Tuesday 13 August 2013

10 of the Strangest Animals Found in Africa




The mandrill is the most colorful primate. It has an olive green or dark grey pelage with yellow and black bands and a white belly. Its hairless face has an elongated muzzle with distinctive characteristics such as a red stripe down the middle and protruding blue ridges on the sides. It also has red nostrils and lips, a yellow beard and white tuffs. The areas around the genitals and the anus are multi-colored, being colored red, pink, blue, scarlet, and purple. They also have pale pink ischial callosities. The coloration of the animal is more pronounced in dominant adult males. Both sexes have chest glands which are used in olfactory communication. These, too, are more prominent in dominant adult males. Males also have longer canines than females, with an average of 4.5 cm (1.8 in) and 1.0 cm, respectively.
The mandrill has one of the greatest sexual dimorphisms among the primates. Males typically weigh 19–37 kg (42–82 lb), with an average mass of 32.3 kg (71 lb). Females weigh roughly half as much as the male, at 10–15 kg (22–33 lb) and an average of 12.4 kg (27 lb). Exceptionally large males can weigh up to 54 kg (120 lb). The average male is 75 to 95 cm (30 to 37 in) long and the female is 55–66 cm (22–26 in), with the short tail adding another 5–10 cm (2.0–3.9 in). The shoulder height while on all fours can range from 45 to 50 cm (18 to 20 in) in females and 55 to 65 cm (22 to 26 in) in males. The male Mandrill is the heaviest monkey in the world, although its total length is relatively short due to its vestigial tail and, due to its high sexual dimorphism, baboons such as the Chacma and Olive average around the same weight. Compared to the largest baboons, the mandrill is more ape-like in structure, with a muscular and compact build, shorter, thicker limbs that are longer in the front and almost no tail.  Mandrills can survive up to 31 years in captivity. Females reach sexual maturity at about 3.5 years.



The wildebeest plural wildebeest or wildebeestswildebeesties (juv)), also called the gnu or is an antelope of the genus Connochaetes. It is a hooved (ungulate) mammal. Wildebeest is Dutch for "wild beast" or "wild cattle" in Afrikaans (beest = cattle), while Connochaetes derives from the Greek words κόννος, kónnos, "beard", and χαίτη, khaítē, "flowing hair", "mane". The name "gnu" originates from the Khoikhoi name for these animals, gnou.
Gnus belong to the family Bovidae, which includes antelopes, cattle, goats, and other even-toed horned ungulates. Connochaetes includes two species, both native to Africa: the black wildebeest, or white-tailed gnu (C. gnou); and the blue wildebeest, or brindled gnu (C. taurinus). Fossil records suggest these two species diverged about one million years ago, resulting in northern and southern species. The blue wildebeest changed very little from the ancestor species, while the black wildebeest took on more morphological changes to adapt to a habitat of open grassland in the south. Today, the blue wildebeest has five subspecies, while the black wildebeest has no named subspecies. In East Africa, the wildebeest is the most abundant big-game species, both in population and biomass.




Despite its name, the blue monkey is not noticeably blue: it has little hair on its face, and this does sometimes give a blue appearance, but it never has the vivid blue appearance of a mandrill, for example. It is mainly olive or grey apart from the face (which is dark with a pale or yellowish patch on the forehead - the "diadem" from which the species derives its common name), the blackish cap, feet and front legs, and the mantle, which is brown, olive or grey depending on the subspecies. Typical sizes are from 50 to 65 cm in length (not including the tail, which is almost as long as the rest of the animal), with females weighing a little over 4 kg and males up to 8 kg.
The blue monkey is found in evergreen forests and montane bamboo forests, and lives largely in the forest canopy, coming to the ground infrequently. It is very dependent on humid, shady areas with plenty of water. It eats mainly fruit and leaves, but will take some slower-moving invertebrates. It prefers to live in tall trees which provide both food and shelter, and is therefore, like almost all guenons, suffering from the loss of its natural habitat. Where pine plantations replace natural forest, the monkey may be treated as a threat by foresters, since it sometimes strips the bark from exotic trees in a search for food or moisture. It is also hunted for bushmeat.


