Sunday, November 29, 2009

WORLD'S WEIRDEST HOTELS


Grand Daddy hotel, Cape Town
Where the penthouse is a trailer park: Cape Town's sleek Grand Daddy hotel has a surprise on its roof: a fleet of seven Airstream trailers, six of which were imported from the U.S. The aluminum-clad "rooms," which sleep two people, have been done in playful themes that incorporate icons like "Goldilocks and the Three Bears" (a blonde wig and a bear suit are available for dress-up), and John Lennon and Yoko Ono (the room's white-on-white furnishings include an enormous bed, natch). If you don't want to stray as far from the trailers' original looks, there's the Pleasantville model, an Eisenhower-era fantasia with chintz, harvest-gold curtains, and flower-covered throw pillows




Exploranter Overland Hotel, Brazil
On the road again: Imagine how much ground you could cover if you took your bed with you. That's the idea behind Exploranter Overland Hotel, a converted 25-ton truck that's a true hotel on wheels. An awning extends out from the truck's side to provide some al fresco shade at lunchtime. The "kitchen" comes tricked out with fridges, freezers, and a large convection oven — on this trip, the restaurant comes with you too, and sometimes nearby cooks are brought in to give guests a taste of the local cuisine. Your luggage and sleeping quarters are towed behind you, in a trailer that sleeps up to 24. With so much flexibility, guests can see Brazil's back country, far from crowds and sometimes any other people at all. The tours, which last from three days up to three months or more, have included horseback riding, vineyard tours, bird watching, and rodeos






Capsule Hotel, the Netherlands
Your escape pod awaits: Colored bright-orange for easy visibility, the '70s-era escape pods that make up the Capsule Hotel once hung outside oil rigs, ready to be deployed in case of an evacuation. Recycled by self-proclaimed "garbage architect" Denis Oudendijk, the fleet of pods now rotates among different moorings in the Netherlands and elsewhere in Europe. At the moment, two are in the western Dutch town of Vlissingen and another is in The Hague. For a kind of James Bond-meets-Barbarella twist, opt to book your pod with a disco ball and all the spy's movies on DVD. It's a super-kitschy nod to a similar pod's appearance in "The Spy Who Loved Me."






Hotel Costa Verde, Costa Rica
Crash in a jet plane: Near a beach that's within Manuel Antonio National Park, the Hotel Costa Verde doesn't lack for great sights. But few are as amazing as its own 727 Fuselage Suite, a salvaged 1965 Boeing 727-100 that looks as if it's crashed into the Costa Rican jungle (it's actually mounted atop a 50-foot pillar and reached via a spiral staircase). The jet's interior was once able to hold up to 125 passengers, but there are few reminders left of its days in the service of South African Airways and Colombia's Avianca Airlines. The suite's two bedrooms, dining area, and sitting room are now covered over entirely in teak to match the surroundings. Guests can play "spot the toucan" on the small wood deck that sits on top of the right wing.





Jules' Undersea Lodge
In a league of its own: Hydrophobics should stay far from Jules' Undersea Lodge, named for novelist Jules Verne of "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea" fame. The 600-square-foot lodge, a former marine lab, is 21 feet underwater, close to the bottom of the mangrove-filled Emerald Lagoon, in Key Largo. You'll have to know how to scuba dive to reach your room, and guests without the mandatory certification must take a course at the hotel. Once you've reached the lodge, which sleeps up to six, you'll be close to angelfish, anemones, barracuda, oysters, and other creatures — each room is equipped with a 42-inch window, so you don't need to be suited up to keep an eye on the neighborhood.






Hang Nga Guest House and Art Gallery
A bad trip (with none of the consequences): The daughter of Ho Chi Minh's number two masterminded the Hang Nga Guest House and Art Gallery, a complex that more than earns its local nickname, the Crazy House. This LSD nightmare's three main buildings are Gaudi-esque concrete treehouse-like growths that appear as if they flowed organically out of the ground. Inside, the walls seem to dissolve into the floor, and right angles are avoided entirely. Each guest room is built around a different animal theme: the Eagle Room has a big-beaked bird standing atop a huge egg, while another has arm-sized ants crawling up the wall. The animal theme continues outside — a large giraffe statue on the property contains a teahouse, and human-size "spider webs" are set up here and there.






