Monday, 1 June 2026

Monday Humour

Cultivate and develop your sense of humour. Humour helps you to see the lighter side of things, in life. It helps you to keep light-hearted and not to take things too seriously. It helps you to enjoy life even when you do not have everything you want, or when things do not happen the way you expected them to. In fact, it is when things do not go your way that you need your humour most.

The important thing is to have a sense of humour. And not to lose your sense of humour no matter how tough life gets. Enjoy this week’s selection of humour! Have a great week ahead!

Image created on Canva

A newly famous artist specialized in stormy seascapes. After a rather successful showing of his latest work, he was approached by an impressed viewer. “I think your work is tremendous.” Said the appreciator, “but what a shame you’ve had such bad luck with the weather.”

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A doctor in a clinic was interviewing a new patient. “If I find an operation necessary,” he asked, “would you have the money to pay for it?”
“Listen, Doc,” replied the man, “If I didn’t have the money, would you find the operation necessary?”

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A wife is dreaming in bed. She suddenly wakes up and shouts, “Quick, my husband is home!”
Her husband wakes up and jumps out the window!

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A woman who had just given birth to triplets was explaining to a friend that triplets happen just once in fifteen thousand times.
“Good heavens!” exclaimed the friend. “When did you ever find time to do housework?”

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I was doing a crossword the other day when I got stuck, so I asked my mum for help and told her the clue – ‘Overworked Postman’.
“How many letters?” she asked.
“Bloody thousands,” I answered.

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, 31 May 2026

The World of Plants

Learning is the only thing for you. Look what a lot of things there are to learn. - T. H. White

Ignorance is the cause of fear. - Seneca

A peek into the world of plants. Here are some trivia, and fun facts about plants, courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Plant Care Today’ ‘Colours of Nature’, ‘Wildest Facts’, etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

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If you are hiking in the high mountains of South America, you might spot a flower staring right back at you with the smiling face of a little monkey!

Welcome to the cloud forests of Ecuador and Peru, home to one of the rarest, most visually baffling plants on Earth: Dracula simia (The Monkey Face Orchid).

Growing high up on the sides of mountains (up to 6,000 feet in elevation), this flower doesn't get much direct sunlight, thriving in the cold, dense, permanent fog.

The Illusion: Due to the bizarre arrangement of its petals, column, and lip, the inside of the flower forms a terrifyingly perfect optical illusion of a Capuchin monkey's face, complete with dark eyes, a nose, and a smiling mouth!

(The name Dracula actually comes from the two long, fang-like spurs hanging off the bottom petals!).

Because the fog is so thick, insects can't rely on sight to find the flower. To ensure it gets pollinated, this strange orchid emits an intense, sweet perfume that smells exactly like a freshly peeled, ripe orange!

Nature’s greatest prank! Would you grow this in your garden? – A Facebook post by ‘Wildest Facts’

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A single grown tree can send hundreds of liters of water into the air every day. This happens through a natural process called evapotranspiration, where water moves from the soil through the tree and evaporates from leaves. It is a quiet, ongoing work the tree does without any machines or electricity.

As the water turns into vapor, it cools the air around the tree, much like how sweat cools our skin. This cooling makes the area under and near the tree feel fresher on hot days. Trees also give shade and slow the heat that buildings and roads absorb, so neighborhoods stay more comfortable.

Because trees cool the air naturally, they help balance the local climate and reduce the need for artificial cooling. Planting and keeping mature trees in towns and cities can lower temperatures, save energy, and make places healthier to live in.

In short, one tree’s daily release of water has a big role in keeping our surroundings cooler and more pleasant. – A Facebook post by ‘Colours of Nature’

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You know that moment when you realize the forest floor has been teaching us something we've been too busy to notice?

Stand in any woodland and look down. That spongy mat under your feet isn't just rotting debris — it's a living economy, powered by relationships we can't see but can absolutely learn to build.

Here's what's actually happening beneath those leaves. Fungi send out microscopic threads called hyphae, finer than spider silk, reaching through the soil in every direction. These threads don't just break down organic matter. They connect to plant roots in a partnership older than flowering plants themselves. The fungi dissolve minerals from rock particles and woody materials, trading those nutrients to plants in exchange for sugars the plant makes through photosynthesis. It's commerce at the cellular level, and it runs 24 hours a day without a single invoice.

When you pile wood chips or chunky organic matter onto your garden beds, you're not feeding the plants directly. You're building habitat for these fungal networks. The wood becomes their scaffolding, their pantry, their Interstate highway system. As they colonize those chips, they start mining nutrients locked inside the lignin and cellulose—elements that would take decades to release otherwise. The fungi make them available in weeks.