Nigeria: It's God's Blessing, Okagbare Speaks On Her Silver


Moscow — Experts here are tipping Nigeria's Blessing Okagbare for a possible gold medal in the 200m, going by her slow start and powerful finish.
Okagbare's height that naturally puts her in good stead for long strides is a huge advantage.
"I thank God for using me to end the drought for Nigeria. It's a blessing from God. I'll savour the medal but I have got more races to do so it's better to keep a cool head now," Blessing said here at the Olympic Stadium in Moscow.
Nigeria last won a medal in the World Championships in Seville, Spain in 1999. Gloria Alozie and Francis Obikwelu won silver and bronze in Hurdles and 200m respectively.
Nigeria only got into the books again here in Moscow after a 6.99m effort placed Blessing behind Unioted State's Brittney Resse who jumped 7.01 to win the gold. Ivana Spanovic of Serbia won silver with a jump of 6.82m.
"I'm taking it one at a time and feeling good about it. It's tough but I'll do my best not to lose focus," Blessing said of her remaining races. After the 100m last night she would be back for the 200m on Thursday and will also run the 4x100m relays.
Nigerians here are celebrating the Delta athlete for the silver and expecting more from her.
"What a great thing it will be for me to cover a gold medal winning athlete from Nigeria," Daren Esan, a track and field expert and journalist said.
"Anything can happen tonight in the 100m but I think she can win gold in the 200m. She has the good finish to do so. The 100m would depend on how she starts. Others expressed similar expectations including Cameroun's Rene Thobhi.

Thursday 8 August 2013

TUFACE Speaks On Collab With Dr Victor Olaiya And Why He Married Annie



Innocent Ujah Idibia, aka 2Face, is unarguably the most successful and celebrated new generation Nigerian musician. Humility personified and forever churning out hits after hits, the superstar singer and father of five shared some of his success secrets with YES International! Magazine on sale this week.
Your song with Dr. Victor Olaiya turned out a big hit. How did you feel when you were contracted for that collaboration?

Whaao! I was excited. Dr. Olaiya is a legend of our time, somebody I respect musically for a long time. So, once the opportunity came up, I was excited and I think that's the word to describe how I felt. I was honoured; and it's a privilege to be in the remix of one of the greatest songs in Nigeria.


What's the thing about you that people do not know?
I don't think there is a part of me that is hidden from the public. But if I'm to describe myself, I will just say I'm a peaceful guy. Yes. Very peaceful, I no dey like quarrel.

What led you into doing music?
I think the reason for me is because it's my calling. Music is what I've always dreamt of doing. I never thought of doing anything else other than music. Music for me is a calling. It's a gift that God has given to me. It wasn't like I sat down one day and said I no wan do engineering again, make I do music. It's been music all the way.

Tell us about your growing up days.
My growing up was peaceful with my brothers in my father's house. In fact, I had a peaceful growing up.

As one of the most celebrated artistes in Africa, what do you think is the reason why most musicians cannot cope with stardom?
The biggest mistake is to believe your own hype. To believe that you are above everybody. To believe that you are too much.

What are some of the mistakes you have made at one time and regret and wish you never made them? You know, one thing with me is, I think it is necessary to make mistake at times.

Now that you are married, what has changed about you?
Hmmm! Marriage don make me I no dey crazy like before again

What exactly do you mean?
What I mean is, I don't go out so much anymore. I spend more time with my family.

Of all your baby mamas, why did you choose to settle down with Annie?
Well, it's a matter of the heart. You know, she's the one I know.

How many more children do you want to have with your wife?
We are still on the matter.

What more heights do you want to attain musically?
Musically, I just want to go all out. I want people in every corner of the world to know about me.

Don't you think that you have achieved that already?
I never reach yet, I still need to do some more.

What's your relationship with your former label mates, Black Face and Faze?
We dey o! We see once in a while, but it's not as if we communicate regularly, but we are still good.

Blackface seems to be saying that you abandoned him?
Me, abandon him? Did he tell you that himself?

But it was reported in the media?
Well, Black didn't tell me anything like that at all. We meet sometimes, but he has never told me anything like that at all. You know each time I hear this, then I wonder why he hasn't met with me to say anything like that. I'm not owing him any money and we don't quarrel. So, I don't know what this is all about.

Is it possible for Plantashun boyz to reunite again?
I don't think so.

What if you are called for a collaboration with the group again?
Very well. I will definitely go.

