Showing posts with label world reocord. Show all posts
Showing posts with label world reocord. Show all posts

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Strange Chinese Boy With 31 Fingers


This poor chinese boy has 31 fingers, he got 15 fingers and 16 toes. it’s much more than the normal people. this poor Chinese boy would break the records for the most fingers in the world.

A Chinese hospital has released images of a 6-year-old boy who was born with 15 fingers and 16 toes. Since more isn’t always better, he’ll soon undergo surgery to have the extras removed.

With a total of 31 fingers and toes, the boy, who’s identity hasn’t been revealed, has beaten the previous record of 25. According to scientists, the excess offingers and toes is a result of gene mutation.






Tuesday, September 29, 2009

10ft tall Horse Poe set to gallop into the record books

It’s lucky he’s such a good-natured beast.

Because if this horse turned grumpy, there’s no way a petite woman armed with a rope could hold him back.

Standing 20.2 hands - that’s 6ft 10in - at the shoulder and weighing 200 stone, Poe is the tallest horse in the world, according to owner Shereen Thompson.

The Clydesdale is 2in bigger than the horse from Texas currently listed in the Guinness Book of Records, she believes - and dwarfs her own 5ft 3in frame.

He lives on Miss Thompson’s farm in Tupperville, Ontario, in Canada.

Poe - who is 10ft tall with his head held high - needs two bales of hay a day, 10lb of grain and 75 gallons of water.

Miss Thompson rescued Poe - named after her favourite writer, Edgar Allen Poe - in February 2008.
He used to work in the city of London, Ontario, hauling crates of Budweiser - ‘rather like the horses of Youngs Brewery used to in London, England,' Miss Thompson explained.

The ten-year-old has since become a firm favourite at local fairs - where she said he behaves like ‘a real puppy’.

‘But he does sometimes forget his strength and drags me along if he wants to play or go chasing something,’ she added.
Clydesdale horses were first bred in what was then Clydesdale, now Lanarkshire, in the mid-18th century.
They usually stand at around 5ft 4in at the shoulder.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

The leaning tower of egg and flour: Chefs claim world record with pancake skyscraper




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