Wednesday, February 27, 2013

10 Craziest Things You Can Buy in China

Another blog I subscribe to. Ya... interesting.

 
 

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via Listverse by JFrater on 2/19/13

If you want to step outside your comfort zone, go skydiving. If you want to forget you ever had a comfort zone, buy a ticket to China. If you already live in China, you're two sentences ahead of me and just a few yuan away from owning some of the most bizarre items ever available on the legal free market. Here are ten of the craziest things you can buy in China. And if you know of anything that can top the items on this list, feel free to put it in the comments.

10
Live Crabs From Vending Machines

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In 2010 the Twin Lakes Crab Co., a Chinese crab supplier, decided that sometimes a grocery store just isn't convenient enough. So they built a vending machine that dispenses live crabs to be installed in subway stations in the city of Nanjing. Picture a typical snack vending machine, then replace all the chips and cookies with aerated plastic boxes containing living, moving crabs and you'll have a perfect image of what this looks like.

The crabs are kept at a constant 5 degrees Celsius (41 F), which is cold enough to put them in a temporary stasis, but not so cold it kills them. They sell for the equivalent of about two US dollars, and the bottom row of the machine also offers bottles of ginger vinegar—a combo sort of like ketchup and french fries.

9
Panda Tea

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Let's just go ahead and say it: Panda Tea is a drink made from panda poop, and it's the single most expensive tea in the world—one dried kilo of the tea will run you about US $77,000. Why would anybody want to drink it? The theory is that pandas really only use about 30 percent of the bamboo they eat, eliminating the rest of the unprocessed bamboo in their fecal matter. It's believed that, among other nutrients, bamboo contains antioxidants that can prevent cancer, so panda tea is marketed as an anti-cancer tonic and a weight loss aid.

The facility is located in the Sichuan Province, and the owner of Panda Tea, Yanshi An, started his company with 11 tons of dung that he bought from a nearby panda sanctuary.

8
Food Prepared, Cooked, And Served By Robots

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From noodles to spicy chicken, everything tastes better when it's prepared by the cold, metallic dicing hooks of a robot. This isn't just one isolated example, either—it's three isolated examples, showing a growing trend in robotic food service.

In 2011, inventor Cui Runquan created Chef Cui, a humanoid robot that prepares shaved noodles, a popular noodle variety in China in which the noodles are shaved by hand off a block of dough and then boiled. The robots are being mass produced and sold for the equivalent of US $2,000, and over 3,000 have already been sold.

A fast food chain in Shanghai is also using robots—but this time as the actual chefs. The obvious benefit is the efficiency: one robot can wash a dirty pot, combine the ingredients, cook the dish, and have the finished order on a plate in only three minutes. The downside? Yet one more integration that will make it easier for robots to kill us all.

Finally, if cooking wasn't enough, you can also go to the Dalu Rebot Restaurant and have your food brought to you by a robot server. The six robots follow a rotation that allows them to serve the restaurant's twenty-one tables before returning to the kitchen to refill their trays.

7
Canned Air

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If you want a breath of fresh air in China, it's going to cost you about five yuan. That's how much Chen Guangbaio is selling his new line of canned air for, which is literally a soda can filled with air. This product is part publicity stunt and part environmental statement on Chinese air pollution, which is now so bad that the haze is visible from space in some areas of the country (seriously).

For the purest air, you can pick up a flavor called Pristine Tibet, and if you're feeling nostalgic you can buy Revolutionary Yah'an or Post-Industrial Taiwan flavored air.

6
Traffic Jam Stand-Ins

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For a country with 1.3 billion people, it's not surprising that China sometimes has some pretty long traffic jams—sometimes lasting for weeks. But a few entrepreneurs have turned lemons into the Chinese version of lemonade by offering a service that provides a person who will actually sit in your car for you while it's stuck in traffic.

It works like this: If you find yourself stuck in a gridlock, you can call the service, tell them where you are, and wait for two men to arrive on a motorcycle. The stand-in will sit in your car, and the motorcycle driver will take you anywhere you need to go. The service is mostly offered around Wuhan in Central China, which typically has some of the worst traffic in the country.