Are there any more musical collaborations you would want to do with top artists from any part of the world?
Yes! But I'll like to do it first before talking about it. You know Nigerians, if I should say anything and it doesn't happen, they will keep harassing me about it.

Your latest video, Rainbow is well loved and applauded. Why the choice of a storyline that showcases your white wedding and so on?
Actually, that was not the video for the song. It was for the launch of my website, but we used the opportunity to show my fans clips from my wedding and use the music at the background. People mistook it for the video, but it's not.

So, when are you looking at releasing the official video of the song?
I have not shot it yet, but we are working on shooting it soon. I was supposed to shoot it last month (June), but TPain was not available and we postponed it to August.

One of your baby mamas (Sumbo) just got married. How does that make you feel and what's your wish for her?I'm happy for her. I wish her a successful married life. She is a nice person and deserves the best.

What has been your staying power?
I don't know. But I guess this is the way I am designed to be. I do exercises once in a while. I try to eat right.

What do you take to get ready for recording?
That's where the talent comes in. I think about the subject I want to write on or sing on and that's it.

Do you write your songs before going to the studio to record them?
Yes! At times I do. At times I just go to the studio and at times the beat comes before the song and that's it. At times too, the song comes before the beat.

Among all your songs, which do you prefer?
 I don't know which one. It's a tough one. I don't remember.

Which of your songs was more challenging during the recording process?
 I still can't say.

´*Nice interview..I like Tuface despite all..........

Tuesday 6 August 2013

Cord Blood Facts and Misconceptions

Cord blood is the blood that remains in a newborn’s umbilical cord after birth. One of the amazing things about cord blood stem cells is its ability to find injured cells and tissue in the body and initiate a healing process.

If you’re about to be blessed with a newborn (or know someone soon due) – you should know that the miracle of life can now bring a miracle of healing. Thanks to advances in stem cell therapy, your baby’s banked cord blood can be used to help save lives.

By making the decision to allow your baby’s cord blood to be collected and banked, you can help to further important medical research. Or to help cure a previously untreatable disease, perhaps sometime in the future. And that person could even be your child him/herself, or someone in your family.

Modern medical science treasures these potentially life-saving umbilical cord blood stem cells: They are incomparably pristine, ’smart,’ unique, and powerful. In fact, currently – cord blood stem cells are being used to successfully treat previously untreatable diseases, or injuries. They are important to further research in a miraculous new area of medicine called regenerative medicine: An exciting new branch where scientists are studying the use of cord blood cells in experimental treatments for conditions once thought to be beyond cure.

The decision to bank your baby’s cord blood should be made well before your due date. Consider the facts and misconceptions: A common fear and misconception is that removing cord blood for collection will take something away from your baby. The fact is: Nothing at all; no blood is actually removed from the newborn. After the umbilical cord is clamped and cut, it’s usually discarded and thrown away. Instead, if you request to have your baby’s cord blood collected, the only difference from the routine procedure is that once the cord is cut – your baby’s cord blood will be saved, rather than discarded.

If you’re awaiting the miracle of birth, you should seriously consider saving, or ‘banking’ your baby’s cord blood. It could be yet another precious gift of life. It’s a one-time opportunity that can be a lifesaving, or life-giving miracle of healing for someone you’d like to help.

In a shockingly sincere twist of events, YMCMB artist DJ Khaled proposed to fellow labelmate Nicki Minaj during visit to MTV News studios. The moment was caught on camera because—as Khaled explains in the video—she’s too busy to track down in person, let alone by phone…

"I like you, I want you, I want you to be mine,” says Khaled in the clip.



According to MTV, the mistake ring is valued at an impressive $500,000. Minaj has yet to respond officially to the request, but we're currently refreshing her Twitter page like fiends.

Until further notice, Khaled will be sulking in his studio…

 

We the Wale Aluko BLOG are joining the league of other Nigerians in mourning the exit of Pa. Ademola Fashola, father of the Lagos state Governor, Babatunde Fashola.

“A father who gave the people of Lagos state a first-rated Governor and a man of integrity and rare vision like His Excellency, Mr. Babatunde Fashola, must be appreciated and celebrated both in life and in death as the described by the APC  National Chairman, Chief Bisi Akande.  in a communiqué issued in Abuja on Tuesday in ABuja.

We pray God give the bereaved family the fortitude to bear the irreparable loss.


