city streets on a quartet of rubberized spheres… not tires, spheres. That ought to give you a hint the pyramidal people-mover won’t be rolling anytime soon, or at least until Goodyear Spheres are sold at your local Wal-Mart or Pep Boys.

(images via: Gajitz)

On the bright side, the Nimble is able to spin a full 360-degrees, even while in motion. This attribute should provide endless snorts & giggles at the fast food drivethru or after being pulled over by the police. Oh, the hilarity!

Nissan’s “Smiling Vehicle”

(images via: E-News, InventorSpot and Trendhunter)

Cute cars are supposed to make you smile. When the car smiles back, on the other hand, either you need to see a shrink or you’ve just encountered the Nissan Smiling Vehicle. Yes, “Nissan Smiling Vehicle” is yet another unimaginative, dishwater-dull name for an eminently interesting car but it DOES really smile so all is forgiven.

(images via: Just Labradors)

The deformable polymer plastic in the Nissan Smiling Vehicle’s front end wasn’t designed to form a frown (that’s what Photoshop is for) but hey – you want drivers to express their real emotions or not?

Cestar’s Sunset & Felstar

(images via: Cestar)

The three-wheeled Sunset and Felstar made by Shandong Celstar Electric Vehicle Co Ltd may not smile when called upon like Nissan’s unique concept, but China’s just getting into the car biz and the tech know-how isn’t quite up to Japanese levels. Besides, these cars are made to be sold and as such, their “smiles” are forged in metal and screwed to their “faces”. Such is life in a Communist paradise, my friends.

(image via: Cestar)

All politics aside, there’s something both alluring and endearing about the grinning grills Cestar’s sedans so frequently flaunt. Complemented by a pair of round, eye-like headlights and a blue sky-painted dash background, these cars positively scream “CUTE!”

“BamGoo” Bamboo-bodied Car

(images via: Gizmodo and Colors Of Swallowtail)

Didn’t Cheech & Chong once build a van out of marijuana? The “BamGoo” follows the same sort of concept though instead of customs agents, drivers need only fear hungry panda bears. Hopefully their extreme case of the munchies isn’t the result of running into Cheech & Chong.

(image via: Japan Probe)

The BamGoo can travel 50 kilometers (30 miles) on a full charge and was developed by a team from Japan’s Kyoto University with sponsorship from the city of Kyoto. The project’s aim was to raise awareness of environmental transportation issues while promoting traditional Kyoto bamboo craftsmanship. Personally I’d prefer a nice, immobile wicker chair.

THINK City

(images via: AutoBlog Green, Treehugger and GreenCar)

Having recently learned of one Saab story, is the world ready to give Scandinavian cars another shot? Perhaps, if the THINK City is any indication. Made in Norway, the zero-emissions, all-electric THINK City can run up to 180 km (108 miles) with a fully-charged battery and boasts a top speed of 100 km/hr (60mph).

(image via: MotorCarWin)

You can buy a THINK City if you live in Europe and they’re priced reasonably enough so that you don’t suffer a debt crisis… sorry, Greece. Driving a THINK City confers a few benefits as well, such as London drivers not being subject to the congestion charge. Get one charge, avoid another – works for me!

Electric Trabant

(images via: AllWorldCars)

Some people say the Ugly Duckling from Mother Goose was cute. Those people never saw (or smelled) the Trabant, the un-loved national symbol of the former GDR along with some very burly “female” Olympic swimmers. Is the Trabant ready for a comeback? At least with electric propulsion it won’t stink up the neighborhood. Is it cute? Definitely… if we compare it with the duckling ugly original Trabant.

Mega MultiTruck

(images via: Steck Automobile AG and StockphotoPro)

The Mega MultiTruck is one of a number of small vehicles made by French microcar manufacturer Aixam-Mega. While the company’s electric cars are certainly stylish enough, it’s the MultiTruck that epitomizes cuteness by reminding us of our childhood. The Mega MultiTruck not only looks like a scaled-up Tonka toy, it can be modified in a number of ways depending on the user’s preference… though probably not by snapping the parts together.

(image via: Araba Ruyasi)

You might think the term “electric truck” is a misnomer as trucks typically require both power and torque – not typical features of electric vehicles. Mega MultiTrucks are quite popular in the EU, however, appealing to buyers with economy, utility and their compact size perfectly suited for oft-narrow European city streets.