This is why mature forest soil holds fertility even in poor climates. The biological network stores nutrients the way a good library stores knowledge—organized, accessible, protected from loss. When rain falls, instead of washing minerals away, the fungal threads hold them in place. When plants need phosphorus or nitrogen, the network delivers. The soil becomes less like a storage bin and more like a living community pooling resources.

You can start this in your own beds without digging, without disrupting what's already there. A three-inch layer of wood chips on the surface is enough. Not treated lumber, not fresh sawdust that'll steal nitrogen as it breaks down—just ramial chips, the kind tree services drop off for free because they don't know what else to do with them.

Within months, the underside of that mulch will show white threads spreading like lace. That's your proof. The network is building.

The beauty is how little you have to do once it starts. No tilling to mix things in. No schedules to follow. The fungi work faster in warmth and slow down in cold, but they never stop entirely. Every season, that mulch layer becomes richer, darker, more alive. What you're watching is decomposition, sure, but you're also watching construction — soil being built from the top down, the way nature does it when we stop insisting on our own blueprints.

Plants growing in this kind of soil behave differently. Their roots spread wider, branch more freely, because they're tapped into something bigger than themselves. They're less stressed during dry spells because the fungal network helps them find moisture. They're more resistant to disease because beneficial microbes crowd out the troublemakers. You didn't fertilize. You didn't amend. You just made room for biology to do what it's been perfecting for 400 million years.

That's the thing about soil. It doesn't want to be managed. It wants to be alive. - A Facebook ost by ‘Plant Care Today’

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A single mature lemon tree processing sunlight in a five-gallon container will pull more iron, manganese, and zinc from that small volume of soil in one growing season than an entire raised bed of tomatoes planted in twenty cubic feet of earth. That's not because citrus is greedy. It's because those glossy, dark leaves are running a photosynthetic operation that would make a tomato plant look like it's barely trying.

Inside each leaf, specialized cells called chloroplasts are packed so densely that a cross-section under a microscope looks like a parking lot at rush hour. A lemon leaf can have twice the chloroplast density of a cucumber leaf. All those chloroplasts need iron to build the chlorophyll molecules that capture light. Without enough iron flowing up from the roots, the whole assembly line stalls. The leaves fade to that telltale pale yellow-green that citrus growers recognize instantly.

Here's what surprised me after decades of growing both: a tomato plant can keep producing decent fruit even when it's running low on trace minerals. The plant shifts resources around, prioritizes the fruit, and you might never notice the deficiency. But a lemon tree shows you immediately. Those leaves are the factory and the product. If the mineral supply drops even fifteen percent below optimal, you'll see the color shift within two weeks.

This is why container citrus needs what feels like a fussy feeding schedule. It's not that the tree is delicate. It's that we're asking it to sustain an industrial-level operation in a space the size of a mop bucket. In the ground, roots can travel ten feet in any direction, mining trace elements from a vast underground pharmacy. In a pot, they're working the same plot over and over.

The numbers tell the story. A fruiting Meyer lemon in a container will absorb roughly eighteen milligrams of iron per week during active growth. That tomato plant, even at peak production, uses about four. The lemon's pulling four times the iron from one-tenth the soil volume. You can see why the math gets tight.

What saves us is that citrus roots are astonishingly efficient when the soil stays aerated. They've evolved in rocky Mediterranean hillsides and sandy subtropical ground where nutrients are present but scarce. Give them oxygen around the root hairs and a steady trickle of minerals, and they'll outperform plants that evolved in rich bottomland. But let the soil stay wet for three days, and those same efficient roots begin to drown. The iron is right there in the pot, but the roots can't process it anymore.

That's the real secret to keeping a potted lemon tree looking like it owns the room. It's not complicated fertilizer or perfect temperatures. It's matching the mineral supply to that hidden, relentless appetite. Those leaves aren't just decoration. They're proof that you're keeping pace with a plant that's doing the work of five. - A Facebook ost by ‘Plant Care Today’

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You're standing barefoot in your yard on a summer morning, and beneath your feet, something extraordinary is happening that nobody taught us in school. That clover threading through your lawn — the one you've been told to eliminate — is performing atmospheric alchemy. While your grass sits waiting for you to feed it, clover has a partnership with bacteria that live in nodules on its roots, and together they're doing what grass simply cannot. They're grabbing nitrogen molecules from the air trapped in soil pockets and converting them into plant food.

This isn't a small operation. Each clover plant builds dozens of these nodules, tiny biological factories working around the clock. The bacteria trade nitrogen for sugars the clover makes through photosynthesis. It's an ancient deal, refined over millions of years, and it happens to benefit every plant growing nearby. Here's what makes this truly remarkable: nitrogen is everywhere — seventy-eight percent of the air we breathe — but it's locked in an incredibly stable form that most plants can't use. It's like being surrounded by food you can't digest.