Monday 5 August 2013


i have always love Genevieve is an actress; and no doubt all will agree that she is a rare gem.

 sharing these pictures on her instagram page she says:
 "Soon I will need your help to relocate them to a better home. Can I count on you? 

i think she wanna open an orphanage home? what do u think of her?

Sunday 4 August 2013

LONDON (Reuters) - Former England soccer captain David Beckham will release a picture book in October featuring images from his playing career in a deal with a UK publishing unit of French media company Lagardere.

The ex-Manchester United and Real Madrid midfielder, who retired from football in May after a brief spell with French club Paris St Germain, is expected to release the book on October 31 with Lagardere's UK-based Headline Publishing Group.

Headline's non-fiction publishing director, Jonathan Taylor, bought the world rights in a deal with the 38-year-old's management company XIX Entertainment for a book the publisher said will be a personal celebration of his playing days.

"David Beckham is, without a doubt, the most universally recognized and popular sports person on the planet, and this gorgeous book will be a superb way for his millions of fans around the world to celebrate David's remarkable achievements within football," Taylor said in a statement.

Beckham earned 115 caps for England, a record for an outfield player, and won the Champions League, six Premier League titles and two FA Cups with Manchester United.

He also won league titles with Real Madrid in Spain, LA Galaxy in the United States and PSG in France.

His new book is just one part of the post-retirement plans for Britain's richest sportsman, whose easy charm and image as a family man should ensure the Beckham brand continues to prosper.

Managed by the XIX Entertainment group which has British motor racing driver Lewis Hamilton and Wimbledon tennis champion Andy Murray on its books, Beckham has capitalized on his film-star looks and athlete's body to market underwear for Swedish fashion chain H&M and luxury watches for Swiss manufacturer Breitling.

He is married to former Spice Girl-turned-fashion designer Victoria Beckham, with whom he has four children.

Lagardere posted a 2.3 percent rise in first-quarter sales in May, driven by the publishing success of the "Fifty Shades" bestsellers and a biography of Sweden international soccer player, Zlatan Ibrahimovic.


The Nigerian village that suffered one of the world's worst recorded incidents of lead poisoning is now habitable and doctors can start treating more than 1,000 contaminated children, a doctor and a scientist from two international agencies said Friday.

For some, it already is too late to reverse serious neurological damage, said Dr. Michelle Chouinard, Nigeria country director for Doctors Without Borders, told The Associated Press on Friday.

Some children are blind, others paralyzed and many will struggle at school with learning disabilities, she said.

Doctors Without Borders uncovered the scandal in 2010 but nothing was done until this year about the worst-affected village, Bagega, because the federal government did not provide a promised $3 million, the group said.

The poisoning caused by artisanal mining from a gold rush killed at least 400 children, yet villagers still say they would rather die of lead poisoning than poverty, environmental scientist Simba Tirima told the Associated Press Friday. Villagers make 10 times as much money mining as they do from farming in an area suffering erratic rainfall because of climate change, he said.

Managing five landfills with some 13,000 cubic meters (nearly 460,000 cubic feet) of highly contaminated soil, and teaching villagers how to mine safely are major challenges to prevent new contamination, he said.

"That's a big, big worry. But I am joyful that for the kids who will be born in Bagega, we have at least removed one of the major strikes against them because they have so many strikes against them — nutritional problems, diseases ..." said Tirima, who is the field operations director in Nigeria for TerraGraphics International Foundation.

The Moscow, Idaho-based foundation advised Nigeria's northern Zamfara state government and oversaw the 5 ½-month cleanup, or remediation, of Bagega that ended two weeks ago.

There, people were exposed to mindboggling rates of lead contamination: Some residential soil with up to 35,000 parts per million of lead and the processing area with over 100,000 parts per million, Tirima said. The United States considers 400 parts per million safe for residential soil.

At the peak of the gold rush, Tirima said, more than 1,000 itinerant miners and followers were camped around the village — deep in the countryside, beyond the reach of paved roads and electricity and quite cut off in the rainy season when dirt roads become impassable.

Despite its remote location, the booming economy attracted people from Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger to Bagega, which also drew many locals as a regional commercial center with a primary and high school, a hospital and weekly market. In addition, cattle herders and nomads came here to water their animals at a reservoir so dangerously contaminated it killed goats and cows.

