Friday, 10 July 2026

The Cosmos

“The man who graduates today and stops learning tomorrow is uneducated the day after.” - Newton Baker

The cosmos will always be a mystery to us. Each new discovery only adds to the mystery.

Here are some interesting fun facts about what is out there – courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Weird Facts’, ‘Unbelievable Facts’, ‘Today I Learned’, ‘Science and Facts’, ‘The Knowledge Factory’, ‘The Study Secrets’ etc… 

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Scientists think the final moments of a dying star could trigger a new Big Bang.

When a massive star runs out of nuclear fuel, gravity begins crushing it inward. According to the standard picture of physics, that collapse eventually forms a black hole, an object so dense that nothing, not even light, can escape its gravity.

But a new theoretical study proposes a far stranger possibility.

Physicists at Goethe University Frankfurt suggest that under certain conditions, a collapsing star may avoid becoming a black hole altogether. Instead, the collapse could trigger the formation of a tiny expanding universe deep inside the star.

The idea involves a hypothetical object called a gravastar, short for "gravitational vacuum star."

Unlike a black hole, a gravastar would contain a core dominated by dark energy, the mysterious force thought to make up roughly 68 percent of the universe's total energy content and drive the accelerating expansion of the cosmos.

As the star collapses, the researchers propose that a new region of spacetime could form within it. The conditions inside this region may resemble those that existed during the Big Bang that created our own universe 13.8 billion years ago.

That miniature universe would immediately begin expanding.

According to the team's calculations, the outward pressure generated by the expanding universe and its dark energy could become strong enough to counteract gravity's inward pull. Instead of collapsing into a singularity of infinite density, the star would stabilize as a gravastar.

One reason scientists find the idea intriguing is that black holes create major problems for physics. At their centers lie singularities, places where density becomes infinite and our current laws of physics break down completely.

Gravastars could potentially avoid that problem by replacing the singularity with an expanding universe.

The researchers emphasize that this does not mean black holes don't exist. Black holes remain one of the most successful predictions in astronomy and have been observed indirectly through their effects on stars, gas, and even gravitational waves. – A Facebook post by ‘From Quarks to Quasars’

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Three stars sit in a straight line across the night sky, close enough together that every civilization in human history pointed at them and made up a story. From Earth they look identical. They are anything but.

Those three points of light are Alnitak, Alnilam, and Mintaka, and the small orange dot at the bottom of this image is our Sun placed beside them for scale. It barely registers.

Alnilam sits in the middle and is the most luminous of the three. It shines with roughly 500,000 times the energy output of our Sun, making it one of the most intrinsically bright stars visible to the naked eye from anywhere on Earth. The catch is distance. All three belt stars sit between 800 and 1,300 light years away, which is why they appear as modest pinpricks rather than the cosmic furnaces they actually are.

Alnitak on the left is a multiple star system, with a brilliant blue supergiant at its center hot enough that most of its light pours out in ultraviolet wavelengths the human eye cannot detect. It is also responsible for illuminating the Flame Nebula sitting just beside it, a vast cloud of gas and dust that glows because Alnitak's radiation is energetic enough to ionize the hydrogen inside it.

Mintaka on the right is the faintest of the three and also sits closest to the celestial equator, which gave it practical value to ancient navigators. It rises and sets almost exactly due east and west regardless of where you are on Earth, making it one of the most reliable directional markers in the night sky for thousands of years before GPS existed.

Three stars that appear to be neighbors are not even close to each other in actual space. They share a direction from our perspective and nothing else.

That line in the sky that humans have traced since before recorded history is a trick of geometry. An accident of our particular vantage point on one small planet orbiting one very ordinary star that, next to any of these three, would not even be worth circling on a map. – A Facebook post by ‘@Astrophilesz'

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To understand the true scale of the Sun’s empire, start close and move outward. Light takes about 8 minutes to travel from the Sun to Earth. To reach Neptune, the farthest planet, it takes roughly 4 hours. To reach the heliopause, the boundary Voyager 1 crossed in 2012, it takes around 18 hours.

That already feels enormous. But the heliopause is not the true edge of the Sun’s influence. Beyond it, the Sun’s gravity continues to reach into deep space, holding distant icy objects across nearly 2 light-years. That means the Sun’s invisible domain stretches a significant fraction of the way toward Proxima Centauri, the nearest star system.

