23 February 2012

A little kindness from person to person is better than a vast love for all humankind.
 Good Morning!
Try not to become a man of success but a man of value.
Good Morning!
Because the more you look for something not with you, the more you find something wrong with what you have. Good morning!

Give Your Best To Relationships

Posted by chandhu on February 23, 2012
A boy and a girl were playing together. The boy had a collection of marbles. The girl had some sweets with her.
The boy told the girl that he will give her all his marbles in exchange for her sweets. The girl agreed. The boy kept the biggest and the most beautiful marble aside and gave the rest to the girl. The girl gave him all her sweets as she had promised.
That night, the girl slept peacefully. But the boy couldn’t sleep as he kept wondering if the girl had hidden some sweets from him the way he had hidden his best marble.
Moral of the story:
If you don’t give your hundred percent in a relationship, you’ll always keep doubting if the other person has given his/her hundred percent...............Ur's chandhu
This is applicable for any relationship like love, employer-employee relationship etc., Give your hundred percent to everything you do and sleep peacefully.

Photo: A group of hikers silhouetted against a mountain ridge in Svalbard, Norway
Photo: Fish swimming among sea pens
Photo: A view of the Salmon River in Idaho
Photo: A Sami herder resting inside a tent
Photo: A misty morning landscape
Photo: Fallow deer standing in a park in Kent, England
Photo: Two people standing in the snow
Picture

Picture
Shoo, you pesky tsetse flies!


Picture
Red-and-yellow barbets nest in termite mounds.
Picture
This young male lion perches on a termite mound.
Picture
This mongoose family lives inside the termite mound.


Picture
Picture
Picture


Picture





Picture
Picture
During our latest TUNGO surveys we documented the two smallest antelopes in Tarangire, the dik dik and the klipspringer. Both are about the size of a hare, but the klipspringer prefers steep rocky habitats, while the dik dik are usually found in bushy savanna flats. We often see dik dik during our surveys, but this is the first record of a klipspringer.  This one was part of a pair seen on Tarangire Hill.  This dik dik mother and calf were seen near the river.




Picture
This young zebra has brown stripes that will darken into black.


Picture
Tarangire Hill in Tarangire National Park.





Picture



Picture
A drinking giraffe looks rather awkward.




Monica continues her research with The Institute for Bird Populations on foraging ecology and space use of black-backed woodpeckers in burned snag forests of the southern Cascade Mountains of California.
Picture
Both male and female black-backed woodpeckers incubate eggs, brood young, and work hard to feed their chicks.
Picture
The male is identified by the yellow patch on his head: females lack the yellow.
Picture
Black-backed and other woodpeckers thrive on eating larvae from wood-boring beetles, which are abundant in burned forests. This male is feeding his chicks in the cavity.
Picture
Other cavity nesters, like this western bluebird, cannot create their own nesting holes and rely on woodpeckers to make them. These cavities are prime real estate!




Picture

Life is Meaningful

Posted by chandhu on February 23, 2012
The fact that you were born,
Is proof, God has a plan for you.
The path may seem unclear right now,
But one day you will see,
That all that came before,
Was truly meant to be,
God wrote the book that is Life,
That’s all you need to know.
Each day that you are living,
Was written long ago.
God only writes best sellers,
So be proud of who you are,
Your character is important,
In this book, you are the ‘Star’…God has a plan and purpose for all of us…….!!!
                                    

                                         
If your Friends want to receive daily mails,announcements,jobs,wishes,e.t.c, plz forword this mail to them or send me their mail id to receive my invite.(chandhugroupmails@gmail.com)

                                                                          

No comments: