10 Most Weirdiest Dogs in the World

Dogs are wonderful, loving animals who don't care about superficial things like appearances... which is a very good thing because these pets are downright fugly!

Sam, Crypt-Keeper Dog
He looked like a cross between the Crypt-Keeper and a Gremlin, which made registered Chinese Crested dog Sam a shoo-in to win the "World's Ugliest Dog" competition at the Sonoma-Marin Fair in California in 2005. That was the third year in a row that Sam had won this dubious title.

Sadly, the 14-year-old Sam suffered from a myriad of health problems. He died of cancer in November of 2005. (Link | Photo)


Munchkin the Mystery Mutt
Munchkin is perhaps one of the most decorated ugly dogs in recent history, having won several competitions for Ugly Dogs/Mutts and been featured on television and print media outlets all over the world.

Her breed is completely indeterminable; her vet calls her a "Canardly," as in "Can hardly tell [what she is]." Munchkin snorts when she walks (waddles?) and has wiry gray hair around her neck that sticks out on its own without the use of any combing or hair products. (Link | Photo)


"Ug" No More
With a face that only a mother could love, this 2 year-old half-blind Pointer mix was abandoned in an animal shelter in England before finally getting lucky. When he was named Britain's Ugliest Dog in 2010, suddenly hundreds of people flooded the Mayflower Animal Shelter with inquiries about adopting him.

The lucky adoptive "parent" was April Parker, a 35 year-old mother of two. Upon adopting him, Parker's first order of business was to change his name from "Ug" to a slightly kinder moniker: "Doug."

The Infamous Miss Ellie
This Southern Belle won first prize at the World's Ugliest Dog competition at the Sonoma-Marin fair in 2009 at the age of 17. A Chinese Crested dog who was adopted when she was about seven, Miss Ellie's looks earned her worldwide media attention.

Miss Ellie was entered to compete again in the 2010 competition but sadly, fate had other plans. She died last November at her home in Tennessee. (Link | Photo)


Elwood: Don't Feed After Midnight
2007's World's Ugliest Dog competition introduced us to Elwood, a 2 year-old Chinese Crested/Chihuahua mix who won the blue ribbon that year. Elwood's owners were thrilled to win the competition (and the $1,000 prize money), especially because Elwood's breeder had planned to euthanize him when he was born because she deemed him "too ugly to sell."



Representing Great Britain: Hubble
Poor Hubble had no home when he won the title of Britain's Ugliest Dog. He was living in a shelter in Leeds, U.K. after being found stranded in the woods. He was estimated to be about eight years old when he beat out the competition thanks to his mouthful of rotting, twisted teeth and mangy, pseudo-Terrier coat.


Rascal: It's In The Genes
Rascal comes from a long line of ugly dogs: his mother, grandmother, and grandfather have all won Ugly Dog competitions. In fact, Rascal's grandfather "Chi-Chi" is in the Guinness Book of World Records for winning the most ugly dog competitions of all time.

Naturally hairless and covered with spots and warts, Rascal is a purebred Chinese Crested dog.


Gus's Last Stand
Gus had only three legs, one eye, and was riddled with cancer, but that didn't stop him from winning the 2008 title of World's Ugliest Dog.

This 9 year-old pedigreed Chinese Crested dog had been rescued from an abusive home before losing a leg to skin cancer and his left eye in a brawl with a cat. Poor Gus didn't live long enough to truly enjoy his reign as World's Ugliest Dog, however. He died just five months after winning the competition.


Pabst Wins Blue Ribbon
Pabst here is one of the few dogs who was able to beat out all of those scrawny Chinese Cresteds as the overall champion at the 2009 World's Ugliest Dog competition in California. In fact, he even beat Miss Ellie!

A boxer mix who was four years-old when he won the prize, Pabst was named after a cheap brand of beer due to what his owner calls his, "bitter beer face."



All Hail Princess Abby!

Unusual Toothbrushes

Collection of the most innovative, stylish, and creative toothbrush designs.

Twist and Brush Toothbrush

Innovative toothbrush incorporates a toothpaste deposit. Just twist the grip to push up the toothpaste before you brush your teeth.
Hooking Toothbrush

Creative solution to the toothbrush storage problem. Just hang it.
Finger Toothbrush

Denticool portable toothbrush from Korea is made out of silicon.

Toothpaste Squeezing Toothbrush

Slotted toothbrush designed by Jee Young Choi provides a clever way of squeezing out that last drop of toothpaste.Twig Toothbrush

Miswak is a teeth cleaning twig used mainly in the Middle East, Pakistan and India. The top is removed before use to reveal soft bristles.
Folding Toothbrush

Brillo foldable toothbrushes are designed for frequent travelers.
Standing Toothbrush

Upstanding toothbrush makes use of a weight at the end of its rounded handle to create a centre of gravity at the handle base.
Bamboo Toothbrush

Environmental toothbrushes are biodegradable and sustainable.
Yumaki Toothbrushes

These modern toothbrushes made from 100% recyclable material. The bristles are 100% nylon and imported from Japan.
Fountain Toothbrush

Brush and rise toothbrush redirects water from a faucet to your lips.

Wonderful Toothbrushes

Collection of the most innovative, stylish, and creative toothbrush designs.