Hotel De Vrouwe Van Stavoren
A place to unwine'd: When they were owned by a Swiss château, the four enormous casks on the grounds of the Hotel De Vrouwe Van Stavoren in the Netherlands held the equivalent of 19,333 bottles of wine. Now, after some creative recycling, it's guests rather than booze that mellow out inside the casks. The richly worn and airtight oak barrels have two narrow beds, with a small sitting area outside. The grounds are quite close to tiny Stavoren's harbor, which was a major port in the Middle Ages.





Upside-down stay:

At Berlin's Propeller Island City Lodge, each of the 30 rooms is weird in its own way. The artist-owner, Lars Stroschen, has seen to that. One room, the first built, is made to look like a brightly painted medieval town, with an ultra-mini golf course surrounding the castle bed. Another has furniture attached to the ceiling, another has coffins for beds, and still another has lion cages on stilts (the website claims that kids "love to sleep" in them). Then there's the Freedom Room, which resembles a prison, complete with a toilet next to the bed — oh, that German humor!

UNUSUAL MONUMENTS


The Mashuk-Akva Term Spa ,Russia
in the city of Zheleznovodsk southern Russia recently unveiled a particularly unusual monument. The Enema Monument is a nearly 800 pound bronze statue of a syringe held by three children. This area of the country, near the Caucasus Mountains, is known for its mineral springs, the water of which is used in enemas to treat digestive disorders as well as other ailments.




St. Wenceslas, Prague
the patron saint of the Czech Republic, is honored with many statues around the country. But the sculpture of St. Wenceslas Riding a Dead Horse in Prague turns those monuments — literally — upside down. Hanging in the gallery of a shopping and entertainment complex, it was created in 1999 as a parody of a right-side-up statue in a nearby public square.



Cadillac Ranch, Texas
Located in a cow pasture off Interstate 40 in Amarillo, Texas, the Cadillac Ranch is a bizarre roadside attraction. Created in 1974, it consists of a row of half-buried Cadillac cars. Spray-painting graffiti or other messages on the cars is encouraged by the Ant Farm art group, which created the monument, so is has a colorful and ever-changing look.



Concrete Park, Wisconsin
The Wisconsin Concrete Park in Phillips is an outdoor museum displaying 237 sculptures built by a retired lumberjack, Fred Smith. The figures are constructed of concrete and have been embellished with broken glass, ceramic and other reclaimed materials. The display depicts the history of the region and the nation between the late 1800s and early 1900s, including subjects such as American folklore and Native American history. Smith says he built the park "for all the American people everywhere. They need something like this."



Memento Park, Budapest
The open-air museum called Memento Park, in Budapest, is a peculiar collection of statues and monuments. After communism ended in Hungary in 1989, the country removed statues of Communist leaders such as Vladimir Lenin and Karl Marx that had been placed around the country. Four years later, in 1993, this park opened to the public to display the symbols of a once-celebrated era.




Manneken Pis, Brussels
The statue of a little boy urinating into a fountain, the Manneken Pis, is arguably the most well-known landmark in Brussels. The statue, built in the early 1600s, is thought by some to honor a young ruler who was known for urinating on troops. Others believe it commemorates a missing young boy who was found while peeing in the street, while a third legend refers to a small boy who saved the city from peril by putting out a fire with his good aim.




Stone Mountain, Georgia
Stone Mountain is a large granite dome that reaches nearly 1,700 feet high with a circumference of approximately 5 miles. Located in Georgia, in a town sharing the same name, the side of the mountain displays a bas relief that depicts three key figures of the Confederate States of America: Stonewall Jackson, Robert E. Lee and Jefferson Davis.




Fremont Troll, Seattle
Lurking under a bridge in a quirky neighborhood of Seattle, the Fremont Troll stares down visitors with its one hubcap eye. The 18-foot-high troll, sculpted by artists in 1990 who received the commission after winning a national competition, clutches a Volkswagen Beetle in one hand.




