Sunday, 5 April 2026

Quantum Physics

What is Quantum Physics? Quantum physics, or quantum mechanics, is the fundamental scientific theory describing the behavior of nature at the smallest scales—atoms, electrons, and photons. It reveals that particles can behave like waves, be in multiple states at once (superposition), and that the universe is probabilistic, not strictly deterministic. 

Information are courtesy of Facebook pages - ‘Ancestral Stories’, ‘Weird Facts’, ‘Unbelievable Facts’, ‘Today I Learned’, ‘Science and Facts’, ‘The Knowledge Factory’, ‘The Study Secrets’ etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

For a long time, people have thought of luck as something mysterious and totally out of our hands. But ideas from quantum physics shake that up. They suggest that maybe what we call “luck” isn’t as random as we’ve always believed.

The key idea here is quantum probability. In classical physics, everything follows predictable rules. But in the quantum world, things get weird. Particles can exist in multiple states at once, and what actually happens can depend on observation, human intention, and interaction.

That means some of what we call lucky or unlucky might actually come down to how these tiny quantum events play out. When we focus our attention, make decisions, or act with clear intention, we might be nudging probabilities in certain directions. It doesn’t mean every dream instantly comes true, but it suggests luck might have more to do with awareness, preparation, and timing than pure chance.

Some research even hints that our expectations and mindset can shift probabilities – a version of what scientists call the observer effect. In plain terms, what we focus on might subtly influence what happens.... sometimes.

These ideas are still being explored, but they open up a fascinating way of thinking about the nature of our reality, including what it means to be human.

Maybe we’re not just passive players in the human experience, but on some level, likely collective, we shape many things in our reality by our shared beliefs. – A Facebook post by ‘Collective Evolution’

Scientists just saw matter form from quantum nothing. In a historic quantum discovery, physicists have witnessed "quantum twins" emerge from the vacuum, bridging the gap between virtual energy and physical reality. Physicists at Brookhaven National Laboratory’s Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) have achieved a monumental feat by capturing evidence of matter forming from the quantum vacuum. By analyzing millions of proton-proton collisions, the STAR Collaboration identified pairs of particles known as lambda hyperons and their antimatter counterparts.

These particles, which usually exhibit random orientations, were found to be perfectly spin-aligned when produced in close proximity. This alignment serves as a "quantum fingerprint," proving that the particles originated from entangled virtual quark-antiquark pairs that exist within the seemingly empty fluctuations of space.

This discovery marks the first time scientists have directly observed the transformation of virtual "nothingness" into tangible, detectable matter. When protons collide at near-light speeds, the resulting energy promotes virtual particles into reality, allowing researchers to trace their origins back to the quantum vacuum. The fact that these "quantum twins" maintain their spin alignment during the transition suggests a deep, surviving connection between the vacuum and the visible universe. This breakthrough offers a revolutionary window into how fundamental properties emerge and could eventually help solve the mystery of how quarks bind together to form the atoms that build our world. – A Facebook post by Hashem Al-Ghalli

What if death is not the end but just an illusion of perception. In recent years, quantum physics has begun challenging one of humanity’s most profound beliefs: that death is final. Leading physicists suggest that at the quantum level, consciousness may persist beyond the physical body. Unlike traditional views which see life as a strict beginning and ending, quantum theory implies that our awareness could exist in multiple states simultaneously, much like particles that occupy many possibilities before being observed. Experiments in quantum mechanics reveal phenomena such as entanglement, where particles remain connected across vast distances, hinting that the universe is far more interconnected than we ever imagined.

This idea is not just philosophical. It forces us to reconsider what it means to live and die. If consciousness operates on quantum principles, the traditional approach to understanding life and death may be incomplete. Future research could revolutionize medicine, mental health, and even our approach to grief. Imagine therapies that tap into the continuity of awareness or technologies that help preserve consciousness in new ways. While still speculative, these findings push the boundaries of science and spirituality, blending them into a vision of existence where endings are transformations rather than finalities.

