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| Articles about Paddle |
| Paddle Boarding - Push with your ... arms? | | 2008-04-30 06:00:00 | | Paddle Boarding - Push with your ... arms? "It's a great upper body workout!" says Jack Smith. If you enjoyed reading about "Skogging", here's another one! Paddle Boarding, or skateboarding with a street paddle, is a new way... | | By: Skate Boarding | | |
| | Without a Paddle 2 DVD | | 2008-04-03 23:19:11 | | Without a Paddle 2 is going straight to DVD. Don't ask us why theres a sequel to a horrible movie. Oh yeah and it doesn't even have the original cast in it. Gotta be good, right? Article Tools Submit to Digg Bookmark to del.icio.us Give it to Reddit
| | By: The Ugly Cow | | |
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| The Ping Pong paddle pin! | | 2007-09-28 13:12:09 | | The new pin is in the Snow Forts.
There is a new Penguin Poll question. What is your favorite Fall Fair mini game? I voted three times for Puffle Paddle, Ring the Bell, and Feed a Puffle. But my all time favorite is definitely Puffle Paddle. Which may be why the pin is a paddle. | | By: Club Penguin Cheats | | |
| | How Paddle Crabs Burrow | | 2007-06-18 20:06:00 | | Paddle crabs are found throughout New Zealand, from almost semi-tropical Northland beaches to the very much colder beaches of Stewart Island in the far south of the country. They live on sandy bottoms in estuaries and surf beaches alike.During the day most crabs remain hidden in temporary burrows emerging soon after sunset to hunt for bivalve molluscs. In turn they are eaten by over 30 different species of fish. Living as they do in an open environment the crab can either swim for cover (not often its first choice), stand and fight, or burrow out of harms way. Larger crabs (that is those with shells more than 7cm wide) are quite aggressive, and will confront their enemies and lunge upwards with the long chelae (claws) held upwards and outwards. But smaller crabs will burrow backwards quickly out of sight.A short period is spent searching for a suitable piece of sand to burrow into. The crab tests the sand with its first pair of walking legs, it may even take a bit of sand up to its mouth to check out the 'taste',in case there are any other paddle crabs buried there.Satisfied, the back paddle-shaped legs are inserted into the soft sand, and with a wiggle and a wriggle and a push of the body forwards to help create a depression, and an average of some 6 seconds later the crab is buried.Once the sand has covered the body the chelae are folded in against the body, so only the crab’s eye stalks peep out. Larger crabs will also burrow to hide during daylight – they take a little longer – up to 24 seconds.This sequence of still frames from one of NHNZ Image’s clips shows the burrowing technique of paddle crabs. Paddle crabs, many other species of crabs and much marine life are available for purchase for you production, check out the library’s website, or contact us for further information. | | By: NHNZ Images | | |
| | Get in the paddle along the Connecticut shore | | 2007-05-13 22:21:43 | | Kayakers in Stony Creek harbor travel past homes along its shoreline. The Nutmeg State may be small in size and densely populated, but it’s a great place to play outdoors on a summer weekend. via New York Daily News
Original post by Tracy Staedter | | By: UniQuest | | |
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