The planets, moons, asteroids, spacecraft, and even the heliopause itself are only the bright inner courtyard of something far larger. We celebrated the 18-hour boundary because Voyager crossed it, but the Sun’s real territory extends almost 2 light-years outward. One boundary is where the solar wind fades. The other is where the Sun’s gravity still quietly rules. – A Facebook post

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This is everything. Every single star you have ever seen in the night sky. Every galaxy every black hole every nebula every pulsar every quasar every planet every moon every asteroid every atom of matter that has ever existed in the 13.8 billion year history of reality — all of it fits inside this sphere 93 billion light years across.

We call it the Observable Universe — not because this is all that exists but because this is all the light that has had time to reach us since the Big Bang. Beyond this boundary there is almost certainly more universe — perhaps infinitely more — that we will never see because the universe is expanding faster than its light can reach us.

We exist on one pale blue dot orbiting one ordinary star in one ordinary galaxy among two trillion galaxies each containing hundreds of billions of stars in a universe so vast that the number of atoms in your body is small compared to the number of stars it contains. And yet here you are. Aware of all of it. Able to look up and wonder.

In 13.8 billion years of cosmic history the universe finally built something that could look back at itself and ask why. That is you. That has always been you. You are not separate from the universe. You are the universe experiencing itself. And that is the most extraordinary thing in all of existence. – A Facbeook post my ‘SkyMyst’

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The calcium in your bones was created inside a star that exploded billions of years before our Sun even existed. The iron in your blood was forged in the final seconds of a massive star's collapse into a supernova. The oxygen you are breathing right now was cooked inside the core of an ancient red giant that died long before Earth formed.

Every single atom heavier than hydrogen and helium in your entire body — every cell, every bone, every breath — was created inside a star that lived, burned, and violently died somewhere in our galaxy across billions of years. You did not arrive on Earth from somewhere else. You were built, piece by piece, from the literal remains of exploded stars.

The universe did not create you and then leave you alone in it. The universe rearranged itself, atom by atom, across billions of years, to become you. – A Facbeook post my ‘SkyMyst’

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Thursday, 9 July 2026

Our Feathered Friends

“Everyone like birds. What wild creature is more accessible to our eyes and ears, as close to us and everyone in the world, as universal as a bird?” – David Attenborough

A peek into the world of our feathered friends.

Some interesting fun facts about birds – courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Plant Care Today’, ‘F'd Up Facts’, ‘David Attenborough’, etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

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You'd think his feathers changed color like leaves. They didn't. The spring male never made blue pigment — microscopic structures in each feather shaft bend light into brilliant azure. Tilt him in your hand and he goes black. Physics dressed as a bird.

Inside each feather, keratin forms layers thinner than a soap bubble, stacked with precision that would make a watchmaker weep. Light enters, bounces between these microscopic ridges, and only the blue wavelengths escape back to your eye. Every other color cancels itself out in the interference. It's the same physics that makes a soap bubble shimmer, but evolution locked it into living tissue.

This explains why you never see a faded bluebird the way you see a sun-bleached cardinal. Red comes from carotenoid pigments that break down under ultraviolet light. Blue comes from geometry. As long as the structure holds, the color holds. A century-old museum specimen still blazes blue under the right angle.

The female bluebird knows this without knowing it. When she chooses a mate, she's reading structural integrity through color. A brilliant male isn't just pretty — he's advertising feathers built with such precision they can trap specific wavelengths. That kind of construction requires resources, health, and time. It's an honest signal she can trust.

In your garden, this matters more than you might expect. Bluebirds hunt from perches, dropping onto beetles and caterpillars moving through short grass. That flash of blue? It's a hunting advantage. Insects see ultraviolet light we can't, and structural color shifts differently in UV than pigment does. To a beetle, that bluebird might look like a flicker of sky — camouflage from below, beacon from above.

The same principle appears throughout nature once you know to look. Hummingbird gorgets. Butterfly wings. The oil-slick sheen on a grackle's neck. None of them make the colors you see. They make the architecture that bends light into performance.

Plant for bluebirds and you're planting for this physics. Native grasses left a little shaggy give them the hunting perches they need. Let some ground stay open — they can't hunt through thick mulch. Skip the pesticides and you keep the beetles that keep them fed through nesting season.

Your garden holds the same possibility. Not pigment you apply, but structure you build. Layers of native plants, open ground between, perches at varying heights. Get the architecture right and the brilliance follows. The bluebirds will come. And when they do, they'll bring their impossible blue — the color that isn't color at all, just light remembering how to dance. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’

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You're standing at your back door with morning coffee, and there's that myna again — perched on the fence post, head cocked, watching. Not just looking. Watching. The kind of gaze that tracks your routines, catalogs your movements, remembers which window you open first and what time you step outside with the compost bin.

