A small mountain village in Sichuan Luzhou presents such one “special rooster”.
According to the villagers who raises the hen said: "My hen can lay an egg every day, but 1 month ago I discovered that my hen changed suddenly, not only did it grow a bright red cockscomb, the thigh also become strong, when dawn breaks it will cockadoodle!
Although it looks like a rooster, but this chicken is still able to lay eggs every day.
Britain also has the hen “the denaturation” to become the rooster, for example, laying an egg.
The animal expert analyzes it from the rational angle to denaturate the reason, when a hen's ovary is damaged, the androgen level possibly rises, causes the ovary to become the testicle, has the denatured phenomenon, but the British Domesticated poultry Club spokesperson said: “this is a very special case, the probability is 1 out of 10,000”
Showing posts with label China. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China. Show all posts
Armless Chinese Liu Wei pianist wins talent show
Liu Wei, who lost both his arms in a freak electrocution accident when he was just 10, has not only capped off an amazing journey to overcome his disability but he’s also succeeded in winning the entire competition.
The Beijing native’s winning performance was a tear-jerking rendition of James Blunt’s “You’re Beautiful”, complete with singing the song in English in front of a capacity crowd at the Shanghai Stadium.
Cross-dressing boy entering singing contest,Liu Zhu (刘著)
A 2010 Happy Boy southern division contestant Liu Zhu (刘著) are attracting more attentions recently because he went on the show looking just like a girl, wearing heavy makeup, pink stockings and high heels.
Liu Zhu was born in January 9, 1991, 1.68 meters tall from Nanchong, Sichuan province. He is currently a student of Sichuan Conservatory of Music.
Check out this video when she went on the show in front of the judges, she was repeatedly interrupted because one judge just wouldn’t believe that he is a boy. Judge Annie Rose (安妮玫瑰) first asked if his hair was real then asked to see his id, and then even asked to examine his gender.
“I am still suspicious about your identity. Can we examine your gender?”
“How do you examine?”
“Do you choose a male judge or a female judge to verify? I still have doubts about your identity. I think you are a girl.”
“I didn’t lie. Thank you.”
“But I feel if you are lying, you are playing tricks on us and the viewers.”
“I didn’t lie or play tricks on you.”
“Then I hope the netizens will human flesh search you! Can you swear on your dignity?”
“I can swear on it on anything…”
According to the interview after, Liu Zhu has always been this way since he was young. He always dressed this way in everyday life, and his family has already accepted him. “This way is more natural, if I purposely dress like a boy just for this contest, I think it would be very fake.” “I am indeed a boy, and I dress like this every day, but I think everyone has their own choice, their own way of life.”
Liu Zhu was born in January 9, 1991, 1.68 meters tall from Nanchong, Sichuan province. He is currently a student of Sichuan Conservatory of Music.
Check out this video when she went on the show in front of the judges, she was repeatedly interrupted because one judge just wouldn’t believe that he is a boy. Judge Annie Rose (安妮玫瑰) first asked if his hair was real then asked to see his id, and then even asked to examine his gender.
“I am still suspicious about your identity. Can we examine your gender?”
“How do you examine?”
“Do you choose a male judge or a female judge to verify? I still have doubts about your identity. I think you are a girl.”
“I didn’t lie. Thank you.”
“But I feel if you are lying, you are playing tricks on us and the viewers.”
“I didn’t lie or play tricks on you.”
“Then I hope the netizens will human flesh search you! Can you swear on your dignity?”
“I can swear on it on anything…”
According to the interview after, Liu Zhu has always been this way since he was young. He always dressed this way in everyday life, and his family has already accepted him. “This way is more natural, if I purposely dress like a boy just for this contest, I think it would be very fake.” “I am indeed a boy, and I dress like this every day, but I think everyone has their own choice, their own way of life.”
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The train that never stops at a station: Amazing China!
A brilliant new Chinese train innovation - get on & off the bullet train without the train stopping. VERY COOL CONCEPT !
No time is wasted. The bullet train is moving all the time. If there are 30 stations between Beijing and Guangzhou , just stopping and accelerating again at each station will waste both energy and time.
A mere 5 min stop per station (elderly passengers cannot be hurried) will result in a total loss of 5 min x 30 stations or 2.5 hours of train journey time!
The passenger at a station embarks onto to a connector cabin way before the train even arrives at the station. When the train arrives, it will not stop at all. It just slows down to pick up the connector cabin which will move with the train on the roof of the train.
While the train is still moving away from the station, those passengers will board the train from the connector cabin mounted on the train's roof. After fully unloading all its passengers, the cabin connector cabin will be moved to the back of the train so that the next batch of outgoing passengers who want to alight at the next station will board the connector cabin at the rear of the train roof.
When the train arrives at the next station, it will simply drop the whole connector cabin at the station itself and leave it behind at the station. The outgoing passengers can take their own time to disembark at the station while the train had already left. At the same time, the train will pick up the incoming embarking passengers on another connector cabin in the front part of the train's roof. So the train will always drop one connector cabin at the rear of its roof and pick up a new connector cabin in the front part of the train's roof at each station.
