Here’s a funky tree with 2 plastic bottles of ketchup feeding the tree, perhaps a place to catch up with your friends? – link
friends link, ketchup, plastic bottles, Weird and Bizarre, Weird Culture, Weird Earth, Weird Food, Weird Green, Weird Land, Weird People, W ...
Archive for the ‘Weird Earth’ Category
Check out this weeeeird mushroom someone found.
mushroom, Weird and Bizarre, Weird Earth, Weird Green ...
I thinnk this is a great way to build big artsy stuff like this giant elephant. Maybe we should use more plastic bottles for art.
source
art source, bottle art, elephant, plastic bottles, Weird and Bizarre, Weird Animals, Weird Art, Weird Design, Weird Earth, Weird Green ...
Here’s an idea that will burn dead people for heating houses. I’d say no to that, I don’t want more ghosts than necesary. (if there are any…)
Good idea, but maybe bad if your family just “burned” into one of those random houses. For me, I ...
Here’s a great way to recycle scraps of metal and turn it into a public art that everyone can enjoy. We should build one of these for every park in the U.S. (or is that evil?)
via telegraph
giant skull, public art, scraps, telegraph, Weird and Bizarre, Weird Architec ...
This house made from shipping containers may be weird but it’s very eco-friendly and besides, why not re-use the containers to something useful such as this, containers have been proven to be long-lasting, durable enough for ocean travel.
Shipping containers are cheap, ple ...
As they say, “A picture is worth a thousand words,” and here’s some real “green” toilet paper that will help our mother earth.
via inbetweenmeals
mother earth, toilet paper, Weird and Bizarre, Weird Earth, Weird Plants ...
Solar Cookers have been proving themselves to be very useful, some cookers reaching temperatures as high as your conventional ovens.
Here’s some Chinese people making a great use out of the sun.
via travellerspoint
china, conventional ovens, solar cooker, solar cookers, ...
Wow, I didn’t know rainbows could smile!
This may look like a colourful smile in the sky – but in fact it’s an upside down rainbow caused by freak weather.
The phenomenon, called a circumzenithal arc, is rarely seen outside the polar regions and is hardly ever ...