The entire human population of 6,000 to 9,000 was exposed, including some 1,500 children under the age of 5. Human Rights Watch said the death toll of 400 was only an estimate as villagers initially tried to hide the deaths, fearing the government would stop their illegal mining. The group said it was the worst epidemic of its kind in modern history.

The government released money for the cleanup in February, Doctors Without Borders began prescreening in March and found that nearly every one of 1,010 children tested need therapy, Chouinard said. Of them, 267 are severely contaminated and will get chelation — where medication binds the lead to a child's blood and helps them to eliminate it faster from their system.

All the children had more than the international standard maximum of 10 micrograms per deciliter of lead in their blood. Some had as much as 700 micrograms per deciliter, she said. The children will have to be treated for one to two years, she said.

The more basic methods used to get at gold helped cause the poisoning. Some women used hammers to beat open rock ore. Others used some of the 60 grinding mills at a processing area adjacent to the village and water reservoir, Tirima said.

Many took the rocks that carried high concentrations of lead into their homes for processing. The poisoning was facilitated because the particular lead compounds are very toxic and easily absorbed into the body, unlike other forms of lead, Tirima explained.

His TerraGraphics Foundation has trained dozens of Nigerians to clean up any future contamination.

Government officials initially reacted by trying to enforce a ban on illegal mining. When that did not work, they promised to find other sources of income for villagers, but nothing has happened in a country where corruption is endemic.

Tirima pointed to mounting evidence linking lead poisoning to crime waves and said he fears for the community when their poisoned children grow up.

(Y)OUR ACTION AND YOUR REACTION


 



Many times we’ve sat down after doing some crazy thing like cheating on someone; destroying something; accuse someone wrongly; got unnecessarily angry at someone; and ask ourselves silly but sincere questions like 

Did I really do that?
Did I really say that?
Why did I do that?
I shouldn’t have done that;
I should have acted like this;

Those are our reaction after our every actions, I called them SILLY BUT SINCERE in the sense that we all probably know we shouldn’t have done that in the first instance; those action sound being sincere but they sound silly to us for asking/questioning ourselves on deed that had already been done.

The philosophy of this is simple but before then let’s ask our self the question WHY AM I READING THIS; WHY AM I (THE WRITER) WRITING ABOUT THIS; it simple – CORRECTION, how we can make our reactions sound like YES I DID THE RIGHT THING; but that depends on KNOWING MAYBE YOU DID THE RIGHT which we all always want to admit we are on the right side.

Knowing the kind of action you take at any moment when you have situation like these; you actions something cause reactions that affect you physically and psychologically; your behavior toward other different thing; your mood and something your action produce reactions that makes you feel fulfilled and sometimes put you down. I could remember doing my kids day, being a playful boy due to my playful neighbourhood which I still stay till time of this post, my dad; a strict man (which am now happy he was that way then) would warn me not to play soccer so as not to dirty my cloth which I did a lot then but I wouldn’t listen and get punish at night when he comes back and get report of my action. But sincerely being a child or not I KNEW every day what I was doing was wrong and I knew the repercussion but for the FEW MINUTE JOY OF ACTION I underestimated all possible consequences! That’s it THE JOY OF ALL ACTION; but then why regret IF there’s ANY JOY THAT’S GREATER THAN ALL CONSEQUENCES in your action then why regret it. That what I call the point of RIGHT/WRONG ACTION!! But mind you some action might be RIGHTFULLY WRONG yep! We’ve seen convicts who are happy and doesn’t regret their actions, then we ask ourselves is that action WRONGFULLY RIGHT. With this it is incomplete to say what you regret is wrong and what you are happy about is right?

Sometimes a sex addict who had have series of his-so-called relationship and lost the ones who had loved him/her would probably might not regret his action because he has enjoined some sweet period of sex life (in-his-so-called-mind) but believe me somewhere in his heart; maybe atimes when he/she encounter a happy couple who are living comfortable with their children, he/she is sure to jealous them. That’s regretting is action in a RIGHTFULLY WRONG way – RIGHTFULLY because it’s not too late and there’s still hope and chance for correction but WRONG in the sense that his/her action was wrong and might sometimes be late or very risky that could damage any possible of it being RIGHT.

kindly comment your take on this post as we wait for (y)our concluding part of this post. 

thanks for reading and please invite other as discussing together is interesting than you think. 

once again thanks for reading