Saturday, November 28, 2015

Shovel Racing


Shovel Racing is a competition done in some parts of the United States. The riders race down a snowy hill riding the shovel.


It has been practiced on typical snow shovels and some modified shovel based sleds. It was even once an event in the winter X games but was later removed due to safety concerns. Top shovel competitors can reach speeds in excess of 70 mph.

Sexy Grandpa Carwash


These grandpas are ready to break the internet with their sexy car-washing moves...

Ping Pong Door


Designed by Tobias Fränzel, this innovative door turns into a ping pong table when needed. After the game is finished, it goes back to being a regular door.

Ping Pong Door is perfect for people that live in small apartments.





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Thursday, November 26, 2015

Welcome to Zaqistan! Man Creates His Own Country in Utah Desert

Meet Zaq Landsberg, a New York artist who created the ultimate escape from hectic city life – his own country in the middle of nowhere!


It all started in 2005, when Zaq managed to acquire a two-acre piece of uninhabited land in a remote Utah desert for a mere $610. Believe it or not, he actually bought it on eBay. On his first visit to the site, he installed a red-and-yellow flag bang in the middle for future identification. Not long after that, he was struck by an idea – why not turn the area into a sovereign nation named after himself? And that’s how the nation of Zaqistan was born.


“When I bought the land, it was right after Hurricane Katrina, and it was a pretty dark time, politically, in our country,” he said. “I thought, ‘I can run a country better than these clowns.’ So I started creating something out of nothing in the desert.” And that became the nation’s official motto: “Something from nothing.”


Zaq now visits Zaqistan for a few days every year, creating artistic monuments on each visit. The nation now has a victory arch, a bed of plastic wildflowers, and a geodesic dome that had vanished for two years due to high winds. He’s also got a border patrol gate with a giant robot sentry, and sells realistic $40 passports through his website. Zaq doesn’t plan on building any cabins on the site though, because there is no water source nearby. The nearest town, Montello, is about 60 miles away.

Some of Zaq’s closest friends are proud owners of Zaqistan passports, and they occasionally visit the place to ‘hang out’. His girlfriend, Ana Fisyak, recently applied for citizenship. Although she’s a ‘city girl’ from Brooklyn, she visited the sagebrush-covered nation a couple of months ago, and apparently had a great time. “We made our own coffee, cooked rice and beans, saw plenty of scorpions, and slept under the stars,” she said. “I’d never seen the Milky Way before and that was incredible. It would be nice to have a porch and some rocking chairs – we’d be all set then. With beautiful sunrises and sunsets, that’s all we really need.”


But she’s quick to admit that she’d never live there, even if her application does go through. “It’s like being on the moon,” she said. Well, actually it’s more like Mars – hot, windy, red, and rocky – so much so that NASA had the Mars Desert Research Station (MDRS) set up in the area, where researchers dressed in space suits live in isolation to experience life on  the red planet.

“It’s an extremely remote and inhospitable place,” added Michael Abouzelof, another Zaqistan passport holder. “There’s no reason anyone would want to be there. “When I looked at the bushes, I just thought, wow, mad props to this guy for pulling this off.”


“It’s pretty harsh,” Zaq agreed. “Incredibly hot during the day, cold at night, with gale force winds that come in occasionally. I’ve grown to like it, but it’s about as far away as you can get.” But that hasn’t stopped him from spending $10,000 on ‘improving’ the nation.

“My ultimate goal is for Zaqistan to one day become a legitimate country,” he added. He does pay property taxes every year, so officials say that what he’s doing isn’t illegal. But they can’t fathom why he’d want to make such a barren piece of land his nation. “As this two-acre experiment continues, I urge President Landsberg to adopt baseball as his country’s national pastime,” Congressman Ron Bishop, whose district Zaqistan comes under, joked. “The great sport of baseball has served America well, and it can do the same for Zaqistan. Few sports can unite the people of a fledgling nation like America’s pastime.”


Zaq, on his part, welcomes questions about his motive behind going rogue. And his response is simple: “There is no legal standard for what is a country and what is not. I would describe Zaqistan as a de facto sovereign. The government isn’t recognising Zaqistan sovereignty, but they’re not stopping me from doing my thing out there.”