5
Dwarf Tours

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The Kingdom of the Little People is sort of like a cross between a theme park and the Shire—located in the Yunnan Province, it encompasses 13,000 acres set aside to build a miniature world that will be populated exclusively by dwarfs and open for tours like a safari. Don't bother reading that sentence again; it's even more offensive the second time.

The brainchild of entrepreneur Chen Mingjing, the Kingdom of the Little People is still being built, but already has over 30 tiny cottages to house the dwarfs and a parody presentation of Swan Lake, which is now open to the public. Although a lot of people are offended by the idea, Chen claims that it will provide people with permanent job opportunities when they would otherwise struggle in a difficult economy, and many of the residents of the Kingdom are proud to be part of the community.

4
Obama Fried Chicken

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From morally ambiguous dwarfism to vaguely racist copyright infringement, China truly has it all. In 2011, a businessman in Beijing opened China's first OFC—Obama Fried Chicken. The restaurant uses a KFC-styled banner and logo complete with a cartoonishly grinning caricature of Barack Obama and sells fried chicken.

Believe it or not, this isn't actually the first Obama Fried Chicken to grace the planet—or the first time China has used Obama's image to sell chicken. The first OFC opened in Brooklyn in 2009, but closed down a short time later. And in a completely unrelated stunt, the official KFC in China released this ad in 2011 which features an actor who looks like Obama giving a speech before being crushed by a giant chicken sandwich. There's some sort of message here…but we're totally not spelling it out.

3
Live Turtle Key Rings

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Arguably one of the oddest things you can buy in China is a tiny live animal on a key ring. The animals—usually a miniature Brazilian turtle or a kingfish—are enclosed in a small bag or plastic bubble that is filled with a nutrient-rich liquid that's supposed to be able to feed the creature for up to three or four months.

Of course, the sealed container raises a lot of questions about how the animal is supposed to get oxygen, and several animal welfare services in China have understandably raised a public outcry that call these trinkets a particularly severe form of animal abuse. One of the reasons people buy them is for good luck, but supposedly many people will buy one just to set the animal free.

2
White People

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At the risk of sidestepping premise for a second here, you can't actually buy white people in China—but you can rent them, which is close enough. Chinese businessmen will often rent white actors to stand beside them at important events and, well, that's about it.

The idea is that Western businesses are successful (China's words, not mine), and so for a Chinese businessman to be seen with a guy who could be an overseas business partner is a symbol of status and prestige. Sometimes the actor just stands there, sometimes he gives a speech, and sometimes he'll be given a small role to play, complete with fake business cards. One actor named Jonathan Zatkin was paid to give a speech for the opening of a jewelry store and describe "how wonderful it was to work with the company for 10 years."

According to Zatkin, "The requirements for these jobs are simple. 1. Be white. 2. Do not speak any Chinese, or really speak at all unless asked. 3. Pretend like you just got off of an airplane yesterday."

1
Tea Picked By The Mouth Of A Virgin

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Here's a fun sentence: The Jiuhua tea plantation in the Henan Province hires virgins with C-cup breasts to pick tea by grabbing the leaves with their lips and then dropping them into a wicker basket nestled between their breasts.

The women can not touch the leaves or the basket with their hands, and in addition to specifically requesting C-cup breasts, the plantation also requires that the women have no visible scars or wounds. According to the spokesperson for the company, this odd requirement comes from a legend about how the tea used to be picked by the mouths of fairies. With this method, the tea is supposed to be infused with the virility and purity of the virgins, which is then passed on to the person who drinks the tea.

The post 10 Craziest Things You Can Buy in China appeared first on Listverse.


 
 

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How to save money while seeing the world

I've always liked this blog as well - interesting tips on saving money. We're planning a trip for my birthday and I balk at the cost of it, but know that I have expensive taste. Doh! We need to try camping so I can fulfill my need to travel/get away/have adventures, yet still make it cost effective. Staying local first. I also want to look into travel credit cards that earn miles/points and stuff for those times we do go to the Philippines for family and all. Anyway - enjoy!

