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Wednesday, April 14, 2010

CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME (for every computer user)

CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME (for every computer user)

For everyone who works daily on a computer. The mistakes daily mouse and keyboard usage will result in Carpal Tunnel Syndrome! Use the mouse and keyboard correctly. View below for the surgery of a patient suffering from Carpal Tunnel Syndrome followed by the
RIGHT TECHNIQUES for usage....

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Correct way to work on the Computer


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Hand Exercises for Carpal Tunnel Syndrome :

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KINDLY SEND THIS TO EVERYONE YOU DON'T WANT TO SUFFER FROM THIS!

Friday, April 9, 2010

Ostrich born

Ostrich born



Ostrich...

Phew: It's not like breaking into a chocolate Easter egg - it's a lot tougher and requires a sheer muscle power

...and after a short rest, it's off to explore. After all, no good having one's head in the sand


Titled 'Escape Into Life', the series records the first moments of a newborn chick, the young of the African penguin (whose eggs are laid in caves padded with feathers and bits of wood), the ostrich (which breaks the shell not by pecking, but expanding the muscles of its throat) and, finally, the red footed tortoise (seen here popping out of its shell with mouth wide open as if in astonished rapture at what it can see).

The work of husband and wife team Heidi and Hans-Juergen Koch from Germany (who have specialised in animal photography for the past 20 years) they are the result of many days and weeks of patient observation - and provide a fascinating pictoral record of four creatures arriving into the world.

African penguin...

Cracked it: My approach is to peck the shell into tiny pieces - from the inside out

...so that I'm soon ready for action in anyone's book. Penguin books, even

Tortoise...

Escape claws: 150 days after the egg is laid, a scaly red foot emerges

...and after being buried in the sand for so long, it's clearly turtley exciting to be here!

Chicken...

Hen-pecked: Domestic chickens chip around the shell to remove the cap

Still wet: I may look bedraggled, but within minutes I'll look like your classic fluffy chick

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Baby Wombat Cared By Humans

Meet orphaned Karmann, the waving wombat nursed back to health by humans

Mail Foreign Service
Last updated at 11:26 AM on 03rd April 2010

She may only have a tiny heart - but luckily for Karmann the orphaned wombat, she was rescued by an animal lover with a large one.

The helpless little creature owes her life to a driver who rescued her from the pouch of her dying mother, who had been run over in East Gippsland, Australia in early March.

Karmann was rushed to the Warrandyte Wildlife Shelter in Melbourne, where she is to spend the next three months of her life being cared for in their state-of-the- art intensive care unit.

karmaan

Hi Karmann! The tiny baby wombat appears to give a wave for the camera as she nestles in the palm of a veterinarian' s hand at the Warrandyte Wildlife Shelther in Melbourne

blanky

Blanky: Karmann, whose whiskers and eyelashes seem to represent the only hair on her body, will spend the next three months in the ICU

Here her temperature is carefully monitored and she is steadily putting on weight thanks to being fed six times a day.

The equipment to care for Karmann, who is now three-and-a- half-months old, was purchased thanks to a government grant and generous donations from the public following Australia's devastating wildfires last year.

Unlike kangaroos, wombats have a pouch on their backs instead of their stomachs.

This ensures that as they dig their burrows with their front paws and strong, rodent-like teeth, they do not cover their newborns with dirt.

Baby wombats are not supposed to leave the pouch until they are about seven months old - which is why Karmann is being kept in an incubator and cared for so carefully.

karmann

Cosy: Karmann looks sleepy as she is bundled up inside a nest a blankets in the incubator

haha

Lucky to be alive: Karmann was saved by a driver after her mother was run over by a car