First Ever Rain
Feb 6, 2014Do you remember the first time your child saw rain? Check out this adorable video that perfectly captures the quintessential feeling of “childish delight”.
Do you remember the first time your child saw rain? Check out this adorable video that perfectly captures the quintessential feeling of “childish delight”.
Who says you need to be out of a diaper to start shredding? This little guy would look great in a Shark Attax Mini helmet.
How do trees survive winter? This episode of Minute Earth explains.
Check out these awesome photos of kids who are naturals at the game of hide and seek. It’s a wonder how they didn’t end up on the side of a milk carton with such exquisite hiding technique and execution.
Kaia is a dog that clearly loves to run trails, and it looks like Bryan Gregory, her mountain biker, is working hard just to keep up with her. Bryan and Kaia, filmed by Foxwood Films.
Everything you know about the world will be different, after you watch this reality-altering video that will change life as you know it.
Winter is no fun, especially when it comes too soon or overstays its welcome. How can you make it more enjoyable? By being awesome like Chris Marchand who decided to turn snow into snowlemonade (snowade? water?) by making a beautiful and colorful ice wall fortress in his yard. Look at it. It glows.
Marchand used an 8 liter shoebox with food coloring and water to make about 30 ice bricks a day. To turn the bricks into an actual wall, he would mix snow and water to make a “slush mortar that would freeze solid within minutes”. The ice fortress was built on a 25′ x 25′ lot that looked especially beautiful at night.
New World from oliver sin on Vimeo.
New World, a short animation about all kinds of creations, by Oliver Sin.
Our New Years resolution? More Eye-Bombing!
BBC News explores the art of “eyebombing” in Copenhagen with eyebombing.com founders Kim Nielsen and Peter Dam.
Meet Siats (pronounced SEE-otts) Meekerorum, the first giant mega-predator to be discovered in North America — specifically in the Utah desert — in over 60 years. In this Untamed Science video, we hear from Dr. Lindsay Zanno, Director of the Paleontology & Geology Research Laboratory at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, who explains how this 30 foot long, 4-ton, carnivorous creature flourished in the tens of millions of years before T-Rex ruled.