Explorers's Posts
Nairaland Forum › Explorers's Profile › Explorers's Posts
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 (of 624 pages)
Promismike:My gas has finished, no food stuffs and nothing to cook. |
CryptoClub2018:Dont compare death with sickness, this a desert storm. You can only see this in Dubai or Egypt(deep in the desert) |
Yellowstone said several park goers called in complaints about a man harassing wildlife. They found Reinke later that evening and issued a citation for him to appear in court, but were unaware of the video at the time. Officials said Reinke told them that he planned to travel to Glacier National Park next. After the disturbing video at Yellowstone surfaced, park officials contacted rangers at Glacier. Reinke was found at the Many Glacier Hotel after rangers received a call about two guests arguing and creating a disturbance in the hotel dining room. Reinke was arrested and taken to the Yellowstone jail. The individual's behavior in this video is reckless, dangerous, and illegal,' Yellowstone officials said in a statement. 'We need people to be stewards of Yellowstone, and one way to do that is to keep your distance from wildlife. Park regulations require people to stay at least 25 yards from animals like bison and elk, and 100 yards from bears and wolves. These distances safeguard both visitors and the remarkable experience of sharing a landscape with thousands of freely-roaming animals. People who ignore these rules are risking their lives and threatening the park experience for everyone else. 'It's not clear what charges Reinke may face.
|
Park officials at Yellowstone said in a Facebook post on Thursday morning that the incident was being investigated. Reinke was apprehended at a national park in Montana later that night. According to Yellowstone officials, Reinke has spent the past week traveling to different national parks causing disturbances. He was arrested on July 28 by rangers at Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming for 'drunk and disorderly conduct'. He spent the night in the Teton County jail and was released on bond. Following his release, he traveled to Yellowstone where he stopped by park rangers for a traffic violation on July 31. Officials said Reinke 'appeared to be intoxicated and argumentative' and was cited as a passenger for failure to wear a seat belt. He encountered the bison after the traffic incident.
|
Raymond Reinke, 55, was arrested on Thursday night after he was seen in a Facebook video harassing a bison at Yellowstone National Park. The man seen in a now viral video taunting a bison crossing the street at Yellowstone National Park has been identified and arrested, park officials announced on Friday. Raymond Reinke, of Pendleton, Oregon, was taken into custody on Thursday night by Glacier National Park rangers following an incident at a hotel dining room. Authorities began looking for Reinke, 55, after the Facebook video surfaced of him beating his chest and yelling at the bison causing the animal to get agitated and charge at him. In the footage, shared by park goer Lindsey Jones, the large animal is seen slowly walking on the side of the road. Several cars had stopped so passengers could get a better look at the bison. Reinke is seen in the video walking behind the animal screaming at it. The bison turns around and slowly charges at Reinke, who runs away. Reinke then roars at the animal as it charges at him a second time. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sNU_tLtFaJw https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K7MrC_1J7NU http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6025117/Yellowstone-rangers-arrest-Oregon-man-55-taunting-harassing-bison.html
|
Winds downed power lines, uprooted trees across the metro area and blew off part of a roof of a building at an apartment complex in Glendale. The Arizona Department of Transportation shared this photo of the storm.
|
This photo shows drivers traveling through the dust storm that hit the area on Thursday.
|
A huge wall of dust enveloped the Phoenix metro area on Thursday in the second monsoon storm in a four-day span. Officials at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport said flights were delayed or held until visibility improved.National Weather Service (NWS) meteorologists said blowing dust in the Phoenix area brought near-zero visibility for drivers Thursday evening. Photographer Jerry Ferguson and Pilot Dominic Galindo were flying in a news helicopter covering seasonal monsoon weather in Phoenix when they were forced to outrun this massive dust storm. Phoenix residents captured video of the dust storm as they drove through it. One driver recorded several cars getting closer and closer to the storm on Thursday. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6024215/The-haboob-returns-Enormous-wall-dust-rolls-Phoenix.html Lalaaticlala, Mynd44
|
More.
|
Processing the fat after extraction. The surgeons fills up the tools to inject the fat. The needles are inserted forcefully and the fat injected fast as he pushes against the skin with his left hand.
