Have holy curiosity. Make your life worth living. – Albert Einstein
What an amazing world we live in. Here are some interesting fun facts, trivias about this wonder-ful world – courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Colours of Nature’, ‘Plant Care Today’, ‘Strangest Facts’, 'Kindness of All Living Things' etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.
Along the warm rivers of Africa lives a small bird called the Egyptian plover. It is a brave, curious bird with a thin beak and bright eyes. The plover often comes close to large crocodiles sunning themselves on the mud. When a crocodile lies with its huge mouth open, the little bird hops in and out, pecking gently between the sharp teeth. The sight looks dangerous to people, but the plover moves calmly and carefully.
The plover eats bits of meat and old food stuck between the crocodile's teeth. In doing so it cleans the crocodile's mouth and helps keep the big animal healthy. The bird gets an easy and regular meal from this task. So both animals benefit: the crocodile gets clean teeth and the plover gets food. This kind of friendship in nature is called symbiosis.
The crocodile does not snap at the bird. It stays still and allows the plover to work safely. Their quiet trust shows how very different creatures can live together and help one another. This simple scene by the river teaches us that cooperation and gentle care can bring good results, even between animals that seem like enemies. A Facebook post by ‘Colours of Nature’
I've watched countless cats lose their minds over a clump of *Nepeta cataria* in the garden border. They approach slowly, pupils wide, then suddenly press their cheeks against the stems like they've found religion. The rolling starts next—full-body twisting, paws batting air, that look of absolute bliss spreading across their faces. It's theater. It's devotion. And it turns out, it's also armor.The molecule responsible is called nepetalactone, a volatile oil the plant releases when those fuzzy leaves get crushed. For cats, this chemical hits receptors in their nose and mouth that trigger something close to euphoria. They're not hallucinating exactly, but they are experiencing intense sensory pleasure that lasts about ten minutes before the receptors reset. The behavior looks wild, but it's actually deeply purposeful.
Here's where it gets strange. That same molecule—the one giving Fluffy her best afternoon—sends mosquitoes into complete retreat. Not because it masks anything or confuses them, but because their olfactory system reads nepetalactone as a full-scale emergency. Studies show it works ten times more effectively than DEET at clearing mosquitoes from a space. The insects don't just avoid it. They flee.
The evolutionary split couldn't be sharper. Cats inherited a neurological setup that makes this compound feel like winning the lottery. Mosquitoes, with their entirely different sensory wiring, experience it as a threat they can't override. Same chemical. Opposite universes.
Researchers started noticing this connection when they studied big cats in the wild. Lions, leopards, and jaguars all show the same catnip response, and they all seek out plants in the *Nepeta* family when they're available. At first, scientists thought it was purely recreational. Then they measured the insect activity around cats after a good catnip session. The numbers dropped dramatically. These animals weren't just indulging—they were dressing for the occasion.
Your housecat, rolling with abandon in that patch you planted near the back steps, is doing exactly what her ancestors did on the savannah. She's coating her fur in a compound that makes her nearly invisible to biting insects. The ecstasy is real, but so is the protection. She'll carry that shield with her for hours, long after the high wears off.
The plant itself evolved nepetalactone as a defense, a way to keep hungry insects from shredding its leaves. It worked so well that it became one of the most potent insect repellents in the botanical world. That cats happened to find it intoxicating was just a bonus — a quirk of brain chemistry that turned a defensive toxin into an interspecies love affair.
Next time you see a cat in the throes of catnip rapture, you're watching two stories unfold at once. One is about pleasure, pure and uncomplicated. The other is about survival, ancient and ongoing. The rolling, the rubbing, the wild-eyed joy—it all serves a purpose that predates our gardens by millions of years.
One molecule. Two wildly different realities. And your cat, blissed out and mosquito-free, caught perfectly between them. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’
Vanilla is special because it is the only common flavor that comes from an orchid. The vanilla plant is not a tree or a bush but a climbing vine. It produces long green pods that look like beans. Inside those pods are tiny seeds and oils that give the sweet, warm taste we call vanilla.Growing and making vanilla takes a lot of work, which is why it costs so much. Many vanilla orchids must be pollinated by hand, and the pods need months to ripen. After harvesting, the pods go through a slow drying and curing process to develop their full flavor and aroma. These steps take time and skilled labor, so vanilla ends up being the second-most expensive spice in the world, after saffron.
Because of its scent and taste, vanilla is used in many foods, drinks, and perfumes. Just a little bit can change the flavor of a whole recipe. People value vanilla for its aroma and versatility, and chefs and bakers often prefer pure vanilla even though imitation extracts are cheaper. The effort to grow and cure real vanilla explains why it remains so prized. – A Facebook post by ‘Amazing World’
The most successful aerial predator on your property weighs less than a paperclip. Not the hawk. Not the swallow. A dragonfly — the iridescent blur you barely register when it crosses your lawn — intercepts flying prey at a higher success rate than most predators that make it into documentaries.She doesn't chase. She intercepts — calculating where a mosquito will be a fraction of a second from now and flying there first. She was doing this long before birds existed. Before flowers existed. She's one of the oldest flying predators on earth.
Her compound eyes cover nearly her entire head, processing visual information fast enough to track a moving insect against a moving background while she's also in flight. Her four wings operate independently — she can hover, fly backward, and pivot without slowing down. She catches prey in a spiny leg basket assembled mid-flight and often eats without landing.
Before she could do any of this, she spent years as a nymph at the bottom of a pond, hunting mosquito larvae in the mud. When she finally climbed out of the water and unfolded wings for the first time, she went from hunting mosquitoes below the surface to hunting them above it. Same target. New dimension.
She patrols a fixed territory — the same stretch of pond edge, the same garden section, day after day — and the mosquito pressure around your home drops in proportion to how many dragonflies are working the airspace.
How to support them:
- A garden pond or even a consistent low spot that holds water through spring and early summer can produce dragonflies all season — the larvae develop underwater
- Tall plants at the water's edge give emerging adults something to climb when they leave the water for the last time
- Avoid mosquito dunks or broad-spectrum treatments in water features where dragonfly larvae are also developing — the larvae eat mosquito larvae naturally
- She'll be over your yard at first light. If you see one patrolling the same route daily, she lives there. She's been running this math longer than almost anything else that flies. – A Facebook post by ‘Kindness for All Living Things’
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