Switzerland
In the Swiss city of Bern, a disturbing fountain depicts an ogre devouring a naked child, while holding an armful of other terrified-looking children. Built in 1546, the Kindlifresserbrunnen, or child-eater statue, is said to depict the story of Kronos from Greek mythology, who eats his children to keep them from taking his throne. There are other legends about the statue’s origins, but regardless of its meaning it remains successful at reminding local children to behave.





Carhenge,USA

In the northwest corner of Nebraska, a unique replica of England’s Stonehenge rises out of the high plains. Carhenge was constructed in 1987 with vintage automobiles painted gray to replicate stone. The site was built by Jim Reinders as a memorial to his father, who once lived on a farm located where Carhenge stands today.




Le Palais Ideal, France
Ferdinand Cheval was a French postman in the village of Hauterives in south-east France, who gathered stones on his mail route each day to build Le Palais Ideal, “The Ideal Palace.” The work took 33 years, from the late 1800s until the 1920s, mixes a variety of architectural styles, and drew inspiration from the Bible as well as other religious sources. Cheval is buried in a cemetery nearby, in a mausoleum he also constructed from stone.



Crazy Horse Memorial
Begun in 1948, the still unfinished Crazy Horse Memorial in the Black Hills of South Dakota will someday be the world’s largest sculpture, at a planned 563 feet high and 641 feet wide. The model pictured above, with the actual carving in the background, will immortalize the Oglala Lakota warrior, bare-chested and on horseback.

Saturday, November 28, 2009

ASTRONAUTS


Room with a view
Backdropped by the blackness of space and Earth's horizon, the international space station is seen from the space shuttle Discovery after undocking on March 25. With the addition of new solar panels, the station's appearance is close to what it will be when it is completed, leading some to call this view the "$100 billion photograph."





High-tech repairman
NASA astronaut Mike Massimino peers through a window of the Earth-orbiting space shuttle Atlantis during the mission's fourth spacewalk on May 17. During the eight-hour, two-minute spacewalk, Massimino and astronaut Michael Good (background) continued repairs and improvements to the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph. Such repairs should extend Hubble's life into the next decade.





Anti-gravity surfing
Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata demonstrates his "magic flying carpet" on May 15 aboard the international space station. The stunt was one of several offbeat challenges that Wakata tackled during a video program. For the flying-carpet trick, he put adhesive tape on the soles of his feet, then rode a white sheet in zero gravity.

IN FRONT OF THE SUN


One speck of a shuttle
This photo, taken by photographer Thierry Legault, shows the space shuttle Atlantis in silhouette as it crosses in front of the sun's disk on May 12. This image was made before the crew connected with Hubble and started repairs.

ATLANTIS


Take me home
The space shuttle Atlantis takes a piggyback ride back home to NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida on June 2, on top of a modified Boeing 747 jet. The $1.8 million cross-country trip was required because Atlantis landed in California at the end of its flight to fix the Hubble Space Telescope.

TOTAL ECLIPSE OF THE SUN


Protecting the flock
A young Lebanese shepherd carries a goat as he watches a partial solar eclipse in the village of Bqosta, near the southern port city of Sidon, Lebanon, on March 29. Both the shepherd and the goat are wearing protective eyewear.


Reflecting on the petals






Boxed in
Wendy Shifrin of South Lee, Mass., uses a box fitted with welders' glass to view a partial solar eclipse from New York's Central Park on Dec. 25, 2000. People in the Northeast saw the moon blot out as much as 60 percent of the sun around midday. The next partial Christmas eclipse, according to astronomers, will be in 2307.








Red sky at morning
The new moon covers up part of the sun during an eclipse seen from a fishing spot on the Rio de la Plata in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on June 21, 2001







Skywatching shepherd
Portuguese villager Jose Preto, 78, watches the progress of the October 2005 annular solar eclipse through radiation-blocking glasses while tending a flock of sheep at Rio de Onor.







Do-it-yourself astronomy
A man looks at the annular eclipse of October 2005 through a homemade cardboard tube with a filter taped over it, outside a planetarium in Pamplona, Spain.