This is the intelligence we accidentally imported. When settlers brought mynas across oceans in the 1800s, they wanted pest control for crops. What they got was a bird that outthinks the insects, outmaneuvers the natives, and learns human behavior faster than most dogs.

The secret lives in the architecture of their brain. Mynas carry the same brain-to-body ratio that makes crows legendary problem-solvers. That neural density means they don't just react to the world — they model it. They run predictions.

In laboratory observations, researchers watched mynas manipulate tools, solve multi-step puzzles, and adjust strategies when conditions changed. But the real genius shows up outside the lab, in backyards and parks, where mynas map the social landscape of an entire neighborhood.

They know which humans are approachable. They remember faces, voices, the rhythm of daily life. A myna watches you leave for work at the same time each weekday and learns that window of opportunity. It notes the elderly gentleman who scatters seed at dawn, the jogger who always carries a water bottle, the child who drops crackers by the playground. Each human becomes a data point in their mental geography.

This same intelligence that decodes our patterns makes them formidable competitors in the wild. Tree cavities — those precious nesting hollows that take decades or centuries to form in old wood — become contested real estate. Mynas don't just find these spaces. They claim them with territorial aggression that pushes out parrots, woodpeckers, and other cavity nesters who've relied on those sites for generations. A single pair can flood an area with offspring, sometimes thirty birds in a year, each one inheriting that same sharp mind and competitive edge. What's remarkable isn't that they're effective. It's that their effectiveness comes from the same toolkit that helps them thrive alongside us. Pattern recognition. Memory. Social learning. The bird that figures out your schedule is using identical cognitive machinery to dominate nesting territories across three continents.

Stand at your door tomorrow morning and watch for that tilt of the head, that calculated pause before the myna hops closer or flies away. You're not just being observed. You're being understood, filed away, added to a map of resources and routines that this bird carries in a brain smaller than a walnut.

We brought them here to solve our problems. Instead, they learned to read us. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’

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You're standing in your garden watching a robin do that little head-bob dance across the lawn, and you think it's just scanning for worms the way you scan for your keys on the counter.

But that bird is doing something far stranger.

A robin's ears sit in different positions on either side of its skull — not symmetrically like ours, but offset just enough to catch vibrations in the soil at fractionally different moments. When an earthworm moves underground, it creates tiny pressure waves that ripple through compacted dirt. The robin's left ear picks up the signal a hair before the right one does. That delay — microseconds, really — tells the bird not just that something's moving, but exactly where.

The head tilt you see is the bird fine-tuning that data. It's adjusting the angle so those two offset sensors can feed the brain a stereo map of what's happening below the surface. One eye locks onto the target zone while the other stays wide, watching for the hawk that might be watching it. The whole system runs on a speed we can't match. By the time you notice the tilt, the robin has already calculated distance, depth, and strike angle.

Then it moves.

What looks like a casual peck is actually a surgical extraction guided by layers of sensory input we don't even have words for. The robin isn't guessing. It's not hoping. It already knows.

And here's what shifted everything for me the first time I really understood this: the ground I walk on every day isn't quiet. It's humming with movement. Earthworms turning compost into soil. Grubs shifting through root zones. Beetles navigating the dark. I just don't have the hardware to hear it.

The robin does.

Every step I take sends a shockwave through that hidden world. Every time I water, I'm changing the acoustic map beneath the surface. The garden I think I'm tending alone is actually shared with creatures reading signals I'll never detect, operating on frequencies outside my range.

That's the humbling part. I can know the chemistry of my soil, the Latin names of my perennials, the frost dates and the companion planting charts. But I'll never know what the ground actually sounds like to a robin.

Stillness isn't empty. It's the pause before precision. And the most powerful tools in nature aren't the loud ones. They're the ones listening so carefully that silence becomes a language all its own. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’

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Most birds feed their chicks dead prey. The eastern screech owl thinks more creatively.

In Texas, researchers discovered screech owls carrying live Texas blind snakes back to their nests. The snakes don't get eaten. Instead, they burrow into the nest's leaf litter and feed on the same pests that torment the baby owls.

Nests with snakes are dramatically healthier. The owlets grow faster, weigh more, and have higher survival rates than those in snake‑free nests. The snakes leave when the chicks fledge, and the owls sometimes snack on one if the opportunity arises.

It's nature's version of integrated pest management. A hired cleaning crew that works for rent, not wages. – A Facebook post by ‘F’d Up Facts’

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You're watching a chickadee dart from the feeder to the honeysuckle, tuck something behind a flake of bark, then vanish into the pines. What you're witnessing is one move in a mental chess game involving thousands of locations scattered across your neighborhood. That bird is building a living map inside its skull, and the map itself is changing the shape of its brain.

