Month: February 2018
The Windows of Perception
The title is a take on Aldous Huxley’s “The Doors of Perception”.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Irsg0FxcVnQ



Boston Dynamics Robotic Dog Can Now Open Doors
The four-legged robot extends its mechanical arm, turns the door handle and opens it, letting both robots through. But it’s not just the arm that impresses, it’s also the incredibly fluid and lifelike movement of the SpotMini.
Fascinating Desert Landscapes
If reincarnation is real, I believe I was a desert dweller in one of my previous lives. I am captivated by the strange beauty of deserts.



Snow and sand

I am not in Phoenix.






River Zamboni
Assiniboine River Winnipeg.


Gigantic Dumpster Diving Hog
A jaw-dropping video from Hong Kong shows an enormous wild boar scavenging for food by standing on its hind legs and rooting through a dumpster.
In the remarkable footage, the massive creature stands alongside a trio of presumably hungry piglets and can be seen trying to pull a black trash bag from the receptacle.
The video, which has gone viral on social media in Hong Kong, has raised considerable concerns because the animal’s attempt to feast apparently occurred incredible close to an elementary school.
With that in mind, we’re guessing that the question of what to do about the monstrous hog lurking outside the building will likely be the first order of business at the next PTA meeting.
“Hog Kong”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=1&v=UCCKT3fMMvY
Polar Bear Tundra Buggy

A Tundra Buggy, originally invented & built by Leonard D. Smith in 1979, is an all-terrain vehicle used to view, photograph and study polar bears, in the Cape Churchill Wildlife Management Area, of Manitoba, Canada. Smith took his first trip on his Tundra Buggy to Cape Churchill in 1979 with a group of explorers and a ‘National Geographic’ film crew which created the movie “Polar Bear Alert”. Smith also created a company he named “Tundra Buggy Tours” and went on to build 14 Tundra Buggies and The Tundra Buggy Lodge. The lodge consists of a diner, lounge, two bunkhouses, kitchen, muktuk saloon and utilities unit. It is towed from Churchill, Manitoba, behind the Tundra Buggy vehicles for several miles and connected together like units of a train, on the west shore of Hudson Bay.

Polar bears congregate every year along the shores of the bay, waiting for the freeze up and to feed on ringed seals. Leonard D. Smith received the Manitoba Tourism Innovation Award in 1989, and the Order of Manitoba in 2004, celebrating 25 years of the operation of Tundra Buggy Tours. In the year 2000 Smith sold Tundra Buggy Tours to Frontiers North Adventures, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.