|
'Snapchat Surgeon': doctors who livestream their operations on social media to millions of viewers. Inside the operating theatre with Dr Shulman and his snap chatting assistants. Liposuction: Extracting fat from the abdomen. The jars fill up with a mixture of fat, bodily fluid and blood, which will gradually separate like oil and water. https://www.nairaland.com/4012989/snapchat-surgeon-livestreams-lady-getting?_e_pi_=7%2CPAGE_ID10%2C2130747914
|
For the procedure, a surgeon suctions excess fat from one part of a patient's body and transfers it to the buttocks via injection. 'It really requires relatively little technical finesse,' says Dr Mark Mofid, a San Diego-based plastic surgeon. HOW IT WORKS: 1. Liposuction to remove fat from abdomen/hips/thighs. 2. Fat is 'processed'. 3. Fat is injected into buttocks. HOW TO PREPARE: *. Don't smoke (increases infection risk and blood clot risk). *. Don't gain weight (when you lose it again, your butt will change). RECOVERY: 1. Don't work for 10 days. 2. Don't sit for 6 weeks. 3. Sleep on stomach. 4. Final shape will take months or a year to form. In 2017, Ranika Hall (Pictured)had a lift and died shortly after, at just 25 years old. Heather Meadows (Pictured) died in the same building in Florida during the same operation
|
In the last five years, plastic surgeons have seen a 150 percent increase in the Brazilian butt lift business. Plastic surgery, as a field, is fairly low risk, with average mortality rates across all such procedures hovering around one in 55,000. But some surgeries are far more dangerous than others. Traditionally, plastic surgeons consider the tummy tuck one of the riskiest procedures they do, with about a four percent risk of major complications. That procedure is complex and invasive, and patients are at risk for developing blood clots that travel up to the heart and can quickly turn deadly. When plastic surgeons inject transferred fat into the muscles of the butt, there is a high risk that a glob of the fat will get into the inferior or superior gluteal veins and travel to the lungs.
|
Women from across the globe are dying from complications of Brazilian butt lift operations, prompting an international task force of plastic surgeons to warn against the procedure. Driven to fame by the likes of Kim Kardashian and Kylie Jenner, plastic surgeons performed 18,487 such 'butt lifts' in 2015. But the procedures comes with serious risks. For 30-year-old Lattia Baumeister, a butt lift was deadly. She died on the operating table in Florida, leaving her six children in Illinois motherless. She was one of least 33 people have died in the last five years in the US because fat transferred to their butts caused deadly embolisms, and a special task force is now warning surgeons that the way they learned to do the operation may be deadly. Pictured Lattia Baumeister (1st) died of a fat embolism after a Brazilian butt lift in June of last year. Lidvian Zelaya (2nd), from New York, suffered the same fate after getting the lift in Florida. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-6023579/Worlds-plastic-surgeons-warn-Brazilian-butt-lifts-deadly-cosmetic-procedure.html
|
Members of the women's union take part in a dancing party at the plaza of the Arch of Triumph for the 83rd anniversary of the founding of the Korean People's Army (KPA), in Pyongyang.
|
Statues of North Korea's founder Kim Il Sung and former leader Kim Jong Il at Mansudae hill in Pyongyang.
|
Children attending the Congress of the Korean Children's Union (KCU).
|
The Arch of Reunification. Yonggwang Station.
|
A member of staff looks from the balcony inside the Mangyongdae Children's Palace in central Pyongyang May 5, 2016.
|
A residential building. A man examines a placard showing the layout of the sprawling network of apartments.
|
The top of the 105-storey Ryugyong Hotel in Pyongyang.
|
General view of the May Day Stadium. Sci-Tech complex
|
Fireworks explode in the sky over high rise buildings.
|
The Munsu Water Park. Thousands of cheering North Koreans watched on as the dictator opened the sprawling Ryomyong Street development, which includes 5,000 flats.
|
Soldiers walk in front of the Monument to the Foundation of the Workers' Party in Pyongyang. Thousands of cheering North Koreans watched on as the dictator opened the sprawling Ryomyong Street development, which includes 5,000 flats.
|
A view of the Wonsan Baby Home and Orphanage. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un outside the Wonsan Baby Home and Orphanage.
|
A metro station. Pyongyang Airport.
|
The Sci-Tech Complex in Pyongyang.
|
The Monument to the Foundation of the Workers' Party in Pyongyang.
|
A view of Pyongyang's Mirae Scientists Street. In this April 13, 2017, file photo, North Korean soldiers carry the Korean People's Army flag as they walk past residential buildings along Ryomyong street, in Pyongyang, North Korea.
|
A view of the Sci-Tech Complex in Pyongyang.
|
Take a look at the eclectic buildings, monuments, and other structures of the Hermit Kingdom. https://mobile.reuters.com/news/picture/north-koreas-eclectic-architecture-idUSRTX4ED2M Lalasticlala, Mynd44
|
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 (of 624 pages)