South Korean children watch the eclipse through special sunglasses in Seoul






A Chinese couple try out welding screens they bought at a hardware store to view the July 22 solar eclipse in Beijing. Experts say No. 14 welder's glass provides adequate eye protection for seeing a partial eclipse, but they generally recommend specially made solar filters instead.






A skywatcher looks at the sun from his campsite at Tatsugo on Japan's southern island of Amami Oshima on July 21.





Indian students use a specially equipped telescope on July 21, to track the sun at a science museum in Patna, capital of India's Bihar state.





Spectators observe the solar eclipse in Hangzhou, China, on July 22. Hangzhou was one of the cities lying in the track of totality. However, cloudy and rainy weather made seeing the eclipsed sun difficult in Hangzhou, Shanghai and other urban locations.






Children use special viewing glasses to watch the partial phase of the July 22 solar eclipse from an observation deck in Tokyo. Experts say observers should not gaze directly at the sun without eye protection, even during a partial eclipse. However, it is safe to look at an eclipse while the sun is totally blocked out.




Hindu holy men watch the solar eclipse of July 22, 2009, through specially designed viewing glasses in Allahabad, India. The track of the total eclipse ran through a wide swath of Asia, from India to China, across southern Japanese islands and out into the Pacific. It was the longest-lasting total eclipse of the 21st century.

WE LOVE SHOOTING STARS


Seeking shooting stars
Astronomers watch the night sky during the Perseid meteor shower at an observatory near the Bulgarian village of Avren on Aug. 12. The Perseids rank among the year's most reliable sky shows.

WE GO TO SPACE


Open for business
The space shuttle Discovery's payload bay is open, revealing the Italian-built Leonardo cargo carrier within, in a picture taken from the international space station just before docking on Aug. 30.



Midnight ride
The space shuttle Discovery lifts off from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 11:59 p.m. ET Aug. 28, heading for the international space station. Discovery's liftoff was the final night launch scheduled for the shuttle fleet, which is scheduled for retirement in 2010.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

FOTO DEL ALMA HUMANA



En un hospital en Alemania, ha sucedido algo increible nunca visto.
En el momento de su fallecimiento, Karin se encontraba rodeada de doce personas, todos ellos miembros del equipo de cardiología: Médicos, técnicos y enfermeras comprobaron cómo todos los esfuerzos para intentar reavivarla eran inútiles.

El profesor Peter Valentín, director del Departamento de Divulgación Didáctica del hospital también estaba en el quirófano.

En aquella ocasión su tarea consistía en manejar una cámara de fotos.

Es muy frecuente que, durante las intervenciones, se fotografíe o se filme la labor de los cirujanos; esto se utiliza luego para la divulgación científica, los archivos médicos y, sobre todo, para las clases universitarias en la facultad de Medicina.

También fue el profesor Valentín quien, pocos días después, tras recoger el carrete en el laboratorio y ver las copias, no pudo contener su sorpresa. Una de las fotografías enseñaba, con toda claridad, cómo una forma humana, difusa y transparente, se elevaba hacia el techo con los brazos abiertos. Era la foto de un espíritu y además, ¡estaba saliendo del cuerpo de la fallecida!


El Papa Juan Pablo II tiene una copia y los investigadores del Vaticano la están analizando. Su primera reacción fue pensar que alguien le había gastado una broma; sin duda los del laboratorio fotográfico con un montaje sorprendente. De manera que llevó la copia a otro laboratorio para que uno de sus expertos descubriera si se trataba o no de un truco.

El segundo laboratorio revelo la misma imagen!