Chinese Chika

(images via: Gizmag, Automopedia and Electric For Car News)

Out to pick up some cute chicks? Better your odds by cruising in a cute Chika from China Automobile. Officially known as the Tang Hua XY08 Chika, the car displays generally pleasing curves with the only straight lines appearing on the horizontally striped grill. What’s up with that logo badge, though? Is that the company founder? Cheeky move, Chika dudes!

(images via: Automopedia)

The 4-wheeled, 2-doored Chika is China Automobile’s bold step towards creating an original styling theme and they may have just done it. Unless, that is, blueberries have something to say about it.

Japan’s Wrapping Electric Ad Cars

(images via: Tokyo Times)

You can’t buy one of these electric “ad cars” but would anyone really want to? If there’s such a thing as Cute Overload, this is it. Besides, by all appearances they come in threes. Operated by the Wrappin company and often seen rolling merrily through the streets of Tokyo, these cars are wrapped in vinyl anew for every ad campaign. By this point it would seem their original flimsy bodies have been significantly augmented by untold layers of ad vinyl.


(image via: Natebeaty)

There are plenty of reasons to buy electric cars. GM and the folks who work at the Chevy Volt manufacturing plant think so, but they may be a tad biased. Does the cute quotient of an electric vehicle factor into your decision to buy it – or pass it by? Considering the alternative to cute styling on a small car is something like a slab-sided golf cart, maybe going cute is the way to go!


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Elegant Tree Building is Half Learning, Half Play

August 28, 2011 by admin · View Comments 

[ By Delana in Art & Design & Nature & Ecosystems & Technology & Gadgets. ]

Watching trees meet untimely ends in the name of construction is heart-wrenching. But Japanese architectural firm Tezuka Architects figured out an elegant solution to the problem of a tree standing on the desired building site: they simply built around it. The Ring Around a Tree project surrounds and embraces a beautiful mature tree, encouraging interaction with the living architectural element.

(all images via: DesignBoom)

Built as an additional space for Fuji Kindergarten in Tachikawa, Tokyo, Japan, this stunning building blends indoors and outdoors, natural and constructed, learning space and play space. The structure was built to be used as English language classrooms and a waiting space for students who are riding buses home. Half of the building is enclosed in glass while the other half features many levels of small platforms in an open-air configuration.

The platforms in the play space offer some very intriguing spaces for crawling children to romp and hide. There aren’t many barriers in this unusual space, but there is plenty of soft padding on the floors to cushion the unavoidable falls.

Two classrooms, each taking up one level of the building, use this unconventional space to create a liberating and stimulating learning environment. Although the auxiliary learning space is just a stone’s throw away from the main school building, having English language classes in this removed space allows students to enjoy the unique setting. The classrooms may even allow a greater chance for real-world experience-based lessons.

The centerpiece of the new structure is, of course, the mature tree in the very center. Its limbs and leaves were left intact as the beautiful building went up and remain untouched today. Children are encouraged to play around the tree, but for safety’s sake are not allowed to climb on the branches.


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14 Fast and Easy Quotes to Lift your Spirits

July 6, 2011 by admin · View Comments 

1: “Smile! If you can’t lift the corners, let the middle sag” Unknown

2: The world always looks brighter from behind a smile”  Unknown

3: “Wrinkles merely indicate where smiles have been” Mark Twain

4: “Everyone smiles in the same language” Unknown

5: “The shortest distance between two people is a smile”  Unknown

6: “A smile is an inexpensive way to improve your looks” Charles Gordy

7: “A smile is something you can’t give away, it always comes back to you ” Unknown

8: “It takes a lot of work from the face to let out a smile, but just think of all the good a smile can bring to the most important muscle of your body – the heart”  Unknown

9: Deepak Chopra says “The healthiest response to life is laughter”

10: “Before you put on a frown, make absolutely sure there are no smiles available” Jim Beggs

11: “Life is like a mirror, we get the best results when we smile at it” Unknown

12:Wear a smile and have friends, wear a scowl and have wrinkles” by George Eliot

13: He who smiles rather than rages is always the stronger” Japanese Proverb

14: “A smile cures the wounding of a frown”  William Shakespeare

Beth

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Life Thrives in Strange Places: 14 Urban Ecosystems

[ By Steph in Animals & Habitats & Nature & Ecosystems. ]

Boars wreaking havoc in urban Berlin, dogs riding the subway in Moscow, a species of mosquitoes that only lives in man-made underground spaces and snakes that make their way up into our toilets – all of these creatures and more have adapted to human encroachment in surprising (and sometimes terrifying!) ways. These 14 unique urban and man-made ecosystems – including two of the most insane human communities of modern times – shed light on how we affect the natural world for better or worse.

