Thursday, January 31, 2008

Wildlife Photographers' Guide

Wildlife Photographers' Guide
as written by Mohit Midha for "India Today Plus"

Home

Contributed Articles

Focus On

Equipment (Hire)

Equipment (Buy)

Contact Us

Suggestion Box

Itineraries

Resorts

Adventure Sports

Advertising

Photography

Post a Message!

Contests!

Latest Update

Parks Index

Wildlife Index

Note: A lot of this article is India specific regarding best areas to shoot etc.


Damn!! The flash refused to go off when I pressed the shutter release!! Here I was, lying less than three yards from the feet of the biggest tusker I'd seen in all my wild life pursuits, manually focusing in the starlight on his occasionally glinting tusk and now the flash was acting up! I was hoping the small ditch between me and the giant would keep him from squashing me into a permanent fixture on mother Earth, just long enough for me to get a few shots. It was an awesome specter. His tusks were definitely longer than I was. They were almost like those seen in history books on mammoths, shaped like huge bows made of ivory. I snapped myself out of this awestricken trance and put my mind back to the problem at hand. Got it! I pulled the flash off the camera body, shifted the camera exposure dial to "B", put the flash on the test mode and then hoped for the best.As he tore down a tree right before my eyes, I waited patiently for his tusk to shine once again in the starlight so I could refocus the camera.

I watched him tear down the tree between us

There it was!! I think I got it focused. How I wished it hadn't been a moonless night but the starlight was quite bright too. Since I couldn't cross my fingers, with the camera in one hand and the flash in the other, I just hoped for the best and pressed the shutter release. I heard the familiar click, keeping the button pressed to keep the shutter open, I triggered off the flash test switch. It worked!! Yes!! This was followed by a few moments of absolutely undiluted tension spent trying to gauge the reaction of the elephant to the flash. He had paused in his demolition of the tree for a few seconds. I remember wishing I could stop my heartbeat, which sounded too loud for comfort! Then he resumed his meal. I heaved a sigh of relief and took a few more shots before my friend, waiting behind a bush thirty yards away, drove some sense into my head. I lay there and just stared a while at this awesome creature and it's raw display of power, then reluctantly crawled away before it pulled me off the ground and wrapped me around whatever was left of the tree.


As a wildlife photographer in India, being charged by a tiger sometime in your life is almost a certainty
Next morning when we went back to the same spot and looked at the ditch I had relied on so much, I almost did a back flip and died. I think I was very lucky I'd come across an extremely hungry elephant more intent on his meal than on a man at his feet flashing light every now and then. I remember hoping he thought the flash was lightning but why would lightning flash from the ground!! I guess you do have to be a little nutty in the head to be a wildlife photographer.


Nutty but still keep your wits around you to work your way around problems and get yourself out of dangerous situations which could turn ugly very suddenly. I have been charged and chased by elephants on fourteen different occasions, thrice by tigers and once even had the pleasure of sitting on an elephant charging a tiger. If these things aren't for you, don't even think of getting into wildlife photography.

It all began with the general liking for the outdoors, which came naturally because of the regular transfers of my father who was with the Indian Air Force. Air Force stations are mostly located amidst very nice and open surroundings, which along with the adventure stories of writers like Enid Blyton instill a very strong and deep rooted liking for the outdoors and it's inhabitants right from childhood. This feeling has to be a natural part of you by the time you plan to take on wildlife photography as a profession. To be able to stand out in this line, it has to come from the heart. With the kind of equipment available these days, it isn't a very difficult feat to take high quality photographs. High quality in technical aspects, but what really would make you stand out is a special communication between you and your subject. To be able to understand the expressions of a wild animal is possible only when it comes from within. Everyone can press that shutter release button but it's the timing, which will separate the great shots from the ones people keep in their memory albums. There are two aspects to wildlife photography. Getting into it as an amateur or as a professional. More often than not it is the former that transforms into the latter. That isn't such a bad thing either because getting into the line for a hobby will help you realise whether you actually have the liking and more importantly the potential for it. It is better not to fool yourself from the outset. There are many things we love with a passion but that does not necessarily make us exceptional at it. If that was the case, I would be driving circles around Michael Schumacher. So give it a shot and if you still feel this is the line for you, congratulations!! You've made it to one of the most emotionally, mentally and, at times, monetarily satisfying professions anyone can get into.