 
 

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This is a guest post from Matt Kepnes, who writes about travel and more at Nomadic Matt. His advice has been featured in The New York Times, CNN, The Guardian UK, Lifehacker, Budget Travel, BBC and Yahoo! Finance among others. Kepnes is the author of the just-published How to Travel the World on $50 a Day.

Forget what the magazines say about travel. Forget what you see in commercials. They're all wrong: Travel isn't expensive. How do I know? Because I've been traveling the world for six years and have found that everything you learn about travel is generally wrong.

Experience has taught me that travel isn't expensive. Locals don't spend hundreds of dollars per day in your destination — and you don't spend hundreds when you are home — so why do something different when you travel? Traveling taught me that there are myriad ways to cut expenses and turn your dream vacation into a reality a lot more easily than you might think possible.

We're conditioned to believe travel is expensive for few reasons.

  • First, large resorts, hotels and tour companies have enormous marketing budgets that can afford advertising in those glossy magazines.
  • Second, those same companies also charge a lot of money for their products, meaning those who sell them can get a higher commission. Few promote the downscale options, and as a consequence we're left assuming travel is a luxury few can afford.

But that's all wrong. Spending a lot of money on a holiday doesn't mean you'll have a better time than someone who goes budget. Plus, those exclusive resorts and hotels isolate travelers from the locals and culture we flew all this way to see.

So how can you have a first-class trip without having to spend first-class money? Forget everything you ever learned about travel and travel like you live back home.

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Take, for example, a trip to Paris. If I'm flying from Chicago to Paris and spending two weeks in a hotel there, according to Expedia.com it would cost $1,500 or more (the closer to the city center, the higher the number). If you're traveling with a family, you can multiply that by four.

That's a ridiculous amount to spend on a single trip. Seeing that price would discourage anyone from traveling and further reinforce the idea that travel is too expensive to enjoy if you are not rich. How can a middle-class family afford that kind of money multiple times a year, or even once a year? They probably can't.

But there's no reason any trip should cost that kind of money. With a few simple tricks, you can cut that cost by more than 50 percent. At that price, travel becomes a lot more affordable.

Tricks to travel cheap
So how does one cut travel costs? Here are some ways to keep costs down on different aspects of travel.

Flights
One of the best ways to save money on flights is to be flexible with your travel dates. The difference of a day can potentially save hundreds of dollars. Fly midweek instead of on the weekend. Fly with stops instead of flying direct. Small things make a big difference.

J.D.'s note: This is true. I recently booked a trip to Europe for me and my girlfriend. We're leaving on a Wednesday, and our round-trip tickets cost about $900 each. But the very next day — a Thursday, and closer to Easter weekend — tickets cost about $1,300 each.

To take the biggest chunk out of the cost of flying, sign up for a travel-related credit card. By using sign-up bonuses and milking the reward systems, I've used these cards to collect over 500,000 frequent flier miles in the last year. A family of four can fly anywhere with those kind of miles!

Here are some quick tips on using travel credit cards:

  • Sign up for a branded airline credit card. Whether you love Delta, fly United and the Star Alliance, live and breathe JetBlue, or are hooked on Oneworld, all U.S. carriers have a branded travel credit card that may give you 25,000 to 30,000 bonus miles when you sign up and make one purchase. That's a free economy ticket right there. Airline credit cards are the best way to kick-start your mileage balance.
  • Sign up for a non-airline credit card. A Starwood American Express card offers a 10,000-point sign-up bonus, and when you convert 20,000 points into miles, you get a 5,000-mile bonus. I highly recommend signing up for this card too, but signing up for any "points" card like the AmEx travel card or a Capital One card will do. Afterwards, you can transfer your sign-up bonus points to the airline you use and redeem them for flights.
  • When using the cards, pay off your balance each month. These cards are pointless if you are buying stuff just for points!

