Friday, August 27, 2010

I Say Woah One Tousand Times

So.....we all know The Queers album "Suck This" its a great "live album" recorded in a studio live! It has been one of my favorite memories of one of my favorite bands for quite a while(like twelve years, yo!) I just found a dude that recorded the whole thing to video live in studio while the Queers were recording! AMAZING! The vocals are low but if you've heard the record like 1200 times like me, you dont need the vocals!







just so you know..what the fuck??? is an appropriate response!!!!

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Dog is My Co-Pilot


Eli in all his glory.

National Geographic is doing this awesome presentation called And Man Created Dog it is going to explore human and dog realtionships and the role of human on the species. So they had a bunch of dog related facts on their website and I HAD to share them!

# The world’s fastest breed of dog, the Greyhound has an astounding heart. A 65-pound greyhound’s heart is about the same size as that of a human athlete weighing twice as much, yet the running greyhound’s heart rate beats twice as fast as the running human’s: about 310 to 340 beats/minute vs. 170 to 210 for the human.

# The only animal that can accelerate faster than a greyhound over a short distance is a cheetah.

# One of the greatest challenges for canine athletes is the grueling 1,000-mile Iditarod sled dog race in Alaska. Scientists found that the average husky burned 11,000 calories a day - or about eight times the proportional calories a Tour de France cyclist burns. In addition, the dogs take in triple the oxygen of human athletes.

# A dog’s sense of smell is much more sophisticated than a human’s. While the strongest odor overwhelms all others to our noses, the dog can differentiate a myriad of scents simultaneously. Dogs devote 40 times more brainpower to smell than humans.

# Dogs have vastly superior hearing than humans, but they are born deaf, with their ear canals sealed. They cannot hear until they are about two weeks old. When they mature, they can hear sounds at four times the distance we can.

# The human ear is fixed, but a dog and tilt, turn, raise, and lower their ears to pinpoint the origin of sound. They can also work each ear independently of the other.

# Dogs can be taught to understand well over 100 spoken words. Dr. Stanley Coren says the average dog can be taught as many as 165 individual words - more words than an ape can recognize.

# Dogs communicate with each other by using body language as well as vocalization. The tail is the most obvious signaling device. Here are the definitions of some dog tail positions: Tail up and curved over the back: confident pose of the dominant dog. Tail tucked between the legs: sign of fear, submission.

# One of the most human gestures of a dog is the yawn. But while we yawn to increase oxygen flow, a dog’s yawn is a sign of anxiety or stress.

# Dogs cannot smile, so their happy expression is a slightly open mouth with the tongue slightly draped over the lower teeth.

# Modern-day needs have led to modern-day breeds. The Labradoodle, a cross between a Labrador retriever and a standard poodle was originally bred to create an intelligent, easily trained guide dog for blind people with allergies to retriever dog fur.

# Dogs not only have acute sense of smell, but that they can be trained to use that sense to help us. Most remarkable is the experiment where five ordinary dogs were trained to detect breast and lung cancer in the exhaled breath of people. Their detection accuracy was between 88 and 97 percent.

# The dog is the most varied mammal on the planet with the extremes of variation so dramatic that they achieve two orders of magnitude -- ranging from the two-pound Chihuahua to the 200-pound mastiff. In height terms, the range is from the not-quite-seven-inch-high dachshund to the three-and-a-half-foot-tall Great Dane.

# While variations in most animals are a result of natural selection, the vast variety of widely differing traits we see in dogs is the result of human-directed artificial selection. Now a study by scientists at the University of Washington has found that such breeding has altered 155 distinct genetic locations of dogs that could account for such breed differences as size, coat color, texture, and behavior.

Read more: here

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Why Keep The People Waiting?




Sorry I havent posted in a looooooong time...I will be back soon.