You must understand another thing very clearly right from the beginning. The monetarily satisfying aspect does not really come to the fore until you make a name for yourself. The lucky few get the break while they are still amateurs, the rest like me, just take the plunge! As an amateur, you can carry on with your job or whatever it is you do for a living but I feel that in this line of photography, as a professional you have to give it one hundred percent. If you plan to do it alongside some other profession, unless it is a related field, you'll end up not doing justice to either. It's alright if your goals are moderate but if you set standards for yourself that touch the sky, go for it 100%. If you feel that strongly for something, nothing can stop you from making it big. I'm not just talking big, I gave up a managerial post with a reputed MNC for this passion. I still don't know what life holds in store for me. Does anyone?! A lot of people thought I was crazy but then hey!! I think I did tell you that you have to be a little wild in the head to get into this line.


Some Interesting Tips


Contact Us Suggestion Box contributed articles Equipment Itineraries Resort of the month Maps Hot this month
Latest update
Adventure Sports Advertising Wildlife Photography People & Lifestyles Message Board About us

Copyright © 2001 by Wildlywise Adventures, All Rights Reserved

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

A Fight againt "Common Cold"

Welcome to Common Cold

Common Cold Myth This site provides a comprehensive, updated and referenced source of information on the common cold. The goal is to provide a framework for critical thinking which will allow informed decisions about medical care for the common cold.

Content is selected by:

Each of the scientific editors participates in the ownership of the site. Any and all sponsors, or commercial interests of any kind are fully disclosed.

//
Logo
Rhinovirus


Home
Site Map
Treatment
Understanding Colds
Complications
Prevention
Children
Special Features
References

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Find Free Anti-virus Software



Some of the Links to find Anti virus FREE Software






Sponsored Links

Free Virus Software Plus
Free Norton Security Scan
Pack plus safety info. Download now
www.TheBeehive.org/FreeAntiVirus

Download Free Antivirus
Find Solutions for your Business.
Free Reports, Info. & Registration!
www.KnowledgeStorm.com

Remove Spyware - Free
Safe & Effective Spyware Removal.
Download Free Spyware Terminator.
www.SpywareTerminator.com


Sponsored Links
Free Software Downloads
pack.google.co.uk Get the most out of your PC with Google Pack - Learn more.
Free Norton AntiVirus
www.Norton.com Try the world's most trusted antivirus software. Download now!
Free Virus Software
www.ThreatFire.com Award-winning virus and spyware protection. 100% Free Download Now!

AVG Free Advisor - Free antivirus and anti-spyware downloads

AVG Anti-Virus Free Edition (AVG's free product for non-commercial use) was recently awarded PC Pro's Software of the Year award 2007. ...
free.grisoft.com/ - 14k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

AVG Free Advisor - AVG Anti-Virus Free Edition

AVG Anti-Virus Free Edition is not for use with any type of OEM bundling with software, hardware components, or any other services. ...
free.grisoft.com/doc/2/ - 30k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
More results from free.grisoft.com »

McAfee – Computer Anti-Virus Software and Internet Security For ...

McAfee offers virus protection, internet security software, personal computer ... If any Free Software licenses require that McAfee provide rights to use, ...
us.mcafee.com/root/mfs/default.asp - 40k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

Free antivirus - avast! 4 Home Edition

Our company offers the Home Edition free of charge, since, in our ... However, ALWIL Software provides the full line of avast! antivirus products at special ...
www.avast.com/eng/avast_4_home.html - 44k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

avast! antivirus software - computer virus, worm and Trojan ...

avast! antivirus software is based on the ALWIL Software virus scanning technology since 1988. ... try using our FREE avast! Virus Cleaner. Latest Threats ...
www.avast.com/ - 30k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
More results from www.avast.com »

Free AntiVirus Download for Virus Scan with Comodo AntiVirus™ Software

Obtain Free Antivirus download to protect and eliminate viruses desktops and networks to fight against internet threats using Comodo AntiVirus Software.
www.antivirus.comodo.com/ - 9k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

Free anti-virus software; Freebyte's Guide to

Truly free anti-virus software, free firewalls, free email protection software, free virus prevention software, tests of anti-virus programs, ...
www.freebyte.com/antivirus/ - 48k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

Kit out your PC for free: no cost anti-virus software...

It's possible to fully protect your PC from viruses, spyware, worms, trojan horses and the rest; all without spending a penny...
www.moneysavingexpert.com/shopping/free-anti-virus-software - 62k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

Antivirus Software Review: Free Antivirus Software

Free antivirus software may be the only option for those on a limited budget. The question, of course, is how well free antivirus software protects your PC, ...
antivirus.about.com/od/antivirussoftwarereviews/a/freeav.htm - 23k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

Avira AntiVir PersonalEdition Classic - More than Security

Free download of leading antivirus software package. Well suited for Windows XP, ... Available in English and German, complete, easy to use plus virus removal.
www.free-av.com/ - 25k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this





Google Home - Advertising Programs - About Google

©2008 Google

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Bird Flu......................... ?