Lastly, watch for special promotions. I sign up for all the airline mailing lists and always watch out for special two-for-one-mile deals. Airlines offer jaw-dropping deals all the time, but they don't last long and if you aren't constantly looking for them, you'll never find them. The three best to join are Johnny Jet, Airfarewatchdog, and mine. We all watch out for deals and will alert you so you can get them while the getting is good.

Accommodation
Get out of the hotels. Outside of flights, accommodation is usually the biggest travel expense. I never stay at big, expensive brand hotels unless it is free on points. Otherwise, they become too expensive to consistently stay in over the long term. There are far better and cheaper places to stay.

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Even hotels can be inexpensive, if you know where to look.

Here's how to find cheap accommodation:

  • Hotel deals. Getting a sweet deal on a hotel is actually really easy, especially if you are in the United States. Simply head over to Priceline or Hotwire and bid on rooms. When you know your dates, visit Better Bidding first to find winning bids for similar rooms, then use that as your baseline. I used this method to get a hotel room in Times Square, New York, during Christmas for $85 U.S. per night. (A huge bargain!)
  • Stay with locals, stay for free. Use Couchsurfing or similar sites like Global Freeloaders and Hospitality Club to find a local who's willing to host you during your visit to their city. You'll get a free place to stay (sometimes a bed, a couch or an air mattress), a local who can help show you around, and the chance to learn a bit about the local culture. It's a much better way to learn about a city than staying at a hotel.
  • House-sit. Another thing you could do is house-sit. In exchange for watching and cleaning someone's home while they are away, you'll get a place to stay in the area you are visiting. You can do this for a week or three weeks. You get full access to the house and usually a car. It's a good way to save money, especially when you're a large group. Good house-sitting sites include Mind My House, House Carers and Luxury House Sitting.
  • Go camp in a garden. The concept is simple: people offer their gardens for you to camp in. You can search for suitable sites by place, and they range from the basic "here's a spot for the night" to the more glamorous that offer full access to the house. Most locations are in the British Isles and Europe, though there are a few spots dotting the rest of the world. Check it out at Camp in my Garden.
J.D.'s note: Matt skipped one of my favorite resources. Over the past year, I've fallen in love with Airbnb. Like VRBO, Airbnb lets you rent rooms and homes and apartments from people around the world. Kim and I have used Airbnb to rent places close to home (including once from a GRS reader!), but we're also using it to book an apartment in Paris for a week. We found a tidy place near the Louvre for much less than it would have cost to stay in a hotel.

Transportation
Forget the private coaches, taxis and tourist buses; take local buses or trains. It may be easier to get in that tourist bus, but learning the local transportation system saves lots of money. Even in expensive countries like Norway or Sweden, the city train is never more than $4 U.S. It may take some time to figure out the map and where you need to go, but that's half the fun of traveling, right?

Public transportation timetables are available at the information booth at the airport and your hotel or hostel.

Other things to do:

  • Get train passes. Train passes are offered in many regions of the world and can represent a 50 percent decrease off the price of train tickets. These passes will either allow you a set number of train rides or unlimited rides for the duration of the pass. If you plan on using the train system often, you need to strongly consider this option.
  • Buy fare cards. City metro cards provide a considerable discount off buying point-to-point tickets. Even if you are going to be in a city for only a few days, you can usually buy a set number of tickets for a cheaper price. For example, in Paris you can buy a carnet (card) for $16 U.S., which is $6 U.S. less than buying them individually. In Bangkok, you can purchase day passes for the subway for $4 U.S. for unlimited travel; in New York City, the metro is $2.50 U.S. per ride but a seven-day pass is only $29 U.S.

Food
A week's worth of groceries is cheaper than a week's worth of restaurants. I generally find that I spend about $40 to 50 U.S. per week on groceries, as opposed to $20+ per day at restaurants. That's a reduction of 70 percent in food expenses.