Most creatures that hoard food pile it up. Squirrels dig one big messy vault. Chipmunks stuff their cheeks and dump everything in the burrow. But chickadees work differently. They scatter. One seed here, two there, tucked into a crevice on the maple, wedged under lichen on the fence post, buried in a tuft of moss. By the time the leaves drop, a single chickadee has created hundreds of tiny pantries, each one holding just enough for a meal or two.

Here's where it gets strange. They remember. Not most of them. Not the general area. They remember the exact twig, the specific crack, the moss clump on the north side of the oak. And they remember thousands of these spots, each one coded in their brain with the precision of geographic coordinates.

To manage this, their hippocampus — the region that handles spatial memory — physically expands. We're not talking about getting sharper or more focused. We're talking about tissue growth. Thirty percent larger. New neurons firing, new connections forming, the brain literally reshaping itself to hold the season's worth of information. It's as if every autumn, the chickadee downloads a massive map update and the hardware upgrades to match.

Then spring comes. The caches are emptied, the need for that bulging mental file cabinet fades, and the hippocampus shrinks again. The brain remodels itself back down. This isn't a one-time event in youth or a gradual change over a lifetime. It happens every single year. Grow in fall, shrink in spring. Expand, contract, expand again.

And these birds only live two or three years in the wild. That means they're cycling through this transformation their entire adult lives, building and rebuilding the neural architecture that keeps them alive through the coldest months.

This is why that chickadee at your feeder isn't just cute. It's carrying one of the most dynamic brains in your backyard, a biological system that treats memory like a seasonal crop—planted in fall, harvested in winter, cleared in spring. Every time you see one caching a sunflower seed, you're watching the opening move in a performance of recall that would overwhelm most of us.

It makes you wonder what else is happening out there that we're only beginning to notice. The quiet brilliance tucked into feathers, operating on rhythms we don't live by, solving problems we never had to face. That little gray bird doesn't need our admiration, but it certainly has earned it. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care today’

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Wednesday, 8 July 2026

The World of Animals

“Society grants animals rights not because animals are like us or because animals would demand them, but because we humans feel empathy with animals. We attribute to them that they can suffer and that they deserve as living creatures not to suffer.” - Armin Krishnan

A peek into the world of animals. I think it is good that we learn something about the animals that share our wonder-ful world.

Here are some fun facts and trivia about animals, courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Stangest Facts' 'Wild Wonders’, etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

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The Akhal-Teke’s coat reflects light so cleanly it can look metallic, turning movement into a shifting flash of gold. That glow isn’t color alone, it’s built into the hair itself.

The overlooked part is how the shine is created. Each strand of hair is unusually fine and lacks the opaque core seen in most horses. Light passes through, reflects, and scatters back outward, creating that liquid, mirror-like sheen that seems to glow rather than simply sit on the surface.

This breed dates back more than 3,000 years to the deserts of Turkmenistan, where heat, scarcity, and long distances shaped every trait. Riders depended on them for endurance, often keeping them close to home, which led to a reputation for forming unusually tight bonds with a single person.

Their bodies reflect that same environment. Long legs, narrow frames, and thin skin help regulate heat and conserve energy across harsh terrain where heavier horses would struggle.

Even the shine may have served a purpose, subtly reflecting sunlight in a landscape where exposure never lets up. It looks ornamental at first glance, but nothing about it is accidental.

What appears golden is actually precision, refined by survival and carried forward in light. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

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Jaguarundis don’t sound like cats at all. They chirp and whistle like birds, turning familiar calls into a hunting advantage.

Here’s how that deception actually works.

Instead of stalking in silence, jaguarundis use up to 13 distinct vocalizations to imitate the sounds of small birds. Curious prey respond to what feels safe, moving closer to investigate, only to step within striking range of a predator that never needed to chase.

Their body design adds to the illusion. Long, low, and streamlined, they move more like weasels or otters than typical cats, slipping through dense vegetation with minimal noise. This shape also helps them hunt along water, where they will snatch fish and amphibians in quick, controlled bursts.

Unlike most wild cats, they operate in daylight, when bird activity is highest and their mimicry is most effective. The timing is not random. It is aligned with when their deception works best.

When the final moment comes, a sudden leap of up to seven feet closes the distance instantly, turning a simple sound into a finished hunt.