The thought that death may be an illusion invites awe and curiosity. It challenges fear and opens a space for hope, suggesting that life may be a continuous journey through the universe rather than a fleeting moment. As science progresses, we might discover ways to connect more deeply with the cosmos and with each other, transcending the limits we once thought were absolute. The universe may be far more mysterious and beautiful than we can currently imagine. – A Facebook post

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Saturday, 4 April 2026

Insects - Fun Facts

Learn everything you can, anytime you can, from anyone you can – there will always come a time when you will be grateful you did. - Sarah Caldwell

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

Today, we take a peek into the world of insects. These are some interesting fun facts about insects – courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Colours of Nature’, ‘Ancestral Stories’, ‘Weird Facts’, ‘Unbelievable Facts’, ‘Today I Learned’, ‘Science and Facts’, ‘Crazy Creatures, ‘The Knowledge Factory’, ‘The Study Secrets’ etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

Some moths have wing patterns that look like the eyes or bodies of bigger animals such as snakes or owls. The markings can be round like big eyes or shaped like a face. When the moth rests, the patterns are often hidden or blended with the background. Different species use different colors and shapes to match their homes or to look frightening.

If a bird or other predator comes close, the moth can suddenly open its wings. The sudden flash of eye-like spots or shapes can surprise the predator. Some moths keep the patterns hidden until they are touched or grabbed, so the surprise is stronger. A startled bird may hesitate, flick away, or fly off, giving the moth a short moment to get away.

This trick helps the moth survive because it uses appearance and sudden movement rather than speed or strength. Over time, moths with better markings were more likely to live and reproduce, so the trait stuck around. It is one of many ways insects protect themselves, along with hiding and flying fast. This simple trick shows how clever nature can be. – A Facebook post by ‘Colours of Nature’

Some people really do get bitten more. To a mosquito, your body is easier to read. But the real detail is this. Your blood type doesn’t stay hidden. It quietly shows up on your skin.

Mosquitoes track chemical signals your body releases through sweat and breath, and for many people, those signals carry traces of their blood type. Around 80 percent of humans naturally “broadcast” these markers without realizing it.

Type O tends to stand out more. In lab tests, mosquitoes consistently chose it over type A, often by a wide margin. Not because it’s tastier, but because it’s easier to detect. That choice happens before the bite.

Carbon dioxide pulls them in. Body heat guides them closer. Skin bacteria fine tune the final decision. By the time they land, the outcome was already tilted.

So when someone says mosquitoes love them, they’re not exaggerating. Their body is simply louder in a language we can’t hear. To a mosquito, that isn’t preference. It’s signal strength. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

You’re Looking at a Tiny Assassin. He’s got cartoon eyes. Pencil-thin arms. And a shyness that feels oddly human. But don’t fall for it. This is a damselfly — and he kills with precision.

Unlike most predators that rip or crush their prey, damselflies paralyze their victims and eat them face-first: Eyes. Mouth. Brain. Gone. All while the body is still twitching. It’s not random. It’s methodical.

Scientists have documented how damselflies snatch smaller insects midair, pin them down with their spiny legs like a cage, and start feeding while the prey is still alive — and watching. Some die in seconds. Others, in slow, agonizing minutes. And the damselfly? Never blinks. What looks like shyness… is just focus before violence. – A Facebook post by ‘Cronus’

Summer is coming, and sometimes survival looks like stillness. That “dead” bee on the ground may just be running on empty. But the part most people miss is how close it is to flying again.

A foraging bee burns energy at an extreme rate, beating its wings around 200 times per second while hauling nectar back to the hive. If it miscalculates distance or food, it can stall mid-journey and drop wherever it can land. At that point, it is not dying. It is empty.

Sugar water works because it mimics nectar, the exact fuel bees are built to process. A few drops can restore enough energy for its muscles to start again, and within minutes, many will groom themselves and lift off like nothing happened.

