Posted on 11/24/2010 6:19:53 AM PST by SunkenCiv
(Excerpt) Read more at english.peopledaily.com.cn ...
The link behind the photo leads to a PDF file version.
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So, apparently, ostrich eggs made it to China?
links don’t seem to work
The bird that lays the big ol’ eggs made it to China.
I have concluded that after you shake them up, they drain through the hole and don’t make a mess all over the skillet
Door hinges made out of egg shells. Man, that’s effete.
Totally off topic -- I live in rural Alabama. I was taking a side road past a little country grocery store, and there on the side of the road was an .. emu. I turned around and went up to the counter in the store and told the clerk, to see if she knew who the owner was (everyone knows everybody around here) who said the bird had been wandering around out there for a long time.
Or, maybe the holes were for leather thongs that were used as hinges so the owner could wear the shells on his hip as an early fanny pack.
Ostrich eggs? They look like corn chips, probably brought over by illegal immigrants.
The shells may be that old, but how would they know how old the holes are? Sorry, this one doesn’t seem right.
Ostrich eggs are an extremely important source of food to the G/wi people of Botswana. The G/wi also decorate the eggshells to use as containers.
I didn’t try the PDF link, but the main topic link works fine:
http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/90001/90783/91300/7207127.html
I had to look too. Haven't thought that ostriches weren't confined to Africa. Interesting.
There have been innovators and artisans since time began and they left their work behind.
The deeper we dig, the more astonished we are going to be.
How much of our culture would survive an Ice Age?
Or pieces of the world’s oldest Jacob’s ladder!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dAYh5Qy7DRU
(Jacob’s ladder toy)
I've never shaken an ostrich over a skillet. It seems like it would be dangerous.
But if I ever do need to drain an ostrich, now I know what to do....
You found my emu! I kept hoping he'd come home by now, but my wife has been saying, "After this much time he's probably halfway to Alabama." I have to go tell her she was right. Do me a favor and bring him home until I can get there. He likes cornflakes for breakfast and he'll curl up on the front porch at night if you give him an old blanket.
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