It is not just camouflage you can see. It is camouflage you can hear. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

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Sloths can survive 100 foot falls because their organs are anchored in place, preventing the internal damage that kills most animals on impact. The overlooked part is how that same body quietly hosts something far more valuable.

Their internal anatomy is reinforced with connective tissue that secures vital organs to the ribcage, limiting movement during sudden drops. Combined with a low body mass and slow metabolism, the force of impact is spread and reduced rather than concentrated, turning a deadly fall into something survivable.

At the same time, their fur supports a layered ecosystem. Algae grows between the hairs, giving sloths their green tint and natural camouflage high in the canopy. Within that same environment, scientists have identified fungi that produce compounds capable of fighting cancer cells and antibiotic resistant bacteria.

This only works because of how they live. Sloths move slowly enough for moisture to remain trapped in their fur, sustaining the organisms that grow there. Speed would break that system.

What looks like vulnerability is precise adaptation. The sloth does not just endure its environment, it carries a living system that quietly protects it in return. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

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Mountain goats are the original Spider‑Men. They don’t just climb cliffs – they stick to them like living suction cups. The secret is in their hooves. Each hoof has a hard outer shell that digs into tiny cracks and a soft, rubbery inner pad that molds to the rock like a suction cup. When the goat puts its weight down, the pad flattens and creates a vacuum seal, gripping the surface so securely that it can stand on a ledge no wider than a human thumb.

These four‑legged mountaineers can scale vertical walls of 200 feet or more, scampering up sheer rock faces that would be impossible for almost any other animal. They perform death‑defying leaps from ledge to ledge, landing on tiny outcrops with pinpoint accuracy.

And why do they risk their lives? Often, just for salt. Mountain goats are drawn to mineral licks, licking salt‑crusted rocks and even human urine deposits. In the Italian Alps, their close relatives – Alpine ibex – have been filmed scaling the near‑vertical face of a 150‑foot dam just to reach salt‑covered stones.

The mountain goat has evolved one of the most effective climbing tools in the animal kingdom. Its hooves are not just feet – they are biological climbing gear, engineered by millions of years of evolution for one purpose: to walk where nothing else can. – A Facebook post by ‘Wild Wonders’

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Pangolins are the only mammals covered in keratin armor, curling into a sealed ball that even predators struggle to break. The overlooked part is how precise that defense really is.

Each scale overlaps like layered plates, creating a surface that flexes with movement but locks tight under pressure. When threatened, the pangolin contracts powerful muscles, pulling its head, limbs, and soft belly inward until nothing vulnerable remains exposed.

Predators often try to bite or claw their way in, but the scales deflect force and can even slice along their edges if pressure builds. What seems like stillness is actually controlled tension, a structure designed to hold under stress without breaking.

This defense evolved for an animal that spends its nights quietly feeding on ants and termites, not fighting. Its goal is not to win a battle, but to make the effort pointless. It survives by removing the opportunity entirely. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

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Tuesday, 7 July 2026

Wisteria Vines

These are Wisteria vines. They were on display at the Flower Dome, together with the Hydrangeas recently.

Wisteria vines are fast-growing, woody climbing vines from the pea family (Fabaceae) renowned for their cascading clusters of purple, pink, or white flowers. The flower clusters can grow up to 60 cm long, blooming, cascading downwards from the top of the cluster.

These ornamental vines can climb trees high into the canopy. Thriving in full sun and well-drained soil, these vigorous climbers bloom from mid-spring to early summer and can live for up to 50 years or more.

Although stunning, they pose significant drawbacks. They are aggressive, invasive growth that can choke out local vegetation. Their woody vines can damage home structures and foundations while their vigorous root systems can push against retaining walls and crack foundations. This makes them high maintenance plants requiring consistent pruning. Their seed pods are toxic and are dangerous to children and pets. 

Fun Fact:
Wisteria flowers symbolize longevity, love, endurance, and grace. Because the plant is incredibly resilient and its vines twist and intertwine as they grow, it is a classic emblem of long-lasting affection, deep romantic bonds, and immortality.

You can click on the picture for a better view.

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Monday, 6 July 2026

Monday Humour

If you are finding it difficult to laugh in these troubled times, I hope the following humour, cheesy ones, I admit, will bring on a smile – at least.

I appreciate anything that can make me smile, or laugh out loud – even the cheesy ones. I hope you do too.

They say laughter is the best medicine, and the most wasted of all days is that which one has not laughed. So, laugh whenever you can. May your days be filled with laughter.