Grass roots can only absorb nitrogen that's already been converted into nitrates or ammonia, which is why lawns demand constant feeding. But clover roots are essentially nitrogen fixation stations, pulling that element down eight to twelve inches deep and storing it right where neighboring roots can access it.

When clover leaves drop and decompose, or when those nodule-packed roots die back seasonally, they release this converted nitrogen directly into the soil. Your grass gets fed without you buying a single bag of fertilizer. The process is so efficient that farmers have used clover as a cover crop for centuries, planting it specifically to rebuild soil between cash crops. Pastures mixed with clover produce healthier livestock because the forage is naturally richer in protein.

We somehow decided this was a weed in the nineteen-fifties, right when chemical lawn care became an industry. Before that, clover seed was included in nearly every lawn mix sold in America. It was considered essential, not optional. The shift wasn't because clover stopped working — it was because broadleaf herbicides became widely available, and clover couldn't survive them. So the definition of a perfect lawn changed to match what the chemicals allowed to live. But that clover still remembers what it's supposed to do. It stays green during summer droughts when grass goes dormant. It flowers for bees when lawns offer almost nothing else. And it keeps working that nitrogen magic, asking nothing in return except to not be poisoned.

The next time you see clover spreading through your lawn, you're watching something older and smarter than industrial agriculture doing exactly what it evolved to do. It's not invading. It's feeding the system the way plants fed each other long before we thought we needed to manage it all. - A Facebook ost by ‘Plant Care Today’

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Saturday, 30 May 2026

Retirement

Retirement is a very nice prospect to look forward to. But, are you really prepared for retirement?

Most working people look forward to retirement. They look forward to the day when they do not have to wake up in the morning, jostle with the crowd during rush hour, to go to the office to a list of tasks waiting for them to do. They long to travel the world, and visit places of interest. They want to engage in their hobbies, or just relax by some beaches enjoying a cocktail or two.

However, there are also people who dread retirement. After a lifetime of working, they suddenly find that there is no reason for them to get up in the morning. They feel lost. They don’t know what to do with their time. Work keeps them occupied. It gives them a sense of accomplishment. Now, they feel useless, wasting time, with nothing to do, and no income at the end of the month. Some of them got really depressed.

Whether you belong to the first group, or second group of people, the day of retirement will come. And you have to prepare for it.

For the first group of people, you have to ask yourself, can your funds sustain your lifestyle in retirement. You don’t want to spend all your money in the first few years of retirement and find that you have no money left in the latter years. That would be sad.

For the second group of people, you have to plan what you are going to do when you retire. Take up a hobby, or if you prefer to work, look for something else to do. You can learn a new skill, get a new job. Or, maybe you can do community service. Do voluntary work. You get to meet people, make friends, and help people who are in need. You will find it fulfilling, and quietly grateful that you are better off than a lot of other people.

Unless you have your retirement mapped out, work, and kind of work is good for you. It keeps you busy. It keeps your mind ticking, occupied, and in working order. It gives you a sense of purpose – a sense of usefulness.

One of the dangers of retirement is that your mind starts to go. You don’t get to exercise the little grey cells, and they begin to slow down and die. Some people, out of boredom, pick up bad habits and their lives go downhill from there.

At the end of the day, by that age, we should have enough sense to do the right thing, do what is best in our interest.

You can click on the picture for a better view.

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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!

Friday, 29 May 2026

Insects

It is good to learn something about this world we live in, and the animals and creatures that share this wonderful world. With our knowledge about them, we do not need to fear them. When we do not fear them, we do not need to harm, or hurt them to defend ourselves. We would know they are just going about their lives like we do. We learn to live and let live.

Here are some interesting fun facts about insects – courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Wildest Facts’, ‘Strangest Facts’, ‘David Attenborough’ etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

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This is the PINK UNDERWING CATERPILLAR – The Master of Disguise!

The larva of the Pink Underwing Moth, this incredible caterpillar is native to rainforest regions of Australia and nearby areas. Its strange “snake-like” face markings and bold eye spots are designed to scare off predators by mimicking a much larger animal.

When threatened, it lifts the front part of its body and expands its head, making the illusion even more convincing. Despite its intimidating look, it is completely harmless and spends most of its time feeding on leaves and growing before its dramatic transformation.

As an adult, it becomes a large and beautiful moth with striking pink underwings hidden beneath camouflaged forewings, helping it blend perfectly into tree bark.

Did you know: This caterpillar’s fake “eyes” aren’t real — they’re just clever patterns that trick predators into thinking it’s a snake! – A Facebook post

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Hello! I’m a tomato hornworm — and while I may look like a garden pest, I’m part of something remarkable. In time, I’ll transform into the beautiful five-spotted hawkmoth.

