Oddity Central |
- Abandoned Greyhound Acts as Guide and Protector for His Blind Sister
- Man Turns Decade-Worth of Fingernail Clippings into What He Calls Art
- These Floating Trashcans Could be the Answer to Cleaning Polluted Oceans
Abandoned Greyhound Acts as Guide and Protector for His Blind Sister Posted: 30 Dec 2015 05:31 AM PST A couple of animal shelter workers in the municipality of Navalcamero, near Madrid, Spain, recently came across the most heartwarming sight – a five-month old greyhound helping his blind sister cross the road. The two dogs were apparently moving very slowly through traffic, with the female resting her head on the male's back. When the two women approached the dogs to help them out, they were visibly nervous, but the male greyhound stuck with his sister instead of running away to safety. The women quickly realised that the female greyhound was visually impaired because she had thin white films over both eyes. They eventually took the canine pair to the shelter where they work and ran a few health tests, confirming that she was indeed blind. Further tests revealed that the female became blind as a result of a virus, and that her condition might be treatable. It seems that the two pups have been abandoned and have stuck with each other since then, with the male acting as his sister’s guide, never leaving her side and protecting her from danger. Caregivers at the ‘El Refugio’ dog shelter have named the female 'Blinder', and her brother 'Pisper'. |
Man Turns Decade-Worth of Fingernail Clippings into What He Calls Art Posted: 30 Dec 2015 03:07 AM PST 45-year-old Mike Drake has been doing something bizarre in the name of art for over a decade – he's been collecting all his fingernail clippings, stuffing them in paperweights, and selling them for $300 to $500 apiece! The Queens resident started the strange practice 11 years ago: "I used to bite my nails, and I wondered how long they could grow," he told The Huffington Post. "And then I wondered how much I might be able to accumulate." So he collected his nail clippings in a Ziploc baggie for about a year, and was about to throw them out when inspiration struck. He decided to do something 'artistic' with them. "I realised I went to all that effort, and I figured, in for a penny, in for a pound. I already worked with acrylics as a hobby so I decided to make paperweights." |
These Floating Trashcans Could be the Answer to Cleaning Polluted Oceans Posted: 30 Dec 2015 02:04 AM PST A couple of Australian surfers have come up with a creative solution to clean up polluted oceans – they've designed an automated trashcan that can suck up floating garbage, right from plastic bottles, to paper, oils, fuel, detergent and more. Andrew Turton and Pete Ceglinski, who spent their childhood around the ocean, said they were frustrated with the increasing amount of rubbish they encountered in the water. So they quit their jobs to design a prototype bin in Perth, with the help of seed investors Shark Mitigation Systems. Once 'Seabin' was ready, they introduced it in Mallorca, Spain, the marina capital of Europe. They're now trying to raise more money through crowd funding for commercial production. The idea's been very well received – they've already raised over $70,000 and a Seabin promo video has attracted over 10 million views. So how does it work? Seabin, a cylinder made from recycled materials, is fixed to a dock with a water pump running on shore power. It floats upright with the open end level with the water's surface. The pump creates a flow of water into the bin, sucking in all the floating rubbish into a natural fibre bag and then pumping clean water back out. "It essentially works as a similar concept to a skimmer box from your pool filter," explained Richard Talmage, a spokesperson for 'Seabin'. "But it's designed on a scale to work and essentially attract all that rubbish within a location within a marine harbour." |
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