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Fleas: How To Rid Your Pet Of Them



Fleas: How To Rid Your Pet Of Them

There are several different types of flea, but by far the most common is Ctenocephalides felis felis, also known as the cat flea. Though it is called the cat flea, it is the species most often found on dogs as well. Unless your pet has a severe infestation, he/she is probably not bothered by the odd flea, unless he/she has a flea allergy. However, since these unpleasant insects also bite humans we are, not surprisingly, somewhat intolerant of them. This article discusses how to tell whether your pet has fleas and, if they do, how to eliminate them from your house.
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Benefits of Baby Swimming



Baby Swimming

Benefits

Babies have a natural affinity with the water. They become totally liberated as water is a free environment for them. We all have an inborn “gag reflex” but it is generally strongest in babies up to 6 months old, this enables them to hold their breath underwater naturally and provides a gentle introduction to submersion. They also have primitive swimming stroke actions up to 6 months of age and can propel themselves through the water. Swim Babes builds upon babies’ natural reflexes to enable your baby to be completely happy moving in and through the water.

Introducing babies to swimming aids and improves babies and children’s development – physical, intelligence, language, emotional and social.

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McLaren driver Hamilton - Monaco Grand Prix Winner



By Ian Parkes in Monaco

McLaren driver Hamilton - Monaco Grand Prix Winner 2008

LEWIS Hamilton realised a boyhood dream by claiming victory in an action-packed Monaco Grand Prix to regain control of a furious fight for the Formula One world title.

After an early run into the barriers on a wet circuit as the rain fell, Hamilton managed to hold his nerve, becoming only the fifth Briton to take the chequered flag. In claiming his sixth triumph in 23 starts, he now joins Stirling Moss, Graham Hill, Sir Jackie Stewart and David Coulthard on being crowned king of the Principality.

After crossing the line, and talking to his pit crew via his in-car radio, a jubilant Hamilton said: “I apologise for hitting the barrier, but we made up for it. Now let’s go party!”

Once the rain started to fall around 20 minutes before the start, it was always going to be an incident-fuelled race, and so it wonderfully proved.

The conditions meant the race ran for the full two hours, with 76 of the 78 laps completed.

And for once, rather than watching a dull procession around the tight, twisty streets of Monte Carlo, the public who pay through the nose for tickets for Formula One’s blue-riband event were given real value for money.

The first incident, though, was unexpected and occurred prior to the race unfolding as Heikki Kovalainen failed to pull away from the grid for the warm-up lap.

After Hamilton had made a superb start to pass Kimi Raikkonen on the run down to Sainte Devote, Jenson Button became the first on-track casualty.

The Briton, normally superb in the wet, attempted to pass the BMW Sauber of Nick Heidfeld coming out of the swimming pool complex on lap one, only to lose his nose cone.

Then Hamilton clipped a barrier on the entry to Tabac, puncturing his right-rear tyre and forcing him into an unexpected pit stop.

The calamities continued when David Coulthard lost the back end of his Red Bull on entry to Casino Square, clouting a barrier and forcing him out of the race on lap eight.

To add to a stationary Coulthard’s chagrin, he was immediately hit from behind by Sebastien Bourdais after the Frenchman had lost his Toro Rosso on the same part of the circuit, forcing the safety car into play.

Then came confirmation of a foolish mistake from Ferrari as they had not fully fitted Raikkonen’s tyres at the three-minute signal prior to the start of the race. That resulted in a 10-second penalty for the Finn

Massa almost joined the list of casualties at Sainte Devote as he slid off into the run-off area, allowing Kubica to take the lead. Then the race and a drying track started to come to Hamilton, as Kubica and Massa were eventually forced to make the first of their routine stops. That allowed Hamilton to gain the lead on lap 33, one he did not relinquish until the chequered flag.

With 20 minutes of the race remaining and at a point when Hamilton had a 40-second lead over Kubica, Nico Rosberg lost his line coming out of the swimming pool complex. The Williams driver initially thundered off a wall and across the circuit into a barrier on the entry to La Rascasse. With a wrecked car and debris all over the track, it brought the safety car into play for the second time, but crucially whittling Hamilton’s 40-second lead down to nothing with 17 minutes to go.

But there was still more drama to come as Raikkonen lost control of his car on the run down to the Nouvelle Chicane. Although the Finn managed to hold on without hitting a barrier, he instead ran into the back of Adrian Sutil.

Behind Hamilton, Kubica came home second, followed by Massa, with the Red Bull of Mark Webber in a season-high fourth.

Sebastian Vettel scored his first points of the season by taking fifth for Toro Rosso, whilst Rubens Barrichello claimed sixth in his Honda.

A thrilled Hamilton, after taking his second win of the year following his success in Australia, said: “This is the highlight of my career, and it will be the highlight for the rest of my life.”

Monaco Grand Prix F1 2008 Result

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