“The advantage of telling a ‘clean’ joke is that people might not have heard it before.” - Unkown

Image created on Canva

Said one friend to another as they were viewing a small oil painting in a local museum, “It’s a nicely done portrait, I think, but I doubt it will ever get stolen.”

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One year, a guy decided to buy his mother-in-law a cemetery plot as a Christmas gift. The next year, he didn’t buy her a gift. When she asked him why, he replied, “Well, you still haven’t used the gift I bought you last year!”

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The doctor was examining a young model who was having tremendous pain in her side.
“My dear, you have acute appendicitis,” the doctor said.
The woman became quite angry and said, “Don’t try hitting on me doctor, I just want to be examined, not complimented.”

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My wife was doing a crossword and was really struggling so I had a look to see where she’d gone wrong…
1-down was a five letter word and the clue was “Eggs on.”…
Correct answer “Goads”.
Her answer: “Toast”

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At the Scottish wedding reception the D.J. yelled, “Would all married men please stand next to the one person who has made your life worth living.”
The bartender was almost crushed to death.  

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Image created on Canva

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Thank you for stopping by. Follow me if you find my posts interesting. If you know of anyone who might appreciate them, do recommend the blog to them. Cheers!

Sunday, 5 July 2026

This Amazing World

“Knowledge is of two kinds. We know a subject ourselves, or we know where we can find information on it.” - Samuel Johnson

What an amazing world we live in. Our planet is far more complex, adaptive, and mysterious than we give it credit for. Here are some interesting phenomena discovered across the globe – courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Strangest Facts’, ‘David Attenborough’, etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

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In the fertile rice fields of Indonesia, farmers have developed a clever system that combines growing rice with raising fish, creating a productive and balanced ecosystem.

Instead of using water only for rice, they introduce fish into the flooded fields. These fish become active participants in the system, feeding on insects, weeds, and algae that would otherwise damage the crop.

This method, known as rice-fish farming, naturally protects the plants while reducing the need for chemical pesticides. At the same time, fish waste enriches the soil, acting as an organic fertilizer that supports healthier rice growth.

Farmers benefit in multiple ways: improved crop yields, reduced costs, and an additional food or income source from harvesting fish. By working with nature instead of against it, this approach increases productivity and sustainability in traditional agriculture. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough

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The ancient Olive Tree of Vouves stands as one of the oldest known olive trees in the world. Located on the island of Crete, its massive trunk — measuring several meters in diameter — reveals centuries of growth and resilience.

Estimated to be at least 2,000 years old, and possibly even older, this remarkable tree has witnessed countless periods of human history. From ancient Greek civilization to the Roman era and beyond, it has endured while continuing to thrive.

Even today, the tree still produces olives, serving as a living symbol of endurance, history, and the deep connection between nature and human culture. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough

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The world’s largest known beaver dam was never the work of a single animal. It was built piece by piece across generations by tireless engineers covered in wet fur and powered by instinct.

What makes the story even stranger is how long it stayed hidden. Deep inside the wilderness of Wood Buffalo National Park, this enormous half-mile structure was not discovered by hikers or explorers. Scientists first noticed it in 2007 through satellite imagery, stretching across the northern landscape like nature had quietly started its own construction project.

But beavers are not trying to create monuments. They build for survival. A strong dam raises water levels, protects lodge entrances from predators, keeps underwater access open during frozen winters, and creates safe food storage nearby. Mud, branches, bark, stones, and endless repairs slowly become infrastructure.

Over time, the Alberta megadam transformed the surrounding environment into a thriving wetland, slowing water flow, trapping sediment, and creating habitat for fish, birds, amphibians, and insects.

No machines. No blueprint. No project manager. Just instinct, teamwork, and decades of relentless maintenance. A simple wall became a wilderness landmark because its builders never stopped rebuilding it. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough

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In the crowded streets of Istanbul, stray cats are treated less like animals and more like neighbors.

Among them, one cat became unexpectedly famous, a chunky, relaxed street cat named Tombili. What made him special was not heroism or tricks, but his unbelievably human way of sitting.

He would casually lean back against steps and curbs with one paw resting to the side, looking completely relaxed, like an old man watching the world go by after a long day.

People passing through the Ziverbey neighborhood loved him instantly. Tourists stopped to photograph him, locals greeted him daily, and his laid back posture quietly became an internet sensation.

The photo of Tombili lounging in his iconic pose spread across social media worldwide because it captured something strangely relatable and comforting. He looked completely at peace with life.

When Tombili died in 2016, the reaction in Istanbul was surprisingly emotional. Residents placed signs, flowers, and messages near the spot where he used to sit. But they did not stop there.

