"Never underestimate the individuals ability to change the world" MAHATMA GANDI

vendredi, mars 31, 2006

Mauricio ou Crocodile Dundee

Ca c'est un DUFF au Mexique qui se prend pour Crocodile Dundee!
Ce n'est pas parce que Palffy (ton 1st pick dans le pool)
prends sa
retraite que du dois t'aventurer ainsi!!!
Tu nous surprendras toujours...







Crocodile Dundee

is a 1986 Australian comedy film set in the Australian Outback in the area around "Walkabout Creek" and in New York City. Inspired by the truelife exploits of Rodney Ansell, the film was made on a budget of under $10 million as a deliberate attempt to make a commercial Australian film that would appeal to a mainstream American audience, but proved to be a worldwide phenomenon. Released on April 30, 1986 in Australia, and on September 26, 1986 in the United States, it was the second highest grossing film in the USA in that year and went on to become the number one film worldwide at the box office.


mercredi, mars 29, 2006

Another Thoughts

samedi, mars 25, 2006

My Owner is a IDIOT!!!

TRANSFORM Your Owner's Behavior Problems!

vendredi, mars 17, 2006

THOUGHT for the DAY

vendredi, mars 10, 2006

Sheeps in Canada

Using sheep grazing to manage competing vegetation in a forest environment

Field: Silvicultural treatments - Method testing

Eastern Quebec

La Forêt modèle du Bas-Saint-Laurent inc.


In 1995, the Lower St. Lawrence Model Forest decided to experiment with using sheep to remove competing vegetation from plantations. The primary objective of the project was to demonstrate the effectiveness of this method as an alternative to plantation cleaning. Another goal of the project was to develop regional expertise in the method and to determine if sheep production in forest areas was feasible. Cutovers in the Lower St. Lawrence region are known to be subject to severe invasion by competing vegetation

The Grizzly

The Grizzly Bear

Grizzly Bear
Grizzly Bear
© Parks Canada

Grizzly bears are more plentiful than black bears in Banff National Park. Most of the backcountry wilderness in the park is subalpine forest, alpine tundra or rock and ice, and is thus more suited to grizzlies than blacks. However, visitors are more likely to see black bears because black bears frequent the low-lying valleys that our park roads run through.

Park grizzlies are currently part of a comprehensive grizzly bear study in the Central Rockies Ecosystem. Over twenty silvertips have been radio collared and are being monitored weekly using telemetry technology.

Visitors hoping to spot a grizzly can drive the Icefields Parkway and the Bow Valley Parkway, but extreme caution should be taken if a bear is encountered. Grizzly bears are unpredictable and have seriously injured tourists in the past -- please stay in your vehicle and give the bear lots of space.

jeudi, mars 02, 2006

African Animals in Pink!


The Zebra
&
The Elephants




 
adopt your own virtual pet!
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