Wordless Wednesday
Oh oh … looks like these Polar Bears are having a penguin roast! It certainly doesn’t look like one bird would be enough to feed all those bears does it.
Odd news, Strange Animals, Funny pictures, Dumb Criminals
by Chris
by Chris
Wordless Wednesday
People are strange and this shot just proves it!
Why on earth would someone cover their van with teddy bears?
We’ve got a friend that loves teddy bears so much that she has not one but two rooms in her house that are just filled to the brim with teddy bears of all kinds and all sizes, but even she wouldn’t cover a vehicle with teddy bears!
by Chris
Bad news, bear.
Knut, the adorable polar-bear cub who has become a Berlin zoo’s most famous resident, is being put on a diet – and that means no more croissants.
“If Knut would live outdoors, his extra weight wouldn’t be so bad,” said a zoo vet. “He would simply build up his fat reserves for the winter.”
But in captivity, Knut won’t need the blubber to stay warm in winter, so he is stuck with his special porridge of milk, meat, cod-liver oil and vitamins.
“Extras like croissants will need to be dropped,” the vet said.
If bears on bad diets isn’t enough for you check out this post that I came across that lists 15 very unfortunate ad placements. Some are quite funny.
by Chris
A woman living in a small community west of New York City was startled when she looked out her kitchen window and saw a black bear looking back in at her.
“I was making a pot of coffee, and I turned around and there he was in the window looking at me,” said Lorraine Grossman.
The womans scream spooked the 211 pound bear who ran and climbed a nearby tree. He reached a height of 40 feet and wouldn’t budge. The woman found herself entertaining more than 50 neighbors who gathered in her Maplewood home to watch the bear in the tree for five hours. The bear didn’t do much more than yawn though.
“He’s really kind of cute,” said Joanne Penaluna.
State wildlife officers eventually shot the animal with a tranquilizer dart. After hanging on for about 10 minutes, the bear dropped into a net. It was taken away, tagged, then released at a state wildlife management area.
“It’s not something you get to see every day — bears falling out of trees,” said Pete Samek, whose 5-year-old daughter, Lucy Rose, watched from his shoulders.
Bears usually hibernate from December to March, though they can be easily roused, said Larry Katz, chairman of the animal sciences department at Rutgers University.
“It’s a little early for them to be waking up,” he said. “Someone or something probably walked over the area where it was hibernating.”
Authorities said the bear, a male estimated to be 2 or 3 years old, might have been snacking on birdseed and likely wandered in from the nearby South Mountain Reservation.