Consider cooking part of your meals, even on a short vacation, as food costs add up quickly. A snack here and a dinner there and you'll be wasting a lot of your money. The majority of hostels, guesthouses and shared apartments offer full kitchens where you can cook your meal. Even if you are staying at a hotel without a kitchen, you can still prepare your own food by making sandwiches.

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While we all love to travel to try new food, you don't always need to do so by eating at a restaurant. Supermarkets are a great place to learn about the food of a culture. How people eat, what they eat, and what they don't eat tells much about how they view food, life and health. Explore the local markets in your destination as you prepare your meals and you can learn and save money at the same time.

  • Lunch specials. In many parts of the world, especially in Europe, you can dine on dinner menus at lunch special prices. The plate of the day, as it's called, is the best bargain in the world. For example, while I was in Barcelona, I went to eat at the seafood restaurants near the beach. However, dinner was around $50 U.S. Yet coming back the next day for the lunch special allowed me to get the same meal for only $20 U.S. Another destination that's great for this is Singapore, a very expensive place by Asian standards. Food here can cost as much as it does back home. Yet restaurants here have fixed menus for lunch that cost between $10-15 U.S. as opposed to $25 U.S. for dinner.
  • Refill your water bottle. You need to stay hydrated when traveling, and buying water every day costs money. Get a metal water bottle or reuse your plastic water bottle a few times to save money. It may only save a small amount of money each time, but over the course of a long trip that can really add up. If the tap water in your part of the world isn't drinkable, you can use a Steripen to purify your water, save money, and reduce your use of plastic bottles and waste. They're good for 3,000 uses and cost as little as $60 U.S. That's a lot cheaper than 3,000 bottles of water!

Sightseeing
The best money-saving device is also the least advertised. City passes are tourism cards that provide discounted and free entry into a city's museums and activities, as well as provide free public transportation and discounts on some restaurants and shopping. In Paris, the museum pass saved me $80 U.S. In London, I saved more than $100; in Oslo, $30.

The bottom line
As you can see, it doesn't take much to lower the cost of a trip. Just like getting rich slowly is about smart investing, savings and reducing unnecessary expenses, so too is making travel a reality by getting out of the normal paradigm of "go to Expedia, book a trip, and eat at fancy restaurants."

By thinking outside of the box when you travel, you can drastically cut your holiday expenses while enjoying a much more authentic experience. I know we all want a break from the routine of life and a little pampering when we're on vacation. There's nothing wrong with that; it's something I like too. But a memorable trip doesn't have to be expensive!




 
 

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

$1

Totally worth it. See him at Santa Monica Third street. Very fun guy.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

The 7 Habits of Calmness

Another thing I've been using to help me in life. This blog has a lot of good tips. This is a good article too and I think it's helping because I am able to deal with my stress a lot better lately. Woooo!

 
 

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via zenhabits by Leo on 2/15/13

By Leo Babauta

I have come to believe that high stress, constant anxiety over tasks and work and life, social anxiety … is all a part of the modern way of life.

Most people just don't feel a sense of peace, of calm, of serenity, throughout their day.

I have to admit that I'm the same way some of the time, but I have learned a few things that have helped me create a feeling of calmness much more of the time than ever before.

It's a series of habits that have developed over the last few years. I'm not perfect at them, but I do practice them, and they are always helpful.

These are habits, not a one-time change in my surroundings or work pattern. Changing your environment is great, but you can't control the things that happen to you much of the time, and you certainly can't control how other people act. The only thing you can control is your response — and this response matters. You can respond to the same event with anxiety or anger, or you can respond with peace and calmness.

Let's figure out how.