Metro Dogs in Moscow

(images via: english russia)

Not only do dogs ride the subways in Moscow, stretching out across a row of seats while amused passengers smile down at them, they have adapted to their unusual urban habitat by developing new survival tactics. An astounding 35,000 stray dogs have actually figured out how to get from point A to point B, getting on and off at their favorite stops. Surviving off scraps, the dogs have realized which techniques are best at securing food, including sending off the youngest, cutest member of the pack to beg or barking loudly at a human holding food, hoping (often successfully) that they’ll drop it on the ground.

Microbes in the Gowanus Canal

(images via: jgny, brainware3000)

The Gowanus Canal in Brooklyn is a sickening sight, full of chemical sludge and such odd and disturbing ‘wildlife’ as discarded medical supplies, raw sewage, debris from scrap metal yards and various specimens of unidentifiable refuse. Now a Superfund site, the canal is home to fish that are too contaminated to eat (though it’s amazing that anything can live in that water at all). But there’s a silver lining to the stench and mess: the canal has become something like a huge petri dish for microbes that could hold the key to combating heart disease, AIDS and other health ailments. Two New York biologists found ‘white gunk’, a combination of bacteria, microbes and chemicals, under the canal bed that could form the basis of new antibiotics.

Chernobyl Reclaimed by Animals

(images via: ssis.edu.vn, wired)

First a bustling urban home to humans, then an abandoned wasteland in the aftermath of the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster, the town of Pripyat, Ukraine is now rapidly becoming a sanctuary for plants and animals. A documentary entitled ‘Chernobyl Reclaimed: An Animal Takeover‘ captured some the creatures that have come to call the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant Exclusion Zone home in the absence of people. Animals spotted there include wolves, wild boar, deer, moose and beavers. It’s not all paradise, however; although most mutations may not be obvious to our eyes, scientists say that radiation continues to affect the species that remain within the zone.

Berlin’s Wild Boars

(images via: freelens.com)

Thousands of wild boars have come to call the streets of the busy German city of Berlin home. Thanks to increasingly mild winters, plenty of wooded parks and gardens full of grubs, the boars have found the city to be more than hospitable, a preference which has unfortunately led to hundreds of car accidents, not to mention property damage. In addition to the dangers they face from the boars, which can weigh 250 pounds and sport sharp curved tusks, forestry officials charged with killing nuisance animals have to contend with angry animal rights activists who don’t want the boars to be harmed. Up to 7,000 boars now live in the city.

“There is no way that hunting can get rid of them all,” biologist Derk Ehlert told The Wall Street Journal. “Ultimately we must learn to share the city with the swine.”

Hemingway’s Cats, Key West, Florida

(images via: hemingwayhome.com, wikimedia commons)

Visitors to Ernst Hemingway’s estate in Key West, Florida, now a museum, will notice something peculiar: dozens and dozens of cats roaming the fenced property. And these aren’t just any cats – they’re descendents of the famous writer’s own six-toed ship cat that have interbred extensively, carrying on the unusual trait of polydactylism. This genetic defect, which is characterized by extra toes, is also commonly found in America’s Northeast and in Southwest England.

Cape Town Penguins

(images via: wikimedia commons)

Cape Town’s famous penguins frolic on Boulder Beach,  bathing and playing to the delight of human swimmers and sunbathers. This colony started with just a single pair, first spotted in 1983, which began to lay two years later. By 1997, thanks to both reproduction and immigration, there were 2,350 adult birds. However cute these critters may be, nearby residents weren’t too happy when the penguins began invading their gardens, making loud noises and pooping all over the streets and sidewalks. The beach has since been taken over by Cape Peninsula National Park to keep the penguins fenced in and away from urban settings.

People Packed in Kowloon Walled City

(images via: doobybrain)

One of the most extraordinary human habitats ever produced was Kowloon Walled City, originally built as a watchpost to protect the area against pirates during British rule, occupied by the Japanese during WWII and taken over by squatters after Japan’s surrender. Located outside Hong Kong, Kowloon became an insanely compacted, lawless, unclaimed city full of labyrinthine passages and towers that extended so high into the air that sunlight couldn’t reach the lower levels.  Within 6.5 acres, the city’s population grew to at least 33,000 by 1987. Residents were evicted and the city was demolished by the Hong Kong Housing Authority in 1993. The area where it once stood is now the Kowloon Walled City Park, where artifacts are displayed, including inscribed stones and old wells.