That single bee is part of a larger system, one worker among thousands keeping a colony alive through constant motion. You did not just help an insect. You restarted a role. Sometimes survival only needs a second chance, measured in drops. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

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Friday, 3 April 2026

Food / Health

Eat healthy, but enjoy the occasional indulgence and meals in the company of friends without scrutinizing ingredients or feeling guilty. - Darina Stoyanova

The benefits of consuming the following food/fruits. The information is taken from Facebook posts by ‘Food IQ’. 👉 HERE I do not know how true, or accurate they are. But I do know that consumed in moderation, they will not do you any harm.

Calcium is a "dumb" mineral; it doesn't know where to go and often ends up in your arteries (causing stiffness). Vitamin K1 (found massively in parsley) is converted by gut bacteria into K2, which activates a protein called Osteocalcin. This protein acts as the "glue" that grabs calcium from your blood and locks it into your bone matrix. Without this leafy "trigger," your calcium supplements might actually be harming your heart instead of helping your bones. – A Facebook post by ‘Fruit IQ’
Black pepper contains high concentrations of the terpene beta-caryophyllene. 2026 neuro-imaging shows that when this scent is inhaled, it stimulates the "reward" centers of the brain similarly to addictive substances, but without the spike and crash. It provides a "satiety signal" to the brain’s ventral striatum, effectively tricking your nervous system into thinking it already got its "hit" of sugar or nicotine, stopping a relapse in seconds. – A Facebook post by ‘Fruit IQ’
On the ORAC scale (Oxygen Radical Absorbance Capacity), ground cloves rank at the absolute top. This is due to the extreme concentration of Eugenol. While blueberries are famous for antioxidants, cloves are roughly 100 times more potent by weight. Adding just a tiny pinch (the size of a match head) to your coffee or oatmeal provides more DNA-protective power than an entire bowl of expensive "superfruits." – A Facebook post by ‘Fruit IQ’
Known as the "sugar destroyer," Gymnema sylvestre contains molecules that are shaped exactly like glucose. They bind to the sweet receptors on your tongue, physically filling the "locks" so sugar molecules can't get in. For about 30 minutes, even the most delicious chocolate will taste like flavorless wax or sand. This isn't just a psychological trick; it's a biological lockout that makes it physically impossible to enjoy—and therefore binge on—sugar. – A Facebook post by ‘Fruit IQ’
Fenugreek contains a unique fiber called Galactomannan and an amino acid called 4-hydroxyisoleucine. When soaked, the fiber becomes a viscous gel that physically "traps" glucose molecules, preventing them from entering the bloodstream too quickly. Simultaneously, the amino acid stimulates the pancreas to release insulin only after blood sugar starts to rise, making your body's response to carbs hyper-efficient and preventing fat storage. – A Facebook post by ‘Fruit IQ’

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Thursday, 2 April 2026

Scarlet Sage (Salvia splendens)

According to Wikipedia, Scarlet sage is a member of the mint family’s largest genus, Salvia, which contains over 900 species. Many Salvia species produce a wide range of pharmacological compounds and are widely used in herbal medicines.

However, scarlet sage is only mildly aromatic and generally grown solely as a flowering ornamental, although it too is being studied as a possible diabetes treatment.

Scarlet Sage is also known as ‘fire sage’. This popular ornamental plant is known for its tabular, long-lasting red blooms. The flowers are nectar rich attracting hummingbirds, bees, and butterflies. Depending on its cultivar, it grows from one to four feet.

It is a perennial sage species that reputedly grows several meters tall in its tropical mountain habitat at elevations of 1000 to 3000 metres. However, I found them in the Flower Dome where the temperature is always spring temperatures.

Scarlet sage usually flowers during the summer in temperate climates. They prefer full sun, or partial shade for optimal flowering. They thrive in well-drained soil, like most plants, but it is moderately drought-tolerant once established.