As an adult moth, I use a long proboscis to reach nectar deep inside flowers. While feeding, I naturally pick up pollen and transfer it between blooms, helping plants reproduce. This role is especially important for flowers that open at night, which rely on nocturnal pollinators like me.

I know I can damage tomato and other nightshade plants during my caterpillar stage, but I’m also part of a larger ecosystem. If you can, consider relocating me to a less critical area of your garden or to nearby wild vegetation. Planting native species and allowing some natural growth can also support pollinators like me.

By giving creatures like me a chance, you’re helping sustain the delicate balance of nature and supporting future generations of vital pollinators. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough

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They don’t just lose a limb. They erase their future to survive the moment. But the part most people miss is what comes after the escape.

In dry deserts and scrublands, certain scorpion species can snap off their own tails when grabbed. The severed segment writhes violently, holding a predator’s attention just long enough for the body to slip away. Seconds are all it takes.

The scorpion survives. But it does not recover. That tail carried more than a stinger. It held the venom used to subdue prey and a critical part of the body’s waste system. Without it, hunting becomes inefficient, meals grow smaller, and the body slowly begins to fail from within.

Field studies have tracked these tailless survivors. They move less. Feed less. Live shorter lives. What looks like a clean escape is actually the start of a steady decline.

The predator loses its meal. The scorpion loses its future.

Sometimes survival is not a victory. It is a quiet trade you carry for the rest of your life. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

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If you are walking in the garden and see a flawless drop of pure, 24-karat gold shining on a leaf... don't try to pawn it. It is actually a highly advanced biological mirror!

Welcome to the magical world of the Golden Tortoise Beetle.

This tiny insect looks like a piece of luxury jewelry. But the gold color is actually an incredibly complex optical illusion!

The beetle's hard outer shell is completely transparent, like clear plastic. Directly underneath the shell are microscopic, highly reflective groove layers. The bug physically pumps liquid moisture into these grooves. When the liquid fills the gaps, it creates a perfect, mirror-like surface that brilliantly reflects golden light!

The Magic Trick:
If a bird tries to eat the bug, or a human touches it, the beetle panics! It immediately drains the moisture out of the microscopic grooves. Without the liquid, the mirror effect is broken, and within seconds, the beetle physically changes color from brilliant glowing gold to a dull, muddy, reddish-brown to camouflage into the dirt! – A Facebook post by ‘Wildest Facts’

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It looks like a cute, fuzzy, soft little red ant. Do not touch it! It is actually a heavily armored, wingless, indestructible wasp that delivers one of the most agonizing stings on Earth!

Welcome to the deceptive world of the Velvet Ant (Mutillidae).

Despite looking soft and fluffy, this insect is a biological tank. It is actually a species of wasp where the females evolved without wings.

Because they crawl on the ground in the open desert, they needed extreme protection. Their exoskeleton is so incredibly dense and rounded that it acts like solid Kevlar. If you literally step on this bug with a heavy work boot on the concrete, it won't crush! It will survive unharmed, and emit a terrifying, high-pitched "squeak" to warn you!

If you ignore the warning, it unleashes its weapon. Nicknamed the "Cow Killer," its stinger is absurdly long (half the length of its entire body) and fully mobile!

The venom causes instantaneous, blistering, excruciating pain that lasts for 30 minutes, driving grown humans to the ground in agony.

If it's bright red and fuzzy, walk away! – A Facebook post by ‘Wildest Facts’

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Thursday, 28 May 2026

Food For Health

Eat to live, not live to eat. - Socrates

The benefits of consuming the following foods/fruits. The information is taken from Facebook posts by ‘Fruit IQ’, ‘Health Knowledge’, 'Strangest Facts' etc. ..

These contents are shared purely for educational and awareness purposes. Always consult a qualified doctor or healthcare professional before making any changes to your diet, lifestyle or health routine. Self medication and self diagnosis can be dangerous. Your health is your most valuable asset — always seek professional medical advice!

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Like potatoes and some other starchy foods, cooked rice undergoes a process called retrogradation when it is cooled after cooking. During this process, some of the digestible starch reorganizes into resistant starch, a form that the small intestine cannot fully break down or absorb.

Because resistant starch passes through the small intestine largely undigested, it reaches the large intestine, where it serves as a prebiotic substrate for beneficial gut bacteria. When these microbes ferment resistant starch, they produce short-chain fatty acids such as butyrate, which help support gut health and the intestinal lining.

Cooling rice therefore increases its resistant starch content compared with freshly cooked rice. Interestingly, if the rice is reheated after being cooled, much of this resistant starch structure remains intact, meaning the digestive response may still be lower than with freshly cooked rice.

While this change can slightly reduce the glycemic response and provide prebiotic benefits, the overall calorie difference is modest. Cooