LOTS OF PICTURES AND IT WILL TAKE A WHILE TO SEE THEM ALL, BUT WELL WORTH THE TIME.
MOST OF THESE PICTURES I HAVE NEVER SEEN, ENJOY.........
I think I need my vision checked after making this one. I keep seeing spots!!


Well, my daughter and son-in-law saw to it I was invited, but for their annual Christmas Dinner, not to break codes!
L
ONLY NEW GUINEA HAS THESE BIRDS LIVING IN THE DEEP RAIN FORESTS.
IT HAS TAKEN YEARS TO TRACK THESE BIRDS AND STUDY THEIR EXISTENCE.
WHY DO THEY ONLY EXIST IN NEW GUINEA AND NO WHERE ELSE?
View full screen. The lens he's using probably costs more than a car.
https://www.youtube.com/embed/REP4S0uqEOc
IT HAS TAKEN YEARS TO TRACK THESE BIRDS AND STUDY THEIR EXISTENCE.
WHY DO THEY ONLY EXIST IN NEW GUINEA AND NO WHERE ELSE?
View full screen. The lens he's using probably costs more than a car.
https://www.youtube.com/embed/REP4S0uqEOc
The red grapefruit eaten today is a product of a 1950s program in the United States called Atoms for Peace, whose goal was to promote practical uses for nuclear power outside of a wartime context. One of the things Atoms for Peace came up with is the gamma garden which is exactly as amazing as it sounds. Radioactive material was planted in the middle of a garden, around which concentric rings of plants farthest away were largely unaffected, but the plants in the middle mutated. Some of those mutations were useful, and among them was the modern red grapefruit: a sweeter, atomically-induced mutation of the existing red grapefruit, whose flesh often faded to a less-desirable pink. Most red grapefruit today comes from the descendants of those atomically mutated plants.
Turn the sound all the way up at 3:25 - Sounds Like a Waterfall!