What is bird flu?

Bird flu, or avian influenza, is an infectious disease of birds caused by type A strains of the influenza virus. Bird flu epidemics have occurred worldwide. The recent spread of bird flu has been localised to certain parts of Asia.

Migratory waterfowl - most notably wild ducks - are the natural reservoir of bird flu viruses. It is suspected that infection can spread from wild fowl to domestic poultry, including chickens and turkeys, and then to humans. Live bird markets have also played an important role in the spread of epidemics.

The type currently causing concern is the "highly pathogenic" Asian strain of the H5N1 virus. Scientists have discovered four different subtypes of H5N1, and there could well be more. However, all are deadly to birds, and can cause disease - and death - in humans. However, it is important to note that H5N1 is overwhelmingly a disease that affects birds - and not humans.

It is true that humans have been infected, but almost all have been poultry workers who have come into intimate contact with birds. H5N1 cannot pass easily from human to human.

How do humans get bird flu?

Bird flu was thought only to infect birds until the first human cases were seen in Hong Kong in 1997. Humans catch the disease through close contact with live infected birds.

People catch bird flu by contact with infected birds or bird droppings. Birds excrete the virus in their faeces, which dry and become pulverised, and are then inhaled.

People do not catch the virus from eating fully cooked chicken or eggs. There have been a few cases where one infected person caught the bird flu virus from another person - but only after close personal contact.

What are the symptoms of bird flu in humans?


It changes every year. For this year, those who have been affected with bird flu from chickens start out with normal flu-like symptoms. Symptoms are similar to other types of flu - fever, malaise, sore throats and coughs. People can also develop conjunctivitis. This worsens to become a severe respiratory disease that has been fatal in a high percentage of cases.

In February 2005, researchers in Vietnam reported human cases of bird flu in which the virus infected the brain and digestive tract of two children. Both died. These cases make it clear that bird flu in humans may not always look like typical cases of flu.

is it safe to eat poultry and poultry products?


Yes, though certain precautions should be followed in countries currently experiencing outbreaks. In areas free of the disease, poultry and poultry products can be prepared and consumed following good hygienic practices and proper cooking, with no fear of acquiring infection with the H5N1 virus.

In areas experiencing outbreaks, poultry and poultry products can also be safely consumed provided these items are properly cooked and properly handled during food preparation. The H5N1 virus is sensitive to heat. Normal temperatures used for cooking (70 degrees Celsius in all parts of the food) will kill the virus. Consumers need to be sure that all parts of the poultry are fully cooked (no “pink” parts) and that eggs, too, are properly cooked (no “runny” yolks).

Consumers should also be aware of the risk of cross-contamination. Juices from raw poultry and poultry products should never be allowed, during food preparation, to touch or mix with items eaten raw. When handling raw poultry or raw poultry products, persons involved in food preparation should wash their hands thoroughly and clean and disinfect surfaces in contact with the poultry products Soap and hot water are sufficient for this purpose.

In areas experiencing outbreaks in poultry, raw eggs should not be used in foods that will not be further heat-treated as, for example by cooking or baking.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Athirrappalli Falls - Trichur - Kerala

Taste what ever you want................. Just CLICK

http://www.kitchensofindia.com
http://www.awesomecuisine.com/
http://www.indiaparenting.com/cookingclub/
http://www.indiatastes.com/NewDirectory/Default.aspx
http://www.spiderkerala.com/kerala/recipes/
http://www.leonardoolives.com/recipe.htm

Sunday, January 20, 2008

Elephant Safari

Get the Elephant Experience
In one year an Elephant….
Drinks 15,500 gallons water and can eat
1,600 ears of corn
2,000 sweet potatoes
3,000 cabbages, apples, carrots
100,000 pounds of palm fronds
1500 pounds of banana leaves
2,000 pounds of elephant grass

Elephant safari helps the visitor to travel through such difficult terrains where even jeeps cannot venture. And why not, riding an elephant takes you back to the royal era, when only the kings use to ride on these majestic beasts, since nothing can even compare with the majesty of the Pachyderm.

Equipped with a howdah, a large seat on which they would sit, complete with soft silk cushions, and with a ceremonial umbrella over the riders head, modern day elephant safaris may lack in comparison with the ones that use to be done by the kings, but are no less regal on that account.

