Renu Desai Second Marriage

renudesai కోసం చిత్ర ఫలితం
 Divorce and Re-marriage have become very easy these days. It is even more easier and very common among the celebrities. Irrespective of the reason, many celebrities have divorced and remarried, not just once but twice and thrice. 

Coming to the context, Power Star Pawan Kalyan had divorced Renu Desai and married a foreign woman. Recently, Renu Desai was asked about getting married again. She made heart touching comments about re-marriage. 

Renu tweeted, "Man has kids remarry no problem. Woman has kids remarry big prob & taboo ! Basically being a mother, a woman stops being a human with emotions." By her tweet, she almost confirmed of having no thoughts of second marriage !






Scooty Number Plate 2.6 Lakhs



Kanwaljit Walia, who runs a popular catering business splurged a whopping Rs 8.1 lakh on a VIP number plate - CH01BC 0001 - for his newly bought Activa scooty, which is worth Rs 50,000. Walia made the highest bid at an auction conducted by Chandigarh's Registration and Licensing Authority over the weekend.
 
The VIP number '0001' is the most sought after number plate and people are ready to spend anything between Rs 70,000 and Rs10 lakh. NS Shergill, a farmer-turned-realtor paid the record price in 2010.

Walia spent additional Rs 2,60,000 for buying the special numbers CH01BC 0011 and  CH01BC 0026 for his son's new bike and for his third SUV, respectively.

Walia, whose father was the founding president of the Chandigarh taxi union told NDTV that he has inherited his father’s passion for VIP numbers.

Chandigarh’s craze for VIP numbers is well-known and that is helping the local licensing authorities, who earned Rs 77.71 lakh this year.
 
In fact last year, the city’s licensing authorities made a record haul of Rs 98.7 lakh in just two days after the launch of the CH-01-AX series.



Idea : Block Ivery Coffee from Elephent dung

Thailand’s Black Ivory brew is a coffee with a conscience


In the lush, green hills of northern Thailand, a woman painstakingly picks coffee beans from a pile of elephant dung, an essential part of making one of the world’s most costly beverages.
This remote corner of Thailand, which borders Myanmar and Laos, is better known for drug smuggling than coffee. But Blake Dinkin, 44, decided it was perfect for a legitimate enterprise that blends conservation with business.
“When I explained my project to the mahouts (elephant riders), I know that they thought I was crazy,” says the founder of Black Ivory Coffee, which uses the digestive tracts of elephants to create a high-end brew for coffee connoisseurs.
The rarity of the drink is a key part of its branding. Black Ivory produced 150 kilograms of coffee this year, its third successful harvest. At about US$1,880 per kilogram, or $13 for an espresso-sized cup, it does not come cheap.
But making coffee from pachyderm poop was harder than expected. “I thought it would be as simple as taking the beans, giving them to the elephant, and out will come great coffee,” says Mr Dinkin, adding that it took him more than nine years to succeed in his quest.
The enzymes in the elephant’s stomach serve as a kind of slow cooker, where the coffee beans marinate alongside the herbs and fruits that the animal eats.
As the beans work their way through the elephant’s digestive tract – a 17-hour process – the digestive acid eliminates the bean’s bitterness.
The mahouts’ wives collect the coffee beans from the elephant dung before washing and drying them in the sun, a division of labour that is boosting the local community’s income.
To make a kilogram of coffee, the elephants have to consume about 33kg of the beans, along with their usual ration of rice and bananas.
But Aleaume Paturle, the owner of Cafe Lomi in Paris, says the coffee brand is more gimmick than taste sensation


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