Favourite links

Aug 14, 2006 17:18

This website was created by a mammal skull collector, for mammal skull collectors. Since I specialise in British mammal skulls, it only contains skulls of mammals that are native to Britain, or are kept as pets by some of the good folk of Britain. It also contains some non-native mammals that have now established in the UK. Please be aware that not all the mammalian species of Britain are represented on this website. Its not a brilliant website, but hell, I made it and I'm happy with it. I keep adding to it every so often!

chunnie's mammal skulls

This website is the bookcrossing website. It's an international site that will be of interest to people of any age who love to read and share their books with the world. On this website you can register your books and release them into the wild and find out who has found it and where you book is heading next, swap books, organise a book ring or a book ray, or get the opportunity to borrow a book from someone. This group is completely free to join.

http://www.bookcrossing.com

This website is also an international website. Find your local group and join. This website encourages people to give away their unwanted items rather than throw them away. The purpose of this website is to reduce landfil and help people out by giving them something that they want that you no longer need. It may also help you find something that you want that someone else no longer needs. This group is completely free to join.

http://www.freecycle.com

This website is fun. Send a message in a bottle and cast it out to the cyber sea. You might want to share a poem or a joke, or just a random note and cast it off into the big drink for someone else to find. See how many bottles turn up on your patch of cyber beach, read the note, add to it and pass it on. It takes a bit of patience waiting for bottles to wash up, this is great if you have other things to do in another window while you are waiting. This website is completely free to use, and you don't need to register.

http://www.oceangram.com

website

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