Monday, November 23, 2009

PARTS OF THE BODY



Tough as Fingernails
Our nails aren’t just a convenient place to put colored polish. Nails, on both the fingers and the toes, are made of keratin, the same stuff our hair contains, only denser and harder. Nails are the primate equivalent of hooves and claws on other animals. Animals use their claws or talons to catch prey, climb trees, and defend themselves. Humans have evolved to the point where fingernails are not vital for survival, but there’s no doubt that they’re useful. They help when we’re performing fine motor skills, like untying knots and preparing food. They’re also important for scratching (a pleasurable experience most mammals enjoy) and grooming.
Toenails are less important than fingernails. At this stage of our evolution, they’re little more than remnants. Watching apes and monkeys use their feet to grasp objects reminds us that at one point it was useful to have nails on our toes, but they’re simply not as necessary now. Apes and monkeys also have opposable thumbs on their feet that help their dexterity. Since humans don’t have these, our feet are useful mainly for ambulation.
One thing that nails are not for is protection of the nail bed. Contrary to popular belief, they serve no protective purpose, and without fingernails or toenails, our digits would not be uncomfortably sensitive; the nail bed would simply become harder and tougher to accommodate the new level of exposure.
Over millions of years, the human body has adapted to maximize efficiency, protect our most delicate areas, and be durable and tough. Although these body parts may seem like mere afterthoughts, they actually provide an important service. Living without them might be possible, but it’s definitely better to have them than to go without.



Prints Make for Sticky Fingers


They make it easier for the police to identify who committed a crime, but fingerprints also serve a vital purpose for law-abiding citizens. Scientists have long theorized that besides being a completely unique way to identify people, the ridges on our fingers are what help humans pick up and grip objects more securely. All primates have fingerprints, as do some tree-dwelling mammals, such as koalas. Some researchers think that fingerprints also help keep our fingertips dry by channeling moisture away, allowing us to maintain a grip even if our hands are wet.
Living without fingerprints would be very difficult, especially for people who work with their hands. People whose fingerprints have worn off because of burns or overuse often find that the smooth calluses that develop on the fingertips make it nearly impossible to maintain a grip on anything.





High Brows and Low Brows

If the eyes are the window to the soul, then the eyebrows are the curtains that frame and protect them. Eyebrows are one of our most expressive facial features–furrowed or uplifted brows leave no doubt about what we’re feeling. It’s not just their tiny swatches of hair that make eyebrows special; it’s also their shape in relation to the eye socket. Because of their arched shape, water (from rain, sweat, or other moisture) is diverted to the sides of our faces, keeping eyes dry and free from salt, debris, and other irritants.
Even though our brows are important for keeping moisture on our faces at bay, most researchers agree that we could get by without eyebrows–and plenty of people do, from alopecia sufferers to victims of overzealous tweezers. Some doctors think that if we didn’t have eyebrows at all, humans would have developed another way–very thick eyelashes, for example, or a more prominent ridge in the skull–to achieve the same purpose.




The Eyelashes


We may think of long, lush eyelashes as signs only of fertility and attractiveness, but they are important for eye health, too. Lashes trap debris and dirt, preventing it from coming in contact with our eyes, which could cause injuries. Eyelashes’ roots also have connections to nerve endings, and a foreign object brushing up against the lashes can trigger a neurological reflex to close the eye, keeping it protected. Even though eyelashes serve an important purpose, however, people can live without them. The size and thickness of lashes vary widely among people, and those with certain forms of alopecia or who are undergoing chemotherapy often have no lashes at all. Although these people don’t suffer from any seriously debilitating effects, they do have to work a little harder to protect their eyes from irritants. For most people, the lack of eyelashes is more a cosmetic concern than a medical one, and many resort to false lashes or lash-enhancing medications and procedures.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

THE GOOD AND THE BAD OF LIFE

I can do it blindfolded
A participant in the annual Rubik's Cube Hungarian Open Championships solves nine 3-by-3 cubes blindfolded after memorizing all of them, in Budapest on Oct. 18, 2009.

Housing crisis
Algerian protesters stand in front of their homes during clashes in the Algiers suburb of Diar Eshams on Oct. 20. Residents threw stones and Molotov cocktails at riot police in protests over housing conditions.

Gang wars
A firefighter sprays water on a bus after it was attacked by alleged drug gang members at the Jacarezinho slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Oct. 17. A police crackdown and fighting between rival gangs has left more than 30 people dead. Three police officers were killed when gangs used high-caliber weapons to shoot down a police helicopter.





Chased by a storm
Storm watchers run from the deck at a hotel on Medano Beach in Cabo San Lucas as a large wave whipped up by Hurricane Rick overtakes their perch on Oct. 19. Rick weakened to a tropical storm as it passed the Baja California peninsula and did not cause widespread flooding or destruction in the Cabo San Lucas resort area.