Urban Monkeys in Malaysia

(images via: plassen, atlai)

It’s not the fault of the monkeys in Malaysia that they’re now city dwellers, dangling from power lines, begging tourists for food and potentially spreading disease to humans. They’ve been forced out of their natural forest habitat by urban development. About 250,000 of Malaysia’s 700,000 monkeys, mostly macaques and leaf monkeys, live in towns and cities amongst humans. Veterinary experts warn that they carry blood parasites, herpes, malaria and dengue and could transmit these diseases to people.

Toilet Snakes Around the World

(images via: nydailynews.com, observer, herald sun)

Rationally, you can say that snakes can’t possibly live in sewer systems, ready to pop up out of the toilet when you’re at your most vulnerable. But tell that to the many people around the world to whom this has actually happened. While ‘sewer gators’ may be entirely the stuff of urban legend, snake-in-the-toilet stories are all too real, and usually result from pets or wild snakes making their way into plumbing systems. In 2007, a Brooklyn woman was shocked to find a 7-foot python in her toilet, while a Bronx man found a 3-foot corn snake coiled atop his own toilet last fall. In India, snakes in the toilet seem to be a common occurrence. While people usually aren’t harmed by these encounters, a Jacksonville, Florida woman wasn’t so lucky. One night in 2005, she lifted up the lid to her toilet and was immediately bitten by a deadly water moccasin with a head “three fingers wide”. As the woman was rushed off to the hospital, the snake got away, and the family still fears running into it in the dark.

Lonely Bacteria in a South Africa Gold Mine

(images via: new scientist)

Two miles beneath the surface of the earth in fluid-filled cracks of the Mponeng goldmine in South Africa, a species of bacteria exists far beyond the reach of oxygen and sunlight. Scientists believe that the discovery of Candidatus Desulforudis audaxviator, a new species, could hold clues about alien life. Amazingly, this species – which lives all by itself in a place where nothing else can survive – extracts everything it needs from an otherwise dead environment, getting its energy from the radioactive decay of uranium in the rocks.

“One question that has arisen when considering the capacity of other planets to support life is whether organisms can exist independently, without access even to the Sun,” says astrobiologist Dylan Chivian. “The answer is yes and here’s the proof. It’s philosophically exciting to know that everything necessary for life can be packed into a single genome.”

South Africa’s Baboons

(images via: amuse.ment, snigl3t)

Baboons are finding themselves bulldozed out of house and home by the rampant expansion of Cape Town, South Africa’s suburbs, so is it any surprise that they’ve chosen to make their home in these newly urbanized environments? 400 urban baboons have been cut off from other troops by human activity, and as a result, male baboons in charge of finding food and breeding partners are growing more aggressive. Local wildlife managers have turned to a ‘three strikes, you’re out’ tactic for misbehaving baboons, euthanizing repeat troublemakers. The baboons have begun breaking into homes and restaurants, but animal activists say that peaceful coexistence is possible, portraying the so-called pests as ‘tremendous recyclers of what we humans casually discard.’

Mosquitoes of the London Underground

(images via: phsource.us)

You’re not just imagining it – the mosquitoes that bite you while you’re waiting for the subway really are more vicious than those above ground. In fact, they’re likely to be a different species altogether – a species that evolved to live in man-made underground environments. The London Underground mosquito, which is found around the world, is thought to have evolved recently from the overground species Culex pipiens, and as opposed to that species, C.p. molestus is cold-intolerant and bites rats, mice and humans. It is believed that old tires carrying larvae may have introduced the population that spawned the new species.

Brazil’s Marmosets

(images via: wagner machado carlos lemes)

The adorable urban marmosets of Brazil, which have adapted to life in the nation’s developed areas, has learned a nifty trick to escape the cats that try to catch them. Unlike their jungle counterparts, these marmosets choose a favorite tree and return to it each and every night – because their favored trees either have limbs to high off the ground or smooth bark, so that cats can’t climb up. This behavior was noted by researchers in marmosets at the Belo Horizonte City Park in Minas Gerais, which is also home to about 115 domestic cats. Like the cats, many of these marmosets may be the descendents of former pets that were dumped in the park.

