Waves Breaking In A Cosy Nook
Thursday, February 11th, 2010Curl up in a nook with a good book, or swindle a crook to curl up with his Kindle. Be sure to catch a cold curl to pass time, after your e-book batteries dwindle.

Curl up in a nook with a good book, or swindle a crook to curl up with his Kindle. Be sure to catch a cold curl to pass time, after your e-book batteries dwindle.

I’ve been closed down these last few days with sickness, and the effects have taken a bite, but with time even this cold will be weathered.

The penguins calmly sharing the beach with the sea lion is deceiving. The only reason why they aren’t afraid of being in such close proximity to him is because he is very well fed by his main food source, to the point where there is no temptation for him to want to eat them. If this sort of stuff is interesting to you, you can find out more at Shark Encounter, Sea World.

Have you ever wondered whether waves are related to one another? If there is some sort of family tree of barrels, or an ancestry of A-frames? While it is easy to compare two different surf spots based on similar wave forms, the crucial modifier always has to be included, such as ‘the Pipeline of California’, or ‘the Lower Trestles of Lake Superior’, so that it is clear which family it aaaactually belongs to. The point is, what if all of these super-good waves and world-class waves are actually just imitations of the real one? And what if that real one is in Antarctica?