The elephant moves slowly and steadily, that's why this type of safari is ideal in and around the wild regions or within the vicinity of the wildlife sanctuaries, where riding the elephant can give you an easy excess for viewing the wildlife. More of all a elephant safari tour in the tropical wildlife sanctuaries of India gets you up, close and personal with these majestic animals.

During your ride, you can watch the wild elephants taking bath in the water ponds. The photographers can easily take pictures of the wilds while riding and as a souvenir of the amazing journey into the wilds, take one with the elephant too.

Get the Elephant Experience at Jim Corbett National Park, India
The internationally acclaimed Tiger Safari Park is not only a sanctuary for this protected and endangered species, but is a total elephant experience that is not duplicated anywhere else in the world. The Jim Corbett Park is ideal for all the family and is open 7 days a week.

Elephant safari in Jim Corbett Park is the best among all the other places, due to its varsatility in flora, fauna, altitude, birds, lengh, duration and terrain. The best thing is you can book your elephant tour in advance.

Camp Facilities Include: Reception Centre with displays of elephant and other animals in the park.
Boutique Gift Shop, featuring a massive range of wildlife related products.
A 42 seat Restaurant with spectacular views of the mountains and forest.
Snack Bar & Photo Kiosk Visitors Can: Ride Elephants through the forest of Durgadevi (additional to entrance fee) Touch and hand feed Elephants
Watch Elephants playful bathing rituals
Have photos taken with elephants
Enjoy & learn amazing facts from information centre, museum and from park staff about Elephant, Tiger and other mammals.

ELEPHANT SAFARI RIDE TOUR
The experience of sitting high a top an elephant in a teak wood chair, through the cool jungle of Corbett National Park, is an experience you'll never forget. The tour includes air-conditioned hotel transfer, park admission, safari ride, buffet lunch and insurance all in one complete package. Don't miss this great value tour. Participate in Children's mini rides.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

History of CAR Logos

ALFA ROMEO
Are the red cross and crowned serpent devouring a human figure a warning to Alfa Sud owners who might complain about their front wings falling off? No, the symbols are the coat-of-arms of the city of Milan and related to the Crusades, hence the cross. The figure being eaten is a child or a Saracen, depending on who you listen to.


The four rings of Audi represent the four companies of the Auto-Union consortium of 1932 - DKW, Horch, Wanderer, and Audi. After the war the Audi name - which is Latin for "Hear!" - disappeared, but was revived in 1965, using the four rings as a logo.
Also, the name is sort of a pun on 'hoerch', German for 'hear', name of one of the founders.


BMW
The BMW roundel is a stylised, rotating airscrew - the blue representing the sky. That's right - Bayerische Motoren Werke built military aero engines for the planes that bombed the factories that they now own. It's a funny old world.


CITROEN
You might imagine that the forward-pointing chevron pattern symbolises Citroen's forward-looking, advanced approach to engineering. But no: Andre Citroen started in the motor trade by building gear wheels, and the twin chevrons are meant to represent gear teeth.


FERRARI
That's not a prancing horse, it's a dancing donkey - Enzo was hung like one and he liked everyone to know. No, no - just a joke. In fact, the prancing horse was originally the emblem of Italian WWI flying ace Francesco Baracca, whose parents persuaded Ferrari to adopt the symbol of their late son for his racing Alfas.


Mr. Ford's right-hand man, Harold Wills, earned money printing business cards in his teens, so when Henry was looking for a logo in 1903 he dusted off his old John Bull printing set. The typeface was the one he used for his own visiting cards. The oval appeared in 1912, and blue was added for the Model A in 1927.


Fiat first used the five-bar logo on the Uno in 1982, after Fiat design chief Mario Maioli - driving past the Mirafiori factory at night after a power cut - saw the giant FIAT logo on top of the plant, set against the fading likght of the sky. He did a quick sketch - five bars represented the spaces he could see between the letters.


MASERATI
Like Alfa, the Maserati badge is mere municipal pride - the trident is the traditional symbol of Bologna, where the cars were originally made.


MAZDA
The Mazda logo is more than just a stylised tulip. Developed by Rei Yoshimara, a world-renowned corporate image-maker, the 'V' represents outstretched wings, and - in Mazda's words - 'The creativity, the sense of mission, the gentleness and flexibility that are Mazda.' Never knew there was so much in it.



MERCEDES
Mercedes-Benz's three-pointed star represents its domination of the land, the sea, and the air. It was first seen on a Daimler in 1909, and was combined with the Benz laurel wreath in 1926 to signify the union of the two firms. The current, plain ring enclosing a star was first seen in 1937.