Medina Zabbaleen, Egypt’s Trash City

(images via: marketplace)

Can you imagine living in a city where trash is stacked on absolutely every available surface, from streets and rooftops to the floors and tables of homes? Medina Zabbaleen isn’t so full of trash because the people don’t know what to do with it; rather, they’re a highly efficient community of trash collectors and recyclers, taking unwanted refuse off the hands of wealthier people in Cairo and bringing it back to their own city where they sort it and recycle as much as 80 percent of it (including feeding all of the food scraps to their pigs, which then provide meat – smart!).The city was featured in the award-winning 2009 documentary, ‘Garbage Dreams‘.


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Paper, Naturally: 48 Gorgeous Works of Paper Art

[ By Steph in Art & Design & Nature & Ecosystems. ]

From organic-looking installations that seem to have sprung from the forest or the sea to incredibly intricate scenes that can take months to complete, these stunning works of nature-themed paper art from 14 artists defy the disposable, ephemeral qualities of the material. Master paper artists slice, fold, bend and glue paper of all colors and textures into sculptures, collages and illustrations that variously elevate paper beyond its origins or take it back to its natural roots. See 56 more works by 14 additional artists at WebUrbanist.

Colorful Scenes by Helen Musselwhite

(images via: helenmusselwhite.com)

“Each piece combines the hand cutting, folding and scoring of a wide range of papers and card that are further worked on to create patterned and textured surfaces,” says artist Helen Musselwhite of her creative cut-paper collages.  “They are then used to build scenes in box frames which are often complex and consist of many layers. This process means that each item of work is truly individual with no two pieces the same.Influenced by the natural world each piece is manipulated to become an intriguing place, a glimpse into another world of fiction and fairytale.”

Birds and Horse by Anna-Wili Highfield

(images via: annawilihighfield.com)

Sydney, Australia-based artist Anna-Wii Highfield creates these beautiful paper sculptures of animals from archival cotton paper which is then painted and sewn together. The artist, the daughter of puppeteers, works mostly by commission, sending her animal figures all over the world.

Black and White Birds by Christina Empedocles

(images via: davidbsmithgallery.com)

A former geologist, artist Christina Empedocles clearly feels an affinity to nature, as evidenced by the many plant and wildlife motifs in her work. Empedocles draws highly realistic images onto paper with wax pencil and then cuts and folds the paper into a mix of sculpture and collage.

3D Animals and Flowers by Jo Lynn Alcorn

(images via: jolynnalcorn.com)

Quirky and fun, Jo Lynn Alcorn’s three-dimensional paper collages spring forth from the artist’s treasured collection of beautiful papers in all prints and colors. “I do a pencil and marker sketch, which I scan digitally, and then rework within Illustrator and Photoshop as needed. I have a background as a graphic designer, which is very useful, as I often work closely with art directors and photographers to ‘imbed’ products such as jewelry or fashion items within my pictures. My artwork and the products are shot separately, then brought together digitally by the photographic retoucher.”

Intricate Cut-Outs by Emma Van Leest

(images via: emmavanleest.com)

Astonishingly detailed and cut by what one can only imagine must be the steadiest of hands, these paper scenes by Emma Van Leest reveal seemingly endless details the more you stare. A single piece could take the artist up to two months to complete, and it’s easy to see why: they’re all hand-cut, using archival paper and an Xacto knife.

In an interview with The Design Files, Van Leest said of her chosen medium, “It’s such an ephemeral, everyday material that we all use. We scribble on it, scrunch it up, throw it out.  It’s lightweight and accessible which means that you don’t think of creating something so delicate and painstaking as a papercut with it.  It’s exciting to create something of beauty and interest out of it.”

Vivid Illustrations by Kate Slater

(images via: kate slater illustration)

Don’t you want to just fall into Kate Slater’s lush, colorful paper world? The British illustrator creates these adorable scenes for children’s books, editorials, advertisements and pleasure, working in both flat collage and relief collages made with cut paper and wire.

Fresh Florals by Eloise Corr Danch

(images via: eloisecorrdanch.com)

New York City artist Eloise Corr Danch creates stunning paper flowers, garlands and even a full-sized dress. Her clients include Anthropologie, Macy’s and Saks Fifth Avenue, with incredible displays in the pages of magazines, in retail shop windows and in galleries.

