The model village features scenes from rural England containing hundreds of hand-crafted houses, cars, trees and people
Workers at Babbacome Model Village are busy preparing for the summer season with its annual spring clean
Famous English landmarks can be seen in the shrunken landscape including Stonehenge
and Picadilly Circus
Don’t miss beneath the cars
Babbacome Model Village was opened in 1963 by Thomas Dobbins
Looks like these Companies that didn't spend quite enough time considering how their online names might appear .. and be misread.
These are not made up. Check them out yourself! Read the web-sites names closely!
1. "Who Represents" is where you can find the name of the agent that represents any celebrity. Their Web site is www.whorepresents.com
Misread by many as "whore presents" do we need to say more!
2 . Experts Exchange is a very popular knowledge base where programmers can exchangeadvice and views at its url is www.expertsexchange.com
Misread by many as "experts sex change".com
3. Looking for a pen? Look no further than Pen Island at www.penisland.net
I wont go in the details about the above one.
4. Need a therapist? Try Therapist Finder at www.therapistfinder.com
when you look carefully it looks like "the rapist finder".com
5. There's the Italian Power Generator company, www.powergenitalia.com
Wont get into details about the above, but I am sure you can figure it out!
6. And don't forget the Mole Station Native Nursery in New South Wales, www.molestationnursery.com
Misread as "molestation nursery".com
7. If you're looking for IP computer software, there's always www.ipanywhere.com
I read it as "I P anywhere" you see what i mean
8. The First Cumming Methodist Church Web site is www.cummingfirst.com
All I can say ouch!
9. And the designers at Speed of Art await you at their wacky Web site www.speedofart.com
I misread it as "speed of fart".com
It certainly beats watching a lonely goldfish swimming round its tiny bowl.
This is one of the world's biggest fish tanks - so big that it's even been named the Kuroshio Sea.
Located in the Churaumi Aquarium in Okinawa, Japan, the enormous tank is some ten metres deep, 35 metres wide and 27 metres long.
A giant whale shark behind the world's largest acrylic panel at Churaumi Aquarium in Okinawa
It holds a staggering 7,500 tonnes of water - roughly equal to three Olympic-sized swimming pools.
Eighty species live in the Kuroshio Sea tank, including yellow-fin tuna, bonito (a type of large mackerel) and manta rays.
But the daddy of them all is the world's biggest fish, the whale shark - which can grow to be 12 metres long and needs a quarter of a tonne of food every week.
Only three aquariums in the world have tanks large enough to house these giant creatures.
Viewers observe a giant manta ray
The four whale sharks at Churaumi move around comfortably - swimming diagonally past each other and feeding with their long tails touching the plethora of colourful corals at the bottom of the tank.
Rather than hand-pick fish from around the world and force them to mix in unfamiliar waters, the emphasis in the Kuroshio Sea tank is placed on local sea life.
All the species housed here can be found thriving around Okinawa - and even the water itself is pumped in from 300 metres offshore.
It is no surprise, then, that this titanic space requires an equally large observation panel.
The Kuroshio Sea: The world's largest fish tank in Okinawa, Japan has a focus on local sea life
The world's largest aquarium window, it measures a staggering 8.2 metres by 22.5 metres and is more than 60cm thick - this is necessary to stop the tank from collapsing under the huge water pressure placed on the glass.
It was constructed from seven acrylic-resin sheets, which were stuck together using a strong glue with a secret formula.
The appearance is dazzling and the window is so clear that each year millions of visitors can believe, for a moment, that they have stepped into a magical underwater world.
Behold the biggest Lego airplane in the world, made after the largest passenger airplane in the world, the Airbus A380. Made at a 1:25 scale-9.5-foot long, 10.5-foot wingspan, 3.2-foot tall—the Lego A380 uses 220 pounds (100kg) of bricks. That's a mindblowing 75,000 pieces in eight colours.
I'm not surprised that it took 600 hours for the entire team of professional Legoland model builders to assemble this beast.