A local sculptor created a bronze statue recreating his exact relaxed pose, permanently preserving the moment that made people smile. – A Facebook post by 'Mr. Scientific'

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Horse chestnuts look like pocket-sized autumn ammo, and the tree knows exactly what it is doing.

The real trick is hiding inside the shine. Conkers contain bitter compounds called saponins, which help make them less appealing to hungry pests.

Every fall, the tree drops glossy brown seeds wrapped in spiked green armor, like nature designed a medieval security system and made it seasonal.

The drawer trick has old-school charm too. One conker tucked beside sweaters can feel like mothballs, a tiny moisture guard, and a forest-scented keepsake all at once.

It is not just decoration. It is chemistry wearing a polished brown helmet. Nature rarely wastes a good disguise. – A Facebook post by 'Strangest Facts'

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Saturday, 4 July 2026

The Virtue of Labour

People underestimate the virtue of work. Work is wholesome for the body and good for the mind. It keeps you busy, and your mind active, or idleness which usually comes from nothing to do, may lead you to do what is worse than nothing.

Work is beneficial for us. It organises life. It gives structure and discipline to life. Work gives you a sense of usefulness and accomplishment. Most importantly, having something to do keeps boredom at bay.

The trick is to find something you enjoy doing. They say find something you enjoy doing and you don’t have to work another day in your life. It wouldn’t be work if you enjoy what you do.

It is well researched that unemployment is connected with negative health consequences. People who are unemployed can suffer psychological and social distress. Unemployment leads to stress-related illnesses and a lowered self-esteem and also uncertainty about the future, financial instability, and loss of vocational identity.

It is through strife, through labour that we advance in life, and move on to better things. By persistent labour man may attain excellence. There is no better pride, and sense of accomplishment than enjoying the fruits of our own labour.

Labour is the root of riches.

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Friday, 3 July 2026

The Deep Sea

“You live and learn. Or you don't live long.” - Robert A. Heinlein

There is so much in the deep sea that we are unaware of. Here are some trivia, fun facts on the creatures of the sea, courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Amazing World’, ‘Wild Wonders’, ‘David Attenborough’ etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

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Orcas, often called killer whales, can copy sounds they hear around them. They do not only make the calls they are born with; they can imitate other animals and even noises that sound a bit like humans. Scientists have recorded orcas copying whistles, clicks, and strange squeaks, and sometimes mimicking sounds from boats or other sea animals. This talent makes them seem playful, curious, and very smart.

This copying skill comes from something called vocal learning, which is rare in the animal world. Vocal learning means an animal can listen to new sounds and learn to repeat them instead of relying only on fixed calls given at birth. Only a few kinds of animals, like some birds, dolphins, and humans, can do this. For orcas, vocal learning lets them pick up local calls and accents from other members of their group.

Vocal learning helps orcas in many ways. It makes their communication more flexible, so they can share information about food and keep strong social bonds. It also shows they can adapt to new noises in their home, but it means human noise can change their sound world too. Studying their sound copying helps people understand orcas better and can guide efforts to protect them. – A Facebook post by ‘Amazing World’

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The lionfish is the most successful invasive predator in Atlantic history. Not because it's the biggest. Not because it's the fastest. Because it weaponized its own offspring. A single female releases 2 million eggs every year. That number sounds fake. It's not.

She spawns every 4 days, year-round, in warm waters. While native fish breed once or twice annually, the lionfish breeds like a factory. But the numbers alone aren't the nightmare. The nightmare is the chemical shield.

Each egg sac is coated in a noxious deterrent. Fish that try to eat it immediately spit it out. It tastes so foul that predators learn to avoid egg sacs entirely after a single attempt. No native predator has developed a taste for them. After millions of years of evolution, nothing eats lionfish eggs except other lionfish.

The eggs drift for 25 days before hatching. During those three and a half weeks, they are completely untouchable. A floating, invisible army dispersing across the Atlantic, carried by currents, settling on reefs that have never seen anything like them.

Native groupers don't stand a chance. Snappers don't stand a chance. The lionfish has no predators in the Atlantic because nothing evolved alongside it. The local fish don't recognize it as a threat. By the time they figure it out, it's too late. The reef is already theirs.

The lionfish isn't winning because it's stronger. It's winning because it turned its own eggs into biological weapons. – A Facebook post by ‘Wild Wonders’

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Boxer crab, often called the pom-pom crab, is a tiny reef-dwelling crustacean found in warm Indo-Pacific waters. Despite its small size, it has developed an unusual survival strategy that makes it far more intimidating to predators.