No time is wasted. The bullet train is moving all the time. If there are 30 stations between Beijing and Guangzhou , just stopping and accelerating again at each station will waste both energy and time.
A mere 5 min stop per station (elderly passengers cannot be hurried) will result in a total loss of 5 min x 30 stations or 2.5 hours of train journey time!
The passenger at a station embarks onto to a connector cabin way before the train even arrives at the station. When the train arrives, it will not stop at all. It just slows down to pick up the connector cabin which will move with the train on the roof of the train.
While the train is still moving away from the station, those passengers will board the train from the connector cabin mounted on the train's roof. After fully unloading all its passengers, the cabin connector cabin will be moved to the back of the train so that the next batch of outgoing passengers who want to alight at the next station will board the connector cabin at the rear of the train roof.
When the train arrives at the next station, it will simply drop the whole connector cabin at the station itself and leave it behind at the station. The outgoing passengers can take their own time to disembark at the station while the train had already left. At the same time, the train will pick up the incoming embarking passengers on another connector cabin in the front part of the train's roof. So the train will always drop one connector cabin at the rear of its roof and pick up a new connector cabin in the front part of the train's roof at each station.
I suffered chemical burns from made in china sofas
As many as 2,000 people in the UK are to receive compensation after they received chemical burns from sofas made in China.
The sofas, manufactured by Chinese firms Linkwise and Eurosofa, contained an anti-fungal agent known as fungicidal chemical dimethyl fumarate, or DMF. The DMF was added to prevent the furniture from going mouldy while in storage.
When customers brought home the sofas, the solid agent turned into gas that burned through their clothes and onto their skin. People suffered severe skin and eye complaints and breathing difficulties among other medical conditions.
Up to 100,000 sofas were sold with DMF inside. The agent has since been banned by the European Union after cases emerged in at least four other member states.
The news came to light after a compensation case at Britain’s High Court in which the claimant’s lawyers said that some of them were afraid they would die from the incident.
“People’s lives were put on hold. Some people thought that they were dying, that they had skin cancer”, Richard Langton of law firm Russell Jones and Walker told the court in London.
“Their doctors couldn’t tell them what was wrong, a lot of psychological symptoms. Some cases were not so severe, fortunately, but for many people they say it was the worst period of their lives ever.”
The court was told that a group of British-based furniture stores that sold the sofas had agreed to pay out $30.5m to 2,000 victims of the toxic agent. The claimants are expected to get between $1,800 and $13,700 each from the settlement, which includes legal costs.
The judge was told that while the claims handling agreement did not solve all of the litigation, it would clear the way for hundreds of people to be compensated. Another 2,500 cases are set to be considered next month.
300 other customers lost out in an earlier ruling involving a furniture firm that went into administration in January 2009. That decision is expected to be appealed.
The sofas, manufactured by Chinese firms Linkwise and Eurosofa, contained an anti-fungal agent known as fungicidal chemical dimethyl fumarate, or DMF. The DMF was added to prevent the furniture from going mouldy while in storage.
When customers brought home the sofas, the solid agent turned into gas that burned through their clothes and onto their skin. People suffered severe skin and eye complaints and breathing difficulties among other medical conditions.
Up to 100,000 sofas were sold with DMF inside. The agent has since been banned by the European Union after cases emerged in at least four other member states.
The news came to light after a compensation case at Britain’s High Court in which the claimant’s lawyers said that some of them were afraid they would die from the incident.
“People’s lives were put on hold. Some people thought that they were dying, that they had skin cancer”, Richard Langton of law firm Russell Jones and Walker told the court in London.
“Their doctors couldn’t tell them what was wrong, a lot of psychological symptoms. Some cases were not so severe, fortunately, but for many people they say it was the worst period of their lives ever.”
The court was told that a group of British-based furniture stores that sold the sofas had agreed to pay out $30.5m to 2,000 victims of the toxic agent. The claimants are expected to get between $1,800 and $13,700 each from the settlement, which includes legal costs.
The judge was told that while the claims handling agreement did not solve all of the litigation, it would clear the way for hundreds of people to be compensated. Another 2,500 cases are set to be considered next month.
300 other customers lost out in an earlier ruling involving a furniture firm that went into administration in January 2009. That decision is expected to be appealed.
Man Married Dead Bride
A 26-year-old Chinese man Zhuang Huagui married his dead girlfriend Lu Yan E, 21, who was murdered 8 days before.
The couple originally planned to get married on February 4, but on January 27, one week before their wedding, the girl was stabbed to death by two robbers.
With all the pain, lost and love, the man still decided to marry his dead girlfriend on January 28.
The Chinese couple’s wedding ceremony was held at a funeral parlor in Zhangzhou, Fujian, China, and family from both sides witnessed their wedding.
The bride was dressed with beautiful wedding gown and lying in a crystal coffin.
Zhuang Huagui held his wife’s wedding photo in front of the funeral parlor to welcome the guests for coming to the wedding.
Towards the end of the ceremony, the groom placed a wedding ring on his dead wife.
This is what true love is all about...
World's largest man breasts

