Welcome to this bilingual (Swedish-English) group blog by family members living on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, "the pond". Our interests range from the scientific to the eclectic, including gourmet food, horses, art and literature, computers, species in nature, history and iron, and photography. Three generations are posting here.
I have never seen so many balloons before in my whole life! Beautiful!
ReplyDeleteQuestion: How does all that Helium affect the global warming in the atmosphere over Stockholm?
Not at all, helium is not a greenhouse gas.
ReplyDeleteit just makes the aliens talk in a high voice
ReplyDeleteI think Helium is a hothouse gas. It is too much hot here both in Sweden and NJ!
ReplyDeleteGreat Odin's Ravens! How did they get all those damn balloons?!
ReplyDeleteNot to speak of all the helium they had to inhale to inflate them, LA...
ReplyDeleteI am just wondering - how do you 'make' helium? How do you collect it in those gas tanks?
ReplyDeleteit is in natural gas and it is extracted from it. I think it is one of the most common elements...
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