Trees from Trash by Yuken Teruya

(images via: inhabitat)

Japanese artist Yuken Teruya cuts the most delicate of trees out of everyday throwaway objects like toilet paper rolls and fast food bags. While the work calls attention to the role that such materials play in our lives, they’re also beautiful, a quality that the artist hopes viewers won’t take for granted. “I feel that my work shouldn’t only have the function of conveying the artist’s message. My works have a right to simply be beautiful or offer any kind of attraction.”

Pop-Ups by Lizzie Thomas

(images via: lizziethomas.co.uk)

Paper artist Lizzie Thomas of Brighton, UK creates these charming wooden books with hand-cut paper pop-ups inside.  “My work is an exploration of narrative, myth and metaphor. I am particularly interested in the use of symbol in fairytale and folklore and also write my own stories. I take inspiration from the use of wood and paper in Japanese spiritual life. I use 2D to create 3D by introducing layering and movement into materials.”

3D Paper Sculpture by Jeff Nishinaka

(images via: jeffnishinaka.com)

“Paper to me is a living breathing thing that has a life of its own,” says renowned artist Jeff Nishinaka, whose work often appears in high-profile advertisements and galleries. “I just try to redirect that energy into something that feels animated and alive.” Take one look at his incredible, often life-sized paper sculptures, and you’ll agree that he succeeds on this front. Nishinaka crafts all kinds of scenes and objects from paper, but those that portray nature seem to be a heartfelt tribute to the very trees that provided his favorite artistic medium.

Playful Illustrations by Saelee Oh

(images via: saeleeoh.com)

Korean-American artist Saelee Oh crafts these playful, childlike cut-paper illustrations that explore themes like utopia, female empowerment, nature and animal symbolism. “I think about lace and delicacy and fragility,” she says. “I like the flatness of paper and all of its subtle textures and properties. I love paper. I want to make a paper burrito and eat it everyday. I love the different smells of paper too. The process of paper cutting is also more of a meditative exercise for me than painting or drawing with graphite or ink.”

Translucent Sculpture by Polly Verity

(images via: polyscene.com)

Edinburgh, Scotland-based artist Polly Verity makes these surreal sculptures of animals and mythological figures from wire and paper. Her work ranges from miniature to life-size figures as well as an array of paper costumes including masks and shoes.

The Paper Garden by Jade Pegler

(images via: spectrescope)

From afar, you might not even notice that there was anything ‘unnatural’ about these art installations by Jade Pegler. Her organic paper creations seem as if they really could have sprung from stumps and dead leaves. These temporary installations bring paper back to its natural environment, where its life first began.

Coral Reefs by Amy Eisenfeld Genser

(images via: amygenser.com)

Vast, mysterious ocean ecosystems in Caribbean blues and the dark, purple-black hues of the deepest seas are represented vividly by rolled and painted paper, mounted to canvas by artist Amy Eisenfeld Genser. “I often look to the natural world for inspiration. I am fascinated by the flow of water, the organization of beehives, and the organic irregularity of plants, flowers, rock formations, barnacles, moss, and seaweed.”


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Hunter Stabler: Visions In Papercutting

Hunter Stabler holds a Masters of Fine Arts from the University of Pennsylvania, and is an extraordinary papercutter who has elevated the craft to new levels.
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Well Trained: 7 Amazing Animal Stationmasters of Japan

May 3, 2011 by admin · View Comments 

[ By Steve in 7 Wonders Series & Animals & Habitats & Transit & Auto. ]


Japan’s many iron horses may no longer be fronted with cow-catchers, but a different sort of critter awaits those who visit some very special train stations far off the beaten track. “Tickets please!,” shout the animal stationmasters of Japan… or at least they would, if they could talk.

Stationmaster Cats

(images via: Hatena/Sarutora, BBC and Wikipedia)

We’ll lead off with Tama, the cat with a hat who started a trend that’s got legs – four of them, in most cases. Tama is an 11-year old, formerly stray tortoiseshell calico cat from the central Japanese town of Kinokawa.

(images via: Cracked, The Full Wiki, Tokyo 5 and BBC)

In April of 2006, an automated system put in place by the Wakayama Electric Railway to save costs saw all of the stations along the Kishigawa Line changed from being manned to unmanned… but not, it seems, un-catted. Railway officials had been selecting local business owners to be honorary stationmasters and local grocer Toshiko Koyama got the nod for Kishi Station in Kinokawa. These same officials noticed that among the stray cats Koyama was feeding at the station, Tama was becoming quite popular with both locals and passengers. In January of 2007, Tama was officially named the stationmaster at Kishi Station and a meteoric rise to national celebrity was about to begin.

