My Favorite Giant Things
43
The capybara, the world's largest rodent. They live in the Amazon basin and grow about as big as a medium-sized dog.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capybara
The Komodo dragon is the world's largest lizard. They can grow to 10 feet long.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Komodo_Dragon
My Favorite Giant Things
46The land shark!


scott wrote:It was fun. We laughed, we cried, most of us shit ourselves as far as I know. What a world.
My Favorite Giant Things
48I LOVE disproportionately large and small objects! LOVE THEM!
The great big Jolly Green Giant in Blue Earth, MN is pretty swell. I stand beneath his skirt on every cross-country trek.
I guess a lot of these things were built to honor car culture in the 40's and 50's. Interest along the roadways and such.
I took no pictures, but I visited the giant dinosaurs from Pee Wee's Big Adventure last week. They live outside of Palm Springs.
rarrrrrrrrrr.
There were giant beavers that inhabited Ohio. Six inch teeth n stuff.

The great big Jolly Green Giant in Blue Earth, MN is pretty swell. I stand beneath his skirt on every cross-country trek.

I guess a lot of these things were built to honor car culture in the 40's and 50's. Interest along the roadways and such.
I took no pictures, but I visited the giant dinosaurs from Pee Wee's Big Adventure last week. They live outside of Palm Springs.

rarrrrrrrrrr.
There were giant beavers that inhabited Ohio. Six inch teeth n stuff.

H-GM wrote:Still don't make you mexican, Dances With Burros.
My Favorite Giant Things
49Here are some more giants. These ones were spotted in the Circus/Cabaret field at Glastonbury last month




arthur wrote:Don't cut it for work don't cut it to look normal, people who feel offended by your nearly-30-with-long-hair face should just fuck off.
My Favorite Giant Things
50Outside of county fairs, another place to find giant vegetables are on nationalistic artworks.
I collect some of the Chinese stuff and the sizes/amounts of items being harvested are awesome.
Joy on the corn pile:
Drowning in cotton:
Just spread our nets, the fish come to us! (so nice, this one):
Wading in rice:
**
Early American folk art animals had obscene proportions to communicate prosperity, too:
**if anyone knows the significance of those fork-tailed swallows(?), let me know. they're in many prints of the period.
I collect some of the Chinese stuff and the sizes/amounts of items being harvested are awesome.
Joy on the corn pile:


Drowning in cotton:

Just spread our nets, the fish come to us! (so nice, this one):

Wading in rice:

Early American folk art animals had obscene proportions to communicate prosperity, too:

**if anyone knows the significance of those fork-tailed swallows(?), let me know. they're in many prints of the period.
H-GM wrote:Still don't make you mexican, Dances With Burros.