Deadheading, (the removal of spent flower heads), will encourage continuous blooming throughout the season, and pruning off young growth can encourage a bushier, fuller plant. They are easily grown from seeds.

You can click on the picture for a better view.

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Wednesday, 1 April 2026

Avians - Fun Facts

Live to learn and you will really learn to live. - John C. Maxwell

Knowledge is an antidote to fear. - Ralph Waldo Emerson

A peek into the world of our feathered friends. Some interesting fun facts about birds – courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Colours of Nature’, ‘Ancestral Stories’, ‘Weird Facts’, ‘Unbelievable Facts’, ‘Today I Learned’, ‘Science and Facts’, ‘Crazy Creatures’, ‘The Knowledge Factory’, ‘The Study Secrets’ etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

A newborn hummingbird is small enough to drink from a single raspberry. Its entire beginning fits in the curve of fruit. But the detail that makes this even more astonishing is what that size demands.

At hatch, a ruby throated hummingbird weighs about 0.6 grams and measures barely an inch long. Three chicks together can weigh less than a single dime.

The nest that holds them is no wider than a quarter, stitched from spider silk so it can stretch as they grow. It flexes with every gram, expanding just enough to keep pace with life.

For the first week, the chicks are blind and nearly featherless. Their mother feeds them a precise blend of nectar and tiny insects, fueling a metabolism that will soon power hovering flight and visits to hundreds of flowers a day.

Within two to three weeks, that berry sized beginning becomes a bird capable of crossing yards in seconds. Scale changes everything.

In the right light, even a raspberry can hold the future of flight. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

Bar-tailed godwits shrink their liver and intestines by 25% before migration, then regrow them after landing. Their heart and flight muscles actually expand during the journey. Wind assistance at 20,000 feet lets them maintain 40 mph for over a week straight. The Alaska to New Zealand route crosses open ocean with zero rest stops. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’
Frigatebirds have the largest wingspan-to-body-weight ratio of any bird—seven-foot wings on a three-pound body. They snatch flying fish that leap from the water, grabbing them before they splash back down. Males inflate their bright red throat pouches to basketball size during courtship displays. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’
Tiny birds should sink in a flooded marsh. Jacana chicks walk across it.

Hours after hatching they step onto lily pads with feet that look almost comically oversized. But those strange toes are the entire trick. Each toe stretches long and wide, spreading the chick’s weight across floating plants the way snowshoes spread a person across deep powder. The pressure distributes so evenly that delicate leaves barely dip, letting the chicks stride over vegetation that would collapse under most birds.

Wetlands are rarely calm. Pads tilt, slide, and shift with every ripple, so the chicks grow up navigating a floating maze that never quite sits still. They move quickly, plucking insects from the leaves and hopping from pad to pad with surprising confidence for something only hours old.

If danger appears, the chick can even slip beneath the water and hide among the stems, using the maze of plants as cover. In a world where the ground is made of drifting leaves, survival favors the bird that learns to walk on water first. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

A tiny bird that almost disappeared from the planet.

The Black Robin lives on small islands near New Zealand and became one of the rarest birds on Earth when its population crashed to just five individuals in the 1980s.

Almost every Black Robin alive today descends from one single female called Old Blue, the bird that helped save the entire species.

Fun fact: Today, the population has slowly recovered to a few hundred birds, making it one of the most famous wildlife comeback stories.

Scientific name: Petroica traversi – A Facebook post by ‘1 minute Animals’

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Tuesday, 31 March 2026

Beaumontia Grandiflora aka Easter Lily Vine

I saw this plant in the garden grounds of the Gardens by the Bay. What attracted my attention was the big white flowers with a very nice scent. This was in the afternoon, when flower scents are not at their strongest. But perhaps, the many blooms along the bridge combined to give them a strong fragrant.