MITSUBISHI
Although Mitsubishi has only been in the UK for 25 years, it built its first car in 1917. The company itself goes back to 1870, when it built its first ships - the three diamonds represent a ship's propellers.
The name means 'three rhombs.'
A reader recently commented that the logo is formed by the joining of two family emblems and does not actually represent any part of a ship. The shipping connection is a misconception brought about by their early involvement in shipping and shipbuilding.


PEUGEOT
Pub-quiz question: what's the connection between Peugeot and the Statue of Liberty? One of the earliest Peugeot models was known as a Lion-Peugeot, which adopted the lion emblem of the city of Belfort, where it was made. Bartholdi, the sculptor responsible for the Statue of Liberty in New York, also takes credit for Belfort's Inn.


PORSCHE
The Porsche badge is essentially the coat of arms of the city of Stuttgart, which was built on the site of a stud farm - hence the horse. The antlers and red-and-black stripes are part of the arms of the Kingdom of Wurttemberg.


RENAULT
The Renault diamond started out as a bonnet emblem. The horn lived behind it, and from 1922 the centre of the badge was cut out to allow the sound to escape. It started out circular and became a diamond shape in 1924.


Rovers are folk who rove about, rather like Vikings - hence the Viking ship emblem that has been used on Rovers in various forms since the beginning. It went very stylised and year-2000 on the original SD1s, but later models reverted to the current badge, first used on the P6.


SKODA
It looks like a green, flying turkey (turkeys don't fly, do they?) - which would have been appropriate for some of Skoda's earlier models - but is actually a winged arrow with no apparent significance beyond a generic impression of speediness.


SUBARU
Subaru was the first Japanese car company to use a name derived from its own language. It refers to a group of six stars - also known by its original Japanese name of mutsuraboshi - in the constellation of Taurus. We'd know them as Pleiades.


TOYOTA
The Japanese have a bit of a weakness for mad badges. Hence, the current Toyota symbol that looks like a cowboy in a big hat, but is actually three elipses depicting the heart of the customer, the heart of the product, and the ever-expanding technological advancements and boundless opportunities that lie ahead It says here.



Volvo means 'I Roll' in Latin, and the arrowed Circle is merely the conventional map sign for steel - Sweden's most famous industry before iKEA came along.
The circle and arrow represent the shield and spear of Mars, which are also an alchemical symbol for iron. Each of the "classical" planets was associated with a metal: Sun=gold, Moon=silver, Mercury=quicksilver, Venus=copper, Mars=iron, Jupiter=tin, Saturn=lead.

Explore India

All India Holidays

Ayurveda & Spa Tours
- Ananda Spa Tour
- Spa And Ayurveda Tour
- Yoga & Meditation Tour
- Ayurveda Exclusive Tours
...more
Beaches of India
- Andaman Beach Tours
- Beaches & Tigers Tours
- Goa Beaches & Carnival
- Cultural Kerala & Beaches
...more
Fair-Festival Tours
- Mewar Festival
- Sindhu Darshan Festival
- South India Festival Tour
- Rajasthan Fair & Fesitval
...more
Hill Destinations
- Bhutan Tour
- Legacy of British Raj
- Sikkim-darjeeling Trip
- Uttaranchal Trip
...more
Honeymoon Tours
- Goa Honeymoon Trip
- Honeymoon Short Tour
- Shimla Honeymoon Tour
- Manali Honeymoon Tour
...more
Kerala Tours
- Adventure Tour of Kerala
- Amazing Kerala
- Exotic Kerala Tour
- Palm & Backwater Trip
...more
Luxury Train Tours
- Royal Orient Train Trip
- Deccan Odyssey Train Tour
- Rajasthan By Luxury Train
- Fairy Queen Train Tour
...more
North India Tours
- Camel Safari Trip
- Chardham Yatra
- Golden Triangle Tour
- Religious North India
...more
Rajasthan Tour
Packages
- Best Rajasthan Tour
- Desert Tour of Rajasthan
- Historical Tour of Rajasthan
- Rajasthan With Taj Mahal
...more
Short Tour Packages
- Mussoorie Tour
- Khajuraho Tour
- Taj Mahal Tour
- Short Pushkar Tour
...more
South India Tours
- Charming South
- Southern Legacy
- South India Glimpses
- South India Vacation Tour
...more
Wildlife Parks & Sanctuaries
- Bandhavgarh National Park
- Simlipal Wildlife Park
- Wildlife Park Kanha
- Sariska National Park
...more
Wildlife Tours India
- Luxury Wildlife Tour
- Himalayan Wildlife Tours
- Wildlife & Culture Tour
- Classical Wildlife Tour