“Nobody has hassled me,” he added. “And one reason is because things are so spread out. I own a speck of desert in this vast desert where there’s no one. They’d have to find me first.”


“Zaqistan is here to stay and it will be here for a very long time.”

Photos: Republic of Zaquistan/Facebook

Sources: People.comNew York Daily News

Abandoned Indonesian Church Shaped like a Giant Chicken

 Photo source: uzone.id

Deep in the dense forests of Central Java, towering above the surrounding trees, lies an abandoned, crumbling church in the shape of a giant chicken with its beak open mid-squawk. Called Gereja Ayam ("Chicken Church") by locals, this bizarre building attracts hundreds of travelers and photographers to the hills of Magelang, Indonesia each year.

Photo source: rwrobe

The story behind Gereja Ayam is almost as strange as the structure itself. In the late '80s, a man named Daniel Alamsjah claims he received a divine message from God telling him to build a prayer house in the shape of a dove. The 67-year-old chose a hill not far from Magelang, his wife's hometown, as the site of his ambitious project. Together with 30 locals, Alamsjah started construction on the impressive building in the '90s.


Despite his Christian faith, Alamsjah says that the prayer house was meant to welcome worshippers of all religions. Many Christians, Muslims, and Buddhists congregated under its rooftop, while the lower floors were used as rehabilitation facilities for drug addicts, children with disabilities, disturbed youths, and the mentally ill.

Photo source: Teman Setaman

The church closed its doors in 2000 because construction costs were too high, but it continues to be an object of fascination to many visitors in the area.


via [Colossal]

Fruit Toilet Paper


A lot of Japanese companies and stores offer toilet papers to their clients in order to show their appreciation. With “The Fruit Toilet Paper”, Japanese design studio Latona Marketing Inc. has imagined four packagings for toilet papers in fruits : kiwi, watermelon, strawberry and orange. An original way to distinguish yourself with clients.






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Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Selfie Stick for Dogs


Innovative phone attachment will help you take great selfies with your dog.

Dog will focus on the tennis ball and look directly into the camera.







Source

Monday, November 23, 2015

15 Hilarious Church Signs

You've seen them - the signs in front of churches, with a witticism or a pun that made you groan. Here is a list of fifteen funny church signs sayings.
















Epic Fail Funny Church Signs



Thursday, November 19, 2015

Bird-in-Hand, Pennsylvania


Bird-in-Hand, Pennsylvania is a census-designated place (CDP) in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, United States, with parts lying in East Lampeter and Upper Leacock Townships.


The community has a large Amish and Mennonite population.As of the 2010 census, its population was 402.
Wikipedia


Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Amazing Grace



"Amazing Grace" is a Christian hymn with words written by the English poet and clergyman John Newton (1725–1807), published in 1779.


Containing a message that forgiveness and redemption are possible regardless of sins committed and that the soul can be delivered from despair through the mercy of God, "Amazing Grace" is one of the most recognizable songs in the English-speaking world.










Amazing Grace Wikipedia





Moscow’s New Toilet-Themed Cafe

A new Moscow cafe, which opened on October 30, serves food to its guests with crockery designed like small baths and urinals, in toilet-themed interior with seats resembling toilets. (REUTERS)

A somewhat unusual cafe has opened its doors in Moscow, where visitors can dine among furniture and crockery dedicated to all things lavatorial.

With lavatory and urinal shaped bowls and toilet seats as chairs, The Crazy Toilet Cafe delivers exactly what it promises.

Customers clink their cups as they sit in Crazy Toilet Cafe located on Arbat Street in central Moscow, Russia, October 30, 2015. (REUTERS)

A waitress serves an order at Crazy Toilet Cafe on October 30. The restaurant admits it will probably mainly draw one-time novelty visitors rather than repeat clients. (REUTERS)

A flower vase designed in the likeness of urinal is seen at Crazy Toilet Cafe in Moscow, October 30, 2015. The walls are decorated with faeces-themed cartoons. (REUTERS)

Flower vases designed in the likeness of urinals are seen on a counter at Crazy Toilet Cafe Moscow. (REUTERS)

Alexander Donskoi, the owner of the cafe, is the former mayor of the northern Russian city of Arkhangelsk. (REUTERS)

Cups designed like urinals are seen on a counter at Crazy Toilet Cafe in Moscow. (REUTERS)










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