Anyway, Google tells me that this is the Beaumontia grandiflora, also commonly known as the Easter lily vine, herald's trumpet, or Nepal trumpet flower. 

It is a sturdy, woody evergreen climber belonging to the Apocynaceae family, and native to the eastern Indian Subcontinent and Southeast Asia. 

You will notice from the photos that the flowers are large, trumpet-shaped, and creamy white in colour resembling the Easter Lily. I guess that is why they are also known as Herald’s Trumpet and Easter Lily vine. The leaves are big and glossy green. The thick woody vines are able to climb along, and far, as long as there is a strong support structure.

Beaumontia Grandiflora thrives well in good soil, adequate water and hot moist conditions, and they are regarded as among the most outstanding vines of the world. Quite an impressive plant really, which is why they are widely cultivated as an ornamental.

Apparently, the plant has medicinal value and is used in traditional medicine for its anti-inflammatory and pain-killing properties. 

Big glossy leaves
The bridge’s rail provides strong support for the sturdy wooden vine winding along it.

You can click on the picture for a better view.

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Monday, 30 March 2026

Witty Humour

Science has proven that laughing increases the brain’s production of endorphins – “the natural way our body relieves pain, reduces stress and boosts mood”. Laughing also “increases our intake of oxygen-rich air and blood flow and circulation, which can improve brain health”.

With so many benefits to laughing, we should all have a good laugh whenever we can, and try to maintain a cheerful disposition all the time. I hope the following witty aphorisms will do just that – bring on a chuckle or at least a smile.

May your days be filled with laughter..

There is so much good in the worst of us, and so much bad in the best of us, that it behooves all of us not to talk about the rest of us. - Robert Luis Stevenson

In order to keep a true perspective of one’s importance, everyone should have a dog that will worship him and a cat that will ignore him. - Dereke Rita

The trouble with people is not that they don’t know but that they know so much that ain’t so. - Josh Billings

You may not be too wise, but if you remain silent, you could fool a lot of people. - Unknown

All of us could take a lesson from the weather. It pays no attention to criticism. - Unknown

If confusion is the first step to knowledge, I must be a genius. - Larry Leissner

It is better to be looked over than overlooked. - Mae West

Talk is cheap because supply exceeds demand. - Unknown

The bedfellows politics made are never strange. It only seems that way to those who have not watched the courtship. - Marcel Achard

Our scientific power has outrun our spiritual power. We have guided missiles and misguided men. - Martin Luther King Jr.

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Sunday, 29 March 2026

The World of Animals

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

No matter what else, we can be daily grateful we have been put in touch with knowledge, for its source is inexhaustible. – Unknown

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 ‘Colours of Nature’, ‘Ancestral Stories’, ‘Weird Facts’, ‘Unbelievable Facts’, ‘Today I Learned’, ‘Science and Facts’, ‘Crazy Creatures’, ‘The Knowledge Factory’, ‘The Study Secrets’ etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

Tiny habits with planet-sized consequences.

Squirrels bury seeds and nuts to save food for later, carefully hiding them beneath the soil. But memory isn’t perfect, and many of those buried seeds are never recovered.

Instead of going to waste, the forgotten seeds take root, sprouting into young trees and eventually shaping entire forests. What begins as a simple act of survival quietly becomes an engine of regeneration. Without realizing it, squirrels act as nature’s gardeners—planting the future one forgotten seed at a time. – A Facebook post

New surveys show the güiña survives in more regions than expected and can tolerate some altered forests, prompting its status downgrade.

Habitat loss still threatens isolated populations, but better data gives conservation a fighting chance. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

The Kiwi is New Zealand's national icon—a shy, nocturnal creature with unique survival strategies. Since it lacks wings for defense, it has developed extraordinary senses of hearing and smell to compensate for poor vision in the dark. One of its most impressive traits is 'loyalty'; pairs stay together for life. Interestingly, the father takes on the task of incubating the massive egg for months, while the mother hunts to regain her energy after the Herculean effort of producing it.