Instead of relying only on claws for defense, boxer crabs carry small sea anemone in each claw. The anemones contain stinging cells that help the crab capture food and discourage predators from attacking.

When threatened, the crab waves the anemones like defensive weapons, using the stinging tentacles to protect itself. Researchers have also observed that if one anemone is lost, the crab may split the remaining one into two pieces and continue carrying them while the anemones regenerate.

This remarkable partnership between crab and anemone is considered an example of symbiosis, where both organisms benefit from living together. Although tiny and delicate in appearance, the boxer crab survives by turning borrowed defenses into an effective survival tool. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough

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Gliding silently beneath the frozen waters of Antarctica, the leopard seal moves with incredible speed, precision, and power through drifting ice.

With its sleek spotted coat, massive jaws, and razor-sharp teeth, this extraordinary marine predator is perfectly adapted for life in one of the harshest environments on Earth.

Hunting beneath floating ice sheets, the leopard seal uses stealth and agility to ambush fish, penguins, and other prey in the icy Southern Ocean.

Both graceful and intimidating, it stands among the most skilled hunters of Antarctica’s frozen wilderness. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough

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Deep beneath the ocean's surface, where sunlight never reaches, lives a creature that evolution designed to hunt in absolute darkness.

The giant squid's eye is the size of a dinner plate — up to 35 centimeters across. It has no iris, no eyelid. It simply exists, open and unblinking, scanning for the faintest flicker of bioluminescence. It can spot a sperm whale from hundreds of meters away. It can see in conditions where humans would be blind.

But the eye is not the nightmare. Each tentacle is covered in rows of chitinous hooks. Not suckers, not pads — hooks. Curved, serrated, designed to dig into flesh and anchor there like a harpoon. The prey thrashes. The hooks sink deeper. The tentacles retract, dragging the victim toward a beak that can snap through bone.

There is no escape.

The glass squid is transparent. Its body contains no pigment, no hiding place. What you see is what you get — a floating digestive system wrapped in a few millimeters of tissue.

When it eats, you can watch.

The prey enters the beak. It travels down the esophagus. It arrives in the digestive gland, a cigar‑shaped organ visible through the translucent mantle. You can see the meal break down in real time. You can see the squid process its food as it drifts through the abyss, digesting in plain sight.

A hunter that cannot hide. A predator that does not need to.

This creature has been in our oceans for millions of years. It has no natural predators at its adult size — because nothing is large enough to eat it. The only animal that challenges it is the sperm whale, locked in an evolutionary arms race that gave the squid its giant, all‑seeing eye.

And you've probably never seen one. Because it lives 3,000 feet down, in a world where humans cannot follow. But it knows you're up there. – A Facebook post by ‘Wild Wonders’

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Thursday, 2 July 2026

Earth

Earth has lost about half its wildlife populations in the past forty years, a decline tracked across thousands of species worldwide.

Monitoring of thousands of species shows average wildlife populations have fallen about fifty percent since the 1970s, meaning fewer individuals not total loss. Habitat change from farming and development is the main reason, with freshwater groups down over eighty percent. These shifts affect pollination and water quality, a pace scientists note is far faster than past natural changes.

Images are from Facebook pages.

You can click on the picture for a better view.

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Wednesday, 1 July 2026

Lupinus

Lupinus, commonly known as lupin, lupine, or regionally bluebonnet, is a genus of plants in the legume family Fabaceae. The genus includes over 199 species. - Wikipedia

I saw these lovely lupine flowers in the Flower Dome during my recent visit. Their colourful blooms on spikes caught my attention.

According to information on the signboards, Lupines are generally easy to grow. Once they are established, they are fast growing and require very little maintenance. They are classic, hardy cottage-garden plants. Hence, caring for them requires minimal effort:

They thrive in cool, sunny spots with well-drained soil that stays slightly moist. They don’t mind a bit of sun as long as not too much. Their lifespan is typically 2 to 6 years, as they are considered short-lived perennials.

They are widely cultivated both as a food source and as ornamental plants. The flowers are produced in dense or open whorls on an erect spike. Blooms open gradually from the bottom of the stalk to the top. The whole spike lasts for about 3 to 5 weeks before fading.

Lupine flowers primarily symbolize imagination, creativity, and transformation. They are also powerful emblems of renewal, inner strength, and overcoming adversity. 

The pea-like flowers have an upper standard, or banner, two lateral wings, and two lower petals fused into a keel. The flower shape has inspired common names such as bluebonnets and quaker bonnets.

You can click on the picture for a better view.

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