The Habits of Calmness

These are the habits to develop that will help you develop calmness (based on my experience):

  1. A calm morning ritual. Many people rush through their mornings, starting the day out in a stressful rush. I wake up a little earlier (5 a.m. these days, though that changes), and start with a little meditation, then a few yoga poses. I then start writing, before I let the noise in. Exercise is another component of my morning routine. You don't need to do the same things, but find the quiet of the morning and make the most of it.
  2. Learn to watch your response. When something stressful happens, what is your response? Some people jump into action — though if the stressful situation is another person, sometimes action can be harmful. Others get angry, or overwhelmed. Still others start to feel sorry for themselves, and wish things were different. Why can't other people behave better? Watch this response — it's an important habit.
  3. Don't take things personally. Many times the response (that you noticed in Habit 2) is to take things personally. If someone does something we don't like, often we tend to interpret this as a personal affront. Our kids don't clean their rooms? They are defying us! Our spouse doesn't show affection today? He/she must not care as much as he/she should! Someone acts rudely at work? How could they treat us this way?! Some people even think the universe is personally against them. But the truth is, it's not personal — it's the other person's issue that they're dealing with. They are doing the best they can. You can learn not to interpret events as a personal affront, and instead see it as some non-personal external event (like a leaf falling, a bird flying by) that you can either respond to without a stressful mindset, or not need to respond to at all.
  4. Be grateful. Sure, lots of people talk about gratitude … but how often do we apply it to the events of our day? Things are crashing down at work, or our boss is angry, or our co-workers are rude, or our kids are misbehaving, or someone doesn't love us as we'd like … do these cause anger/anxiety/unhappiness, or can we be grateful? Drop the complaints, and find a way to be grateful, no matter what. And then smile. This unbending habit can change your life.
  5. Create stress coping habits. Many times, when we are faced with stress, we have unhealthy responses — anger, feeling overwhelmed and withdrawing, eating junk food, drinking alcohol or taking drugs, shopping or otherwise buying stuff, going to time-wasting sites, procrastinating, and so on. Instead, we need healthy ways to cope with stress, which will come inevitably. When you notice stress, watch how you cope with it, and then replace any unhealthy coping habits with healthier ones. Healthy stress coping habits include: drinking tea, exercise, yoga, meditation, massaging your own neck & shoulders, taking a walk, drinking some water, talking with someone you care about.
  6. Single-task. I've written numerous times in the past about single-tasking vs. multitasking, but I think people multitask now more than ever. People text while on the train, while walking, while driving. They tweet and post to Facebook and Instagram, they email and read blogs and news, they watch videos while getting things done, they watch TV while eating, they plan their day while doing chores. This is a great way to cause a level of anxiety that runs through everything you do, because you're always worried you should be doing more, doing something else. What if, instead, you just did one thing, and learned to trust that you shouldn't be doing anything else? It takes practice: just eat. Just wash your bowl. Just walk. Just talk to someone. Just read one article or book, without switching. Just write. Just do your email, one at a time, until your inbox is empty. You'll learn that there is peace in just doing one thing, and letting go of everything else.
  7. Reduce noise. Our lives are filled with all kinds of noise — visual clutter, notifications, social media, news, all the things we need to read. And truthfully, none of it is necessary. Reduce all these things and more, and create some space, some quiet, in your life.

Ultimate Beginner's Guide to Tea

Speaking of calm habits, I helped create a new guide/course on tea: The Ultimate Beginner's Guide to Tea. This isn't an affiliate link and I don't make any money if you buy it — I just recommend it because Jesse Jacobs is a great tea teacher, and he's created something wonderful at Samovar Tea Lounge. It's one of my favorite places in the world, and tea has become a deeply ingrained part of my life.

Check it out, and learn more about tea with me and Jesse: The Ultimate Beginner's Guide to Tea.


 
 

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Thursday Treats: Medicinal Marshmallows

This is a wedding blog I am subscribed to in my Google Reader, but the Marshmallow Therapy caught my eye and I had to share. Enjoy! The wedding blog is interesting too :)

 
 

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via Rock n Roll Bride by Kat on 2/21/13

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I popped into London at the end of last week to see the girls at Fur Coat No Knickers and to pick the winner of our wedding dress contest (congratulations to Diana by the way!) On my way out of Kingly Court, where they're based, my eyes were drawn to this enticing looking shop. It could have been the pink lighting, the fluffy marshmallow poufs in place of chairs or the words 'medicinal marshmallows' emblazoned on the window that drew me in, but either way I was drawn.

Unfortunately I didn't have time to actually pop in and see what this craziness was all about but as soon as I got home I had a googlefest – and now I'm even sadder that I didn't take the time for a visit because it's only there for two short weeks. WAAAH!

So now I'm really sad and I'm going to console myself with a big tub of shop bought marshmallows which is really not the same at all.

In other news we finally relaunched our private forum for The Blogcademy graduates this week. Up until now we'd just been using a secret group on facebook – which was great, but as the member numbers have now exploded to over 100 blogcadets, facebook's limiting feature just wasn't cutting it any more. The forum has been hopping since we flung open it's doors with loads of questions, advice and general bouts of love flying around. It's so flipping exciting to see all the changes our graduates are making after the workshop, and to get to know the undergraduates we're yet to meet. SERIOUSLY SO EXCITING.

blogcademy forum

And finally, the real reason you popped by today – all things treatalicious..!

Weddings & Weddingy Things

Recognising when DIY wedding projects just aren't worth it
♥ Who would have thought that Winnie the Pooh wedding inspiration would work so well?
♥ Love this Americana decor
♥ A 30th anniversary where the theme was a wedding costume party!
Colourful French and romantic styled shoot
♥ Budget friendly Iowa farm wedding
♥ Beautiful & funky beach side wedding
♥ A floral affair. Goddamnit Brooke Davis is amazing

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Photography: Brooke Davis

Wedding polaroids on the beach – SWOON
♥ Gorgeous sea view engagement
Secret Hawaii wedding
Handmade New South Wales wedding
♥ A Princess Bride wedding
♥ Rocker chic inspiration
Bright mod wedding ideas
♥ Eclectic California wedding

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Photography: Wildflowers Photos

Best of the Rest

♥ Love these street art animated gifs!
ban.do's fall and holiday shoot is perfection
Vimeo's Echograph looks ahhh-mazing. Dang it having an Android phone really sucks sometimes. Sad face.

Proposal pranks!

Katy Perry & Willy Wonka got married and had a candy wedding to celebrate (LOVE the wedding cake!)

Video: Digital Dream Productions

DIY electronic wedding invitations. I just know Gareth will be gutted he didn't think of this for our wedding!

"I am grateful that you were born". Jon made Amber this felt stop motion video to celebrate their ten years together. Awww


 
 

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Sunday, February 17, 2013

I am a librarian!

I am a librarian!

Well, sort of :) See, I'm getting my Masters in Library Science and so far no dice in getting a library job until I have my degree. I'm almost done, so I've been chasing any opportunity to volunteer or help out at any library. The public libraries don't really want any volunteers in library school because of budget cuts and politics, so no luck.

A few weeks ago though, my church library was looking for volunteers. It's a tiny room full of books on religion and a totally old school volunteer library. I applied, and luckily was contacted and they want me for approximately an hour a week!!!

Today I trained - first day! The library matriarch who runs the show is sick, so she sent her granddaughter who showed me around a bit and we chatted. She was very nice and we got along really well. I was super excited because they manage their library completely old school - with typewriter, card catalogs and actual old school library due date cards in the books. It is a super quiet, non-busy and special library of only Catholic religious books, audio, dvds and such. Apparently the people who visit most are nuns, few parish members and a priest now and then. There is a ton of opportunity to learn how to be a librarian, how to manage a small special collection and hopefully ways to improve and make things better. I am so excited!!! NERDY to the max.

So ya. There was some awkwardness as the other volunteer whose shift I will be taking over, was there and surprised someone was there to take over her shift, so... ya. More on that later I guess. Otherwise I'll be learning about managing the collection at our local church. OMG I'm so excited.

Apparently the collection is mainly for adults. I thought of developing a children's library area as I would love to manage that. As the church also manages a Catholic school K-8 I think, it would be a great opportunity to give kids access to materials for reading and learning - of course Catholic based books and media and all.

I appreciate the good luck of this all, and hope I can really learn and enjoy it all. Thanks God :) he he.