(images via: Maison)

Wakayama Electric Railway covers the costs of Tama’s cute cat-sized stationmaster hat and signs off on a monthly ration of cat food. WER’s ROI is impressive: ridership has increased by about 10 percent annually and a whopping 1.1 billion yen (over $10 million) was injected into the local economy in 2007 alone. Tama’s reward? In January of 2010 she was given an office (actually a disused ticket booth) with a litterbox along with two feline assistants (not sure what the “assistants” assist with, other than fundraising). Tama is now the world’s only feline corporate executive and the Wakayama Electric Railway’s highest-ranking female exec. Nice.

(images via: Shinshukai and Torre84)

In Japan, there’s no such thing as “too much of a good thing.” In early 2009 the “Tama Densha” (a train painted up in Tama graphics) began running on the Kishigawa Line in a bid to attract even more cat-crazy tourists – and their wallets – and in July of 2010, Kishi Station re-opened after renovations gave it a new face… a cat’s face. What’s next, a Tama Nekobus to shuttle passengers to and from the nearest hotel?

(images via: Japanator and Japan Probe)

Naturally, many of Japan’s other financially-challenged railway companies have made note of the Tama phenomenon and have made efforts to jump on the bandwagon. Some have their own cat stationmasters (two fiercely competitive ones shown above); some try to promote some of their regional sights, sounds and, er, cuisines through their choice of stationmaster species.

Stationmaster Monkeys

(images via: Japan Probe and Halfdoor Six)

What’s more fun than a barrel of monkeys? Nehime and Rakan, the two baby monkeys who have been named stationmasters at Kasai’s Hojo-cho station in Japan’s Hyoto prefecture. The monkeys were donated by a local resident, who was concerned about the railway line’s decreasing ridership and deteriorating finances. Sound familiar? Check out Nehime and Rakan in this video:

ライバルはたま駅長?子ザル駅長が誕, via Asahicom

(image via: Menn no Hosomichi)

Hojo Railway Company thought appointing monkeys as stationmasters would help attract both attention and riders to the line’s first biodiesel-fueled train. No word if the biodiesel was made from discarded banana peels. The monkeys were only seven months and three months old when appointed to be stationmasters so their on-the-job performance and work ethics may improve as time goes by. Or not – instead of serving you lunch they may resort to throwing their poop. All aboard!!

Stationmaster Dogs

(images via: Japan Probe, Ajiiku Blog and Aptinet)

Japan has at least two stationmaster dogs, with the latest being a shaggy off-white Akita named Wasao. Already somewhat of an animal celebrity in Japan for his “busa-kawa” (ugly-cute) characteristics, Wasao was the ideal choice to be Tourism Stationmaster of Ajigasawa station in far-northern Aomori prefecture. Get that? TOURISM Stationmaster… they aren’t big on subtlety up in Aomori.

(images via: Let’s Japan, Company Clothing and Annie Mole)

Wasao may have gotten off to a running start as an animal stationmaster but now… wee paws for stationmaster identification! The paws in question belonged to Maron (“Chestnut”), a pint-sized Yorkshire Terrier with a nattily-tailored uniform and impressive whiskers rivaling those of illustrious Victorian scoundrel Sir Harry Paget Flashman (VC, KCB, KCIE et al).

(image via: Let’s Japan)

At the risk of mixing metaphors, Maron ruled the roost at Oku-Nakayama Kogen Station in Ichinohemachi on the Iwate Ginga Railway Line from September of 2000 until August 29th, 2009 when he sadly passed away from bronchitis – view pics of his funeral here. Maron will be sadly missed as he always performed his stationmaster duties with dogged determination.

Stationmaster Goats

(images via: Yamagata News Online, I Love NukoNuko and Zenzail)

There are at least two goats performing stationmaster duties in Japan. A snow white goat named Koma (above) performs duties at Uzen-Komatsu station in Kawanishi, Yamagata Prefecture, while way down south in Fukuoka a brown & white goat named Taro greets visitors and guests at the Uminonakamichi station on the JR Kashii Line. Both stationmaster goats promise passengers excellent service or they’ll eat their hats… which they might just do anyway.

