We pride that we are the most intelligent beings on the Earth.
Look how a Frog turns a leaf into an umbrella to shelter it from Rains!

http://www.huffingtonpost.com

Source,Huffingtonpost.
We pride that we are the most intelligent beings on the Earth.
Look how a Frog turns a leaf into an umbrella to shelter it from Rains!


Source,Huffingtonpost.
I am always surprised at people talking a lot about Parenting.
I recall an instance when a leading school invited me for a Seminar as Faculty on Parenting organised for Schools and Parents in Chennai, around 2009.
Knowing my views and quirkiness in addressing a meet , I politely declined.
The Correspondent of the Institution where I was Management Consultant insisted I attend and confirmed me as a participant.
Being a good friend of the Correspondent I attended.
There was a lot of talk and discussions on parenting.

When my turn came , I spoke thus,
‘Ladies and Gentlemen,
All of you are assembled here to listen to a talk on Parenting.
Animals, and even lowly Life, beget children and they bring their children up.
They do not attend a seminar.
That’s my talk.
Thank you”
I am always surprised at people trying to study parenting!
They leave children to baby sitters and attend seminars on parenting!
Now the story beats even this.
Digs are replacing children in Hong Kong and Singapore.And worse dogs are being declared as Buddhists.
Read On:
In Hong Kong and Singapore, it is not unusual to see couples pushing baby strollers that do not contain a baby, but rather a small dog. Sometimes the puppy prams are not wheeled by the dog owners, but by a Filipino or Indonesian domestic helper who has been hired just to look after the pooch.
This extreme level of anthropomorphic dog pampering is taking place, not surprisingly, in two cities where sky-high high real estate prices and poor parental benefits force many adults to forego what is increasingly viewed as the luxury of having children. The combination of low fertility and the worryingly high prices of homes large enough to raise actual kids —this modest 776 square foot 3-bed in a Hong Kong suburb popular with middle class families rents at $3864 a month—produces some eye-catching luxury businesses catering to canines.
In Singapore, pet owners can buy sailboat cruises and aromatherapy sessions for their companions, the Daily Telegraph reports. Hong Kong has a luxury dog hotel for animals whose owners—sorry, “parents”— cannot bear the thought of leaving them in a mere kennel. Allegedly designed in consultation with an animal psychologist, it has a beauty spa and a shop selling products with names such as “Ultrasonic Hydro Bath”. (Here is a photo gallery of its primped and coiffed guests.)
And let us not forget about the dogs’ religious and spiritual needs. At a recent pet products exhibition in Hong Kong, guests could have their animals proclaimed as Buddhists in what is known as a “gui yi” (皈依) ceremony. And in 2011, a South African yoga instructor in Hong Kong offered “dog yoga”; in Singapore they call it “doga.”
Singapore’s leaders would much rather have people fulfill their need to nurture by having more babies; the city state is facing a dangerous demographic time-bomb with a fertility rate of 1.2 births per woman. In Hong Kong, the figure is only 1.1.
One main reason: Real estate. Property prices have soared in both cities due to low global interest rates, open economies and high interest from wealthy mainland Chinese buyers. Hong Kong flats are nicknamed “shoebox homes“. And while Singapore offers its poorest citizens fantastic public housing, the government is also fighting a property bubble (paywall) that has put home ownership beyond the reach of much of the middle class. Hong Kong and Singapore policymakers also don’t do much to encourage parenthood by providing generous maternity or paternity leave, like France and Sweden.


Story:
For a change?
Wellington – A New Zealand man was shot in the backside by a dog that jumped onto a loaded rifle, a news report said Tuesday.
Police said they believe the dog accidentally stepped on the trigger of the .22-calibre rifle that was on the back seat in a car where the victim was sitting, the Northern Advocate newspaper reported.
The injured man, 40, was taken to hospital near Dargaville in Northland province on the North Island, where he was reported to be in extreme pain before a bullet was removed from his left buttock.
http://www.monstersandcritics.com/news/asiapacific/news/article_1570371.php/New-Zealand-dog-shoots-man-in-buttock
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