Bosh!

A South Korean special forces soldier shatters a stack of stone blocks during a martial arts display to celebrate a public holiday in Seoul. (BBC News)

A South Korean special forces soldier shatters a stack of stone blocks during a martial arts display to celebrate a public holiday in Seoul. (BBC News)
There's a whole bunch of fascinating pictures at this National Geographic News article on unknown beasties discovered under Antarctica earlier this year (dear god, look at those starfish!). I was tempted by the globular bulbousity of the sea pig, but I reckon this photo is the best of the bunch.

Photograph by DTIS camera/NZ IPY-CAML
High-powered cameras photographed this sea star or a starfish of the genus Labediaster (lower left) surrounded by brittle stars on a seamount 492 feet (150 meters) below the surface of Antarctica's Ross Sea.
Danger mouse – This genetically-modified mouse senses no fear after certain smell receptors in its brain have been switched off. Japanese scientists designed the fearless rodents to help understand the mechanisms of smell (Kobayakawa). - BBC NEWS
So what's the story? A few weeks ago, at around 6am, a big pile of debris fell into the fireplace in our living room for no clear reason, sending a layer of black dust over everything nearby. Over the next few days, more debris toppled down, along with a few feathers and some bird shit. Quite unsettling, and having never had a 'live' chimney before we weren't too sure what the deuce to do about it. To stop any more dust or debris manking up the room, I placed a nice big A1 board over the fireplace until it looked as though things had settled down. One week later, thankfully while we were out of the room, the cause of all that debris, feathers and shit fell down into our fireplace, stone cold dead. As goodies coming down the chimney go, crows are not high on my list, but it made a nicely dramatic photo. Suitably cleaned up, the fire now burns nicely, while the wannabe Santa rests in peace in the local landfill.
In this photo and caption provided by Six Flags Discovery Kingdom, Beauregard, an 8-month-old male Grants zebra is greeted by Brandy, an Atlantic bottlenose dolphin while out on a daily walk around the park at Six Flags Discovery Kingdom in Vallejo, Calif., Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2007. Beauregard was hand-reared at the park and takes daily strolls around the 135-acre park. (AP Photo/Six Flags Discovery Kingdom, Mike Owyang)
Quiet, isn't it? Sorry about that - I've been kept out of mischief with oodles of proofreading for work, fistfuls of overtime, packing boxes, posting Ebayed stuff and resisting the temptation to call in an air-strike on the flat beneath us (you can see the flaw in such a plan). I'll try and get things a bit more yappy here once the proofreading wraps up soon, but for now here's a duck, spotted nicely by the Cellar Image of the Day last week..
Look at the size of that beauty! It's the work of Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman, based on the Loire river in France and is called, rather suitably, 'Rubber Duck'. His website describes it thus:
A yellow spot on the horizon slowly approaches the coast. People have gatherd and watch in amazement as a giant yellow Rubber Duck approaches. The spectators are greeted by the duck, which slowly nods its head. The Rubber Duck knows no frontiers, it doesn't discriminate people and doesn't have a political connotation. The friendly, floating Rubber Duck has healing properties: it can relieve mondial tensions as well as define them. The rubber duck is soft, friendly and suitable for all ages!
The fellow's definitely onto something. In a perfect world, every warship would be replaced with flotillas of enormous floating ducks. Just wait 'til I'm king. QUAAAACK.
An X-ray of an four foot long pine snake who swallowed a couple of light bulbs is on display during the grand opening of Ripley's Believe It Or Not Odditorium Thursday, June 21, 2007 in New York's Times Square. (AP Photo/ Ripley's Believe It Or Not)
Yang Yang, a 3-year-old Chinese boy swims with a beluga as part of the Polar Region Ocean World's publicity ahead of the June 1 International Children's Day in Qingdao, in China's eastern Shandong Province, Tuesday, May 29, 2007. (AP Photo/EyePress)
Odin, a five-year-old, 445 pound white Bengal tiger dives for a piece of meat during a performance at the Six Flags Discovery Kingdom in Vallejo, Calif., Wednesday, May 30, 2007. Odin was born at the park and was hand raised. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)
Tiger cubs play with chicks at a zoo in Wenling, Zhejian province, May 29, 2007. The chicks, who were not harmed by the cubs, were feeding at a nearby river before entering the tigers' cage. It is the first time zoo staff have witnessed such an occurrence, China Daily reported. REUTERS/China Daily
A girl is enclosed in a floating sphere on a river at a park on the outskirts of Beijing May 3, 2007. The ball-shaped device enables people to "walk" on water surfaces. China is celebrating a week-long Labour Day holiday, which started on Tuesday, a time when millions of Chinese people travel to major cities to enjoy cultural attractions or return home to visit relatives and friends. Picture taken May 3, 2007. REUTERS/Jason Lee (CHINA)
By comparison, monkeeee!
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