(images via: Blog Coara and Asahi.com)

Taro’s not punching a passenger’s ticket (above), he’s partaking in a special slice of bread baked for the occasion of his promotion to stationmaster. Keep your real tickets far from Taro’s chomping choppers: “The goat ate my ticket” is not a valid excuse to ride the rails for free. Baaa, humbug!

Stationmaster Rabbits

(images via: PetPress and Nyanyo Blog)

OK, say you’re in charge of promoting the JR Unomachi Station in Seiyo, Ehime prefecture, which just happens to be the only railway station in Japan that contains the Chinese kanji character for “rabbit” in its name. And, the Year of the Rabbit is due to officially begin on February 3rd, 2011. And, you’ve got to choose an animal for the position of honorary stationmaster. What WILL you do? Answer after the jump.

(images via: 47News, Electric Prophet and Thera)

No, they didn’t choose a fox or an anteater, and presumably the middle-management type at JR Shikoku kept his job by selecting an 8-month-old dwarf white rabbit named Tsubasa to be the stationmaster. Commenting on the appointment and what it means for Seiyo, a station official said “I hope we can promote our town so that it will make a big leap this year, like Tsubasa.” JR Shikoku isn’t the only railway with a rabbit stationmaster, by the way – some gimmicks are too good to ignore. Another white rabbit stationmaster is shown above, brought to you this time from Yamagata Railways – plush replicas available at the gift shop!

Stationmaster Tortoise

(images via: Asahi.com, 373News and Minaibu5960)

At some point, all the cool animals are going to be taken and you’re left with, say, a tortoise. Such is the case at JR Ibusuki Station in Ibusuki City, Kagoshima prefecture. Dubbed “Kotaro” and fitted with his own small stationmaster’s hat, the 25-year-old African Spurred tortoise weighs in at a hefty 41kg (90 lbs). Why is an African tortoise promoting a Japanese railway? JR Ibusuki isn’t saying, but my guess is they had a loco motive.

(images via: Minaibu5960)

Passengers traveling on the Ibusuki Makurazaki Line through Ibusuki Station can access the new Kyushu Shinkansen bullet train via Kagoshima-Chūō station… which is rather ironic considering the stationmaster of Ibusuki Station is a tortoise. Awkward.

Stationmaster Lobsters

(images via: Tokushima Shimbun and Asatetu-V)

If you think promoting your convenient and speedy train service with a tortoise is kinda dicey, things could be worse: on December 7th of 2010, Shishikui Station in Kaiyō, Tokushima Prefecture, appointed a pair of lobsters as their stationmasters. Seriously, lobsters. The Asa Kaigan Railway set up an aquarium in the station’s foyer and propped a stationmaster’s hat above the tank, since attaching cute little hats to the crustacean’s heads was impractical. C’mon guys, you want people to check out your station and ride your train? Get busy with the superglue!

(images via: S-Lucifer)

Shishikui Station set up a Lobster Stationmaster Fan Club in March of 2011, presumably to help boost one’s geek cred beyond the stratosphere. Visitors can also purchase limited edition commemorative ticket sets, stamps and colorful discs that look like coasters.

(image via: S-Lucifer)

Even the train is decorated with a Lobster Stationmaster graphic on the front. All well and good, but the Asa Kaigan Railway only has three stations so your ride will be short-lived… much like the lobsters which are Tokushima’s regional culinary specialty. Clear the track – and bring me more hot butter!

Stationmaster Penguin

(images via: Aqua Catalyst)

A bonus to this list is popular penguin stationmaster Shima-chan, a 9-year-old female Humboldt Penguin who only “works” 30 days a year. Beat that, Batman! Shima-chan and friends take time off from their regular gig amusing visitors at Shima Marineland to amuse visitors riding the Kintetsu Railway’s Penguin Train through Shima City’s Kashikojima Station. Shima-chan doesn’t seem to mind the extra appearances, though the fact that railway authorities make her wear formal attire seems somewhat redundant. So long, and thanks for all the fish!

Stationmaster Monster

(image via: BleedingCool)

Well, what’s your choice for Japan’s next animal stationmaster? Don’t pick Godzilla: the big dude’s got a bad rep when it comes to trains… he flosses with them. More surrealistic possibilities (with real creatures) include Sumo-wrestlin’ Stag Beetles, Hot-tubbin’ Macaques and Food-stealin’ Tokyo Crows. Japan: keepin’ it surreal, one railway station at a time.


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