GUO Feng, 53, has the world’s largest pair of man boobs, or moobs.
And where does the man with the world’s biggest man boobs work?
Yup, at a dairy farm. Me Feng has gone to Jinan Chest Hospital to have his breasts seen to.
Says one doctor: “The man is in every way male except for his enormous breasts.”
Rare Long-Eared Jerboa Poses for a Picture
The Mountain of Flames in Turpan City, China, known for having the coolest name for a mountain in existence, has a new distinction to add to its credentials: home for the rare long-eared Jerboa.

The long-eared Jerboa (Euchoreutes naso) is a nocturnal rodent that is so unique, it has its own genus (Euchoreutes) and subfamily (Euchoreutinae). It possess disproportionately long legs to hop everywhere, making it resemble a bizarre hybrid of a kangaroo, mouse and rabbit.
Its distinguishing characteristic are its large ears, which are used to help avoid detection by predators such as the small owl.

The long-eared Jerboa lives in desert-like conditions in northwest China and southern Mongolia such as the Gobi Desert, spending the majority of the daylight hours in one of four types of self-constructed burrows and foraging for food at night.
Two temporary burrows are used for daylight and nighttime shelter, while two permanent burrows are used for raising young in the summer and hibernating in the winter.

While many Jerboa species subsist on a diet of nuts and seeds, the long-eared Jerboa is unique in that it is thought to have a diet that consists primarily of insects. Unfortunately, very little is known about the creature, and encroachment of their habitat by humans is threatening their existence.
They are currently on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, and served as one of the top-ten 2007 focal points of EDGE: Evolutionary Distinct and Globally Endangered project.

The long-eared Jerboa (Euchoreutes naso) is a nocturnal rodent that is so unique, it has its own genus (Euchoreutes) and subfamily (Euchoreutinae). It possess disproportionately long legs to hop everywhere, making it resemble a bizarre hybrid of a kangaroo, mouse and rabbit.
Its distinguishing characteristic are its large ears, which are used to help avoid detection by predators such as the small owl.