The Kiwi is the only bird with nostrils at the very tip of its beak, allowing it to 'smell' insects and worms underground without seeing them. It represents the pinnacle of adaptation to an environment that was once predator-free, leading it to abandon energy-costly flight in favor of a stable, quiet life on the ground, becoming the 'honorary mammal' of the bird world.

Did you know that a Kiwi's egg takes up so much space that the female literally cannot eat before laying it because there is simply no room left in her stomach? – A Facebook post by ‘Mechanics Mix’

A small, cute snub-nosed monkey lives in a leafy forest. Its fur is soft and fuzzy, and its short nose makes it look extra sweet. On sunny days the monkey jumps from branch to branch, plays with friends, and enjoys warm light on its fur. It loves quiet moments in the trees, watching birds and smelling the green air.

But when rain starts, the monkey suddenly becomes shy. Tiny drops make the air cool and wet, and the little monkey’s nose feels ticklish. Rain waters on its face make it sneeze, so it quickly hides under big leaves, inside tree holes, or beside roots. The monkey stays snug and quiet, trying not to let the rain bother it.

The family waits together until the storm passes, sharing warmth and small comforts. When the sky clears, the monkey peeks out, shakes off a few drops, and steps back into play. Its sneezes are short and funny, and soon the whole group laughs and scampers through the sunshine again. – A Facebook post by ‘Colours of Nature’

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Saturday, 28 March 2026

Trivia

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

The larger the island of knowledge, the longer the shoreline of wonder. - Ralph W. Sockman

Here are some interesting fun facts, trivias about this wonder-ful world – courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Colours of Nature’, ‘Ancestral Stories’, ‘Weird Facts’, ‘Unbelievable Facts’, ‘Today I Learned’, ‘Science and Facts’, ‘Crazy Creatures’, ‘The Knowledge Factory’, ‘The Study Secrets’ etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

Did you know New Zealand is one of the only countries on Earth with no native or established snake populations? This rare ecological situation exists because the islands split from the ancient supercontinent Gondwana around 80 million years ago, long before snakes became widespread across the globe. As a result, snakes never naturally colonized the land, and the surrounding ocean has acted as a powerful barrier preventing them from gaining a foothold.

Because snakes never evolved alongside its wildlife, many of the country’s native species developed without the need for snake-specific defenses. Several native birds, including kiwi and kākāpō, nest directly on the ground, an unusual trait in most parts of the world where snake predation is common. Even the ancient tuatara, a reptile lineage that dates back over 200 million years, survived without adapting to snake threats. Scientists consider this predator-free evolutionary path one of the reasons the islands became a global hotspot for endemic species found nowhere else.

To protect this delicate balance, the government enforces some of the strictest biosecurity measures worldwide. Under national law, importing snakes is illegal without special permits, and any sighting triggers an immediate response from authorities such as the Department of Conservation. There have been rare incidents of sea snakes washing ashore or snakes being discovered in cargo shipments, but rapid containment has prevented any from establishing breeding populations. This combination of geographic isolation, evolutionary history, and modern policy makes the country one of the few places where an entire group of major predators is completely absent from the ecosystem. – A Facebook post by ‘Did You Know’

A question scientists have studied in laboratories for years was once tested by a child… with caterpillars at home.

Friends, the story begins with a young boy in Japan named Jo Nagai, who became fascinated by butterflies and the strange transformation they go through.

During metamorphosis, a caterpillar forms a chrysalis and its body reorganizes before emerging as a butterfly. Because the transformation is so dramatic, scientists have long wondered whether anything from the caterpillar’s life can survive it, especially learned memories.

While reading about insect research, Nagai came across work by entomologist Martha Weiss, who studies learning and behavior in insects. Instead of stopping at curiosity, he decided to try a similar idea himself.

Nagai trained caterpillars to associate the scent of lavender with a mild electric stimulus. Over time the caterpillars learned to avoid the smell. Then he waited as they formed chrysalises and eventually emerged as butterflies.

