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Posted

..naravno planiranje godisnjeg odmora uveliko moze da odu u kurac ako nemate kome da ostavite macku na cuvanje....

 

Posto odjednom svi moji ortaci od poverenja idu na letovanje kad i ja, sad sam iskopala mog dragog prijatelja kosiju kog sam zapostavila prilicno poslednjih XY meseci... Heh.. Prijatelj se poznaje u nevolji...

... Inace pansion za macke u nekoj veterinarskoj stanici je 5 evra dnevno.. pa ono.. za te pare ne isplati se ici na odmor... bar meni. zato komsiju placam duplo manje :)

 

Posted (edited)
Satane aj sledeci put kad ga budes slikao sklopi mu vilicu,iz ove perspektive mi izgleda da ima mnogo dobro zubalo.

 

Ima,bas mu ekstra nalezu zubi,samo je bio nemiran pa sam morao na brzinu da ga slikam:).Jbga ni ja ne volim da me iko drzi za glavu,pogotovo na +30 a da sam pritom u bundi :)

 

Predivan psić, nego kakva mu je ova crna fleka na jezičiću?

 

Beleg :)

 

Edited by SATAN-iz Batajnice
Posted
Dobro je da nije u naturi. :bigblue:

 

Kako nije - dobice na koriscenje sve sto ima u frizideru :):):) kao i adsl 512 i klimu :P

Posted

^^^^ AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHA KAKVA BLENTA OD PAPAGAJA ! :) :) :) :) :] :] :] Strava!

 

Ја имам златног ретривера :) И луду мачку која воли да ми гребе сто.

Posted

Ау, бре.

 

Студентима медицине на форуму...

Има ли шансе да се овај прст спаси? Изгледа ми да мора да се ампутира, не верујем да се оволики део ткива може "обновити".

Posted

Ја заиста мрзим паукове, али колико их мрзим толико их гледам с одушевљењем...како женке праве мрежу...савршено.

 

Елем, зар паукови спадају у кућне љубимце? :)

 

Јел'има неко да гаји буђ?

Posted

Ја мислим да тај један паук љуби у гузу другог. А они што их посматрају су неки воајери, шта ли...

Posted

Ja sam sanjala da mi se Monty Python's odigrava uzivo :D

Zeznut taj pauk. Citiram "Dzizs faking krajst !!!

 

Ono postoji ???

 

Zajebi ti face-huggere iz aliena, ovo je zajebanije...."

Posted

Solifugae is an order of Arachnida, containing more than 1,000 described species in about 140 genera. The name derives from Latin, and means those that flee from the sun. The order is also known by the names Solpugida, Solpugides, Solpugae, Galeodea and Mycetophorae. Their common names include camel spider, wind scorpion, sun scorpion and sun spider.

 

250px-SolifugidLyd.png

 

 

 

Urban legends

Solifugae are the subject of many urban legends and exaggerations about their size, speed, behavior, appetite, and lethality. They are not especially large, the biggest having a leg span of perhaps 12 centimeters (5 in). They are fast on land compared to other invertebrates, the fastest can run perhaps 16 kilometers per hour (10 mph), nearly half as fast as the fastest human sprinter. Members of this order of Arachnida apparently have no venom, with the possible exception of one species in India (see below) and do not spin webs.

 

In the Middle East, it is widely rumored among American and coalition military forces stationed there that Solifugae will feed on living human flesh. The story goes that the creature will inject some anaesthetizing venom into the exposed skin of its sleeping victim, then feed voraciously, leaving the victim to awaken with a gaping wound. Solifugae, however, do not produce such an anaesthetic, and they do not attack prey larger than themselves unless threatened. Other stories include tales of them leaping into the air, disemboweling camels, screaming, and running alongside moving humvees; all of these tales are dubious at best. Due to their bizarre appearance many people are startled or even afraid of them. The greatest threat they pose to humans, however, is their bite in self-defense when one tries to handle them. There is essentially no chance of death directly caused by the bite, but, due to the strong muscles of their chelicerae, they can produce a proportionately large, ragged wound that is prone to infection.

 

 

 

 

Venom controversy

While the absence of venom in Solifugae is a long-established fact, there is a single published study of one species, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rhagodes_nigrocinctus&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Rhagodes nigrocinctus (page does not exist)">Rhagodes nigrocinctus, carried out in India in 1978 by a pair of researchers who did histological preparations of the chelicerae, and found what they believed to be epidermal glands (Aruchami & Sandara Rajulu 1978). Extracts from these glands were then injected into lizards, where it induced paralysis in 7 of 10 tests. While this study has never been confirmed, and while other researchers have been unable to locate similar glands in other species, this particular species does appear to possess venom, although it is not known if there is any mechanism for introducing it into prey (recall that the researchers manually injected it into lizards).

 

 

 

 

Wikipedia®

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