Twist and Brush Toothbrush

Innovative toothbrush incorporates a toothpaste deposit. Just twist the grip to push up the toothpaste before you brush your teeth.
Hooking Toothbrush

Creative solution to the toothbrush storage problem. Just hang it.
Finger Toothbrush

Denticool portable toothbrush from Korea is made out of silicon.

Toothpaste Squeezing Toothbrush

Slotted toothbrush designed by Jee Young Choi provides a clever way of squeezing out that last drop of toothpaste.Twig Toothbrush

Miswak is a teeth cleaning twig used mainly in the Middle East, Pakistan and India. The top is removed before use to reveal soft bristles.
Folding Toothbrush

Brillo foldable toothbrushes are designed for frequent travelers.
Standing Toothbrush

Upstanding toothbrush makes use of a weight at the end of its rounded handle to create a centre of gravity at the handle base.
Bamboo Toothbrush

Environmental toothbrushes are biodegradable and sustainable.
Yumaki Toothbrushes

These modern toothbrushes made from 100% recyclable material. The bristles are 100% nylon and imported from Japan.
Fountain Toothbrush

Brush and rise toothbrush redirects water from a faucet to your lips.

Worlds Most Fat Girl












15 Amazing Creatures from Russia's White Sea Shot in Macro

Alexander Semenov takes us into the secret and mysterious world under Russia's White Sea. Alexander is a biologist at the White Sea Biological Station, where he works as chief of the dive team and in the lab. He loves taking macro shots of the almost invisible tiny creatures in the sea that most of us never get to see.

15. Skeleton Shrimp ("come closer my dear")
This little horror may be a very common shrimp in the White Sea but he sure doesn't look friendly! It is actually a skeleton shrimp and doesn't have a shell. The best description of what it is like we found on Wiki: "They resemble an inchworm while "walking", a stick while sitting still and a praying mantis while catching prey." They are so thin they blend in perfectly with swaying sea grasses.

14. Brachiopod

This beautiful brachiopod is a living fossil. It hasn't changed one bit in 4 million years, even though many of its cousins have become extinct. Scientists are not sure why, but most fish and crustaceans don't seem to like the taste of brachiopods and leave them alone. In this amazing photo you can see the "lophophore" inside the shell which filters food for the brachiopod.

13. Nereis Pellagica - Sandworm
Nerei Pellagica is also known as the sandworm and is huge. It can grow up to 40 cm long and be as big around as your thumb. The little growths on its sides are called parapodia and are used rather like gills, for breathing, and to move with – like little feet.

12. Nereis Virens
This monstrous face is nasty! It isn't above trying to give you a bite with those two teeth either if it can't run away. Behind its mouth is an enormous pharynx, which connects the mouth to the esophagus and which can be a 1/4 of the length of his body with two sharp jaws. When it catches prey it can push it out of his mouth at blazing speed, and as the photographer says, "It's not a good show before sleeping or eating," as you can see in the very first image.

11. Sea Slug
This is one of the prettiest sea slugs in the White Sea. The color of its papillas – the colored parts – depends on what it eats. It is one of the most common creatures in the sea.

10. White Sea Amphipoda
This is the head of an unidentified amphipoda. Amphipoda are shell-less crustaceans, and in the White Sea there are 230 species, most of which are only encountered once or twice. Their name means "different footed" because unlike an isopod (see here) their legs are not all the same.

9. Dendrotus Frondosus
This translucent sea slug has a green digestive system which we can readily see. It is extremely rare – and the photographer has only seen them twice – but its golden brown cousin is common (you see one below).
Sea slugs pull in their papilla when disturbed or scared because predators like to feed on them.

8. Tubularia Flower
This looks like a lovely flower but is all animal! It is carnivorous and has poisonous cells to defend itself and to catch prey with. The flowers are tiny, only 3-4 mm in size.

7. Flourescent Scales of Lepidonotus squamatus
The Lepidonotus squamatus have 12 scales, and Alexander Semenov has done an incredible job of catching the fluorescence in them, shooting the photo under UV light with an orange filter. The males are pale when sexually mature because of the sperm within them while the females are green or gray.

6. Sunstar Skin
This is the skin of the common sunstar, one of the largest and fastest sea stars in the world. It will eat anything and even swallow other sunstars whole!

5. Sea Angel
The sea angel (who was part of our 12 Plankton of Christmas story) is starting to hunt for its prey, the sea butterfly. The angels are actually baby sea slugs and have closely matched their metabolism to their prey.

4. Sea Butterfly
The prey of sea angels, this diminutive animal has black wings that are actually lobes of its "feet", which it beats to move through the water. Sea butterflies are about the size of a lentil.

3. Metridium
This isn't a leftover visitor to Woodstock but a sea anemone that has lots of long tentacles. The Metridium always has a central stalk like this one but they are not all as beautiful or bizarre. This one with purple tentacles is rare; normally instead of purple they are orange or yellow.

2. Limapontia
These incredible little animals look like elephant embryos or little bears but are adult Limapontia. Very little is known about them; they are generally brown in color but some are lighter as we see here.

1. iSlug
This sexy little creature has been nicknamed iSlug by the photographer and we can see why. It is another one of the common sea slugs but has brilliant red coloring from its food.

Alexander Semenov hopes to raise awareness about marine biology and invertebrate zoology around the world. As we can see from just this small collection, there are a lot of wonderful and unique animals that most of us have never seen before.
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...