The long-eared Jerboa lives in desert-like conditions in northwest China and southern Mongolia such as the Gobi Desert, spending the majority of the daylight hours in one of four types of self-constructed burrows and foraging for food at night.
Two temporary burrows are used for daylight and nighttime shelter, while two permanent burrows are used for raising young in the summer and hibernating in the winter.

While many Jerboa species subsist on a diet of nuts and seeds, the long-eared Jerboa is unique in that it is thought to have a diet that consists primarily of insects. Unfortunately, very little is known about the creature, and encroachment of their habitat by humans is threatening their existence.
They are currently on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, and served as one of the top-ten 2007 focal points of EDGE: Evolutionary Distinct and Globally Endangered project.
Man weds dying lover
"MY love is only for you. Let's get married even if you have only one day to live."
Is this what they call true love?
Read on...
Is this what they call true love?
Read on...
Chinese ‘Cat-Boy’ Can See in the Dark

Referred to as the CAT-BOY, Nong Youhui from southern China has confounded scientists with his bizarre ability to see in pitch-blackness with his blue eyes that actually glow in the dark!
Having bright blue eyes in China is certainly weird enough, but Nong Youhui’s dad, Ling, was always concerned and feared they signified something deep and dark that he did not understand.
“They told me he would grow out of it and that his eyes would stop glowing and turn black like most Chinese people but they never did,” said Ling.
The boy has been subjected to a battery of medical tests, all of which were conducted in abject darkness and results have indicated that he does indeed have the ability to read perfectly in the dark and see as clearly as most people do during the day.
Experts believe the boy was born with a chronic condition known as leukodermia (also called Vitiligo), which is characterized by spots or bands of unpigmented skin. The precise cause of leukodermia is very complex and not fully understood. It is known that as a result of this auto-immune disorder, eyes are more sensitive to light and without as much protective pigment as would be found in normal eyes.
If this bizarre anomaly causes those afflicted to have vision similar to that attributed to felines, does it then raise some uncomfortable questions about evolution and exactly where human beings fit into the process? Are we still under construction, so to speak?
One could ask CAT-BOY, but would he answer?
Indeed, does he even know?
Credits by weridasianews.com
Amazing Hotel lets you sleep among the Gods
When a travel agent offers you “a peach of a hotel room,” she’s usually referring to the view or the size of the Jacuzzi. But a hotel in China’s Hebei province lends that expression a whole new meaning.

The Tianzi Hotel, in Yanjiao, doesn’t look like a place where you’d spend a few nights on a business trip. But that’s just what it is: a colorful ten-story hotel in the shape of a familiar trinity of Chinese Taoist figures.The giants are known as Fu, Lu, and Shou. Their names translate as “good fortune,” “prosperity,” and “longevity,” traditionally considered the three attributes of a good life. They in turn represent three important stars, which are said to embody these attributes.



The longevity concept gets a further boost from the peach in Shou’s left hand. Peaches, too, are a classic symbol of long life, but this one has a little something extra: It’s actually one of the hotel’s suites, and the two holes in front are windows!
Credits by weirdasianews & killerdirectory.com

The Tianzi Hotel, in Yanjiao, doesn’t look like a place where you’d spend a few nights on a business trip. But that’s just what it is: a colorful ten-story hotel in the shape of a familiar trinity of Chinese Taoist figures.The giants are known as Fu, Lu, and Shou. Their names translate as “good fortune,” “prosperity,” and “longevity,” traditionally considered the three attributes of a good life. They in turn represent three important stars, which are said to embody these attributes.



The longevity concept gets a further boost from the peach in Shou’s left hand. Peaches, too, are a classic symbol of long life, but this one has a little something extra: It’s actually one of the hotel’s suites, and the two holes in front are windows!
The Tianzi Hotel has been around since 2001, and it reportedly landed some kind of Guinness Book record. The question is, for what category? Fanciest Hotel Room that Looks an Awful Lot like a Peach? Largest Depiction of Three Mythical Figures that Also Features Room Service? Or maybe Scariest Hotel to Return To after Drinking Too Much at a Dinner with Clients?
Credits by weirdasianews & killerdirectory.com
Chinese Baby with 3 Feet
Shanghai Building Falls
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