What happened next surprised him.

When the butterflies were exposed to the lavender scent again, many still avoided it. Even after metamorphosis, the behavior appeared to remain.

Nagai later shared his observations with Weiss, who recognized the careful thinking behind the experiment. His work did not introduce a new scientific theory, but it reflected an idea researchers had already been exploring.

Sometimes science moves forward in large laboratories. And sometimes it begins with a child curious enough to test a question himself. – A Facebook post by ‘Wild Heart’

Shark eggs are shaped in a spiral by nature to help them stay anchored in the ocean. The twisted design allows the egg case to wrap around rocks, coral, or seaweed so it doesn’t drift away with strong currents. This natural structure helps keep the developing embryo stable and protected.

The tough, leathery egg case also acts as a shield against predators and environmental damage. Thanks to this clever spiral design, baby sharks can safely grow until they are ready to hatch. – A Facebook post by ‘Brain Maze’

Many neuroscientists and psychologists emphasize the importance of metacognition, which is the ability to think about and reflect on your own thinking processes. It involves monitoring how you learn, make decisions, and solve problems, and then adjusting those strategies when necessary

For example, when someone realizes that their reasoning might be biased or that a study method is ineffective and decides to change it, they are using metacognitive skills.

Research in cognitive psychology shows that people who actively reflect on how they think often learn more effectively and make better decisions. – A Facebook post by ‘Healthy Harbor’

Purple honey looks unreal, like it shouldn’t exist. But it comes straight from the hive that way. The detail that keeps beekeepers guessing is what actually turns it purple…

In North Carolina’s Sandhills, the landscape is built on sandy, mineral-rich soil shaped by fire and time. Longleaf pine forests dominate, and the plants beneath them shift with each season, pulling different elements from the ground. Some years, bees gather nectar that produces a deep violet honey. Other years, from the same area, the color never appears at all.

One leading idea is that certain plants like gallberry absorb trace minerals, subtly changing the chemistry of their nectar. Another is that something inside the bees themselves alters the compounds during the honey-making process. Even hives placed just a short distance apart can produce completely different results.

That inconsistency is the real mystery. It cannot be predicted, replicated, or scaled. It shows up briefly, then disappears again without explanation.

Some of nature’s rarest things are not hidden. They just refuse to happen twice the same way. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

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Friday, 27 March 2026

Sakura 2026 - II

Sakura, or Cherry blossoms as you know them, are not meant for the tropics. The weather is just not suitable. However, you can see Sakura in bloom in the Flower Dome, where it is eternal spring. Of course, there is no comparing them with those in Japan.

In Japan, Cherry blossoms are also tourist seasons. There is a festival dedicated to ‘Hanami’ - which literally means ‘watching blossoms’, watching the falling of the Sakura flowers. During the festival, people gathered for picnics, or just to watch the ‘Sakura snow’. Viewing spots are crowded with people enjoying the blossoms in a beautiful, romantic atmosphere.

Signalling the onset of spring, cherry blossom season symbolises a time of renewal, bringing hope and new dreams at the beginning of the Japanese calendar year.

Most cherry blossom varieties bloom in spring, and only last for about one to two weeks. Changes in weather can affect both the time of flowering and the length of the blooming season. Generally, the milder the climate, the earlier the blossoms open, but strong wind and rain can cause the petals to shed sooner.

Some of the trees looked like they were just beginning to bloom.
This year, there are over 30 varieties of cherry, peach, and plum blossoms on display in the Flower Dome. As usual, as with all flower displays, there was a crowd – tourists and locals at the Sakura display. This made taking photos difficult. Everyone was in everyone’s way.

‘Sakura 2026’ is now on until the 15th of April. Admission fees apply. Adults pay $12 SGD, Seniors and children below 12 years old pay $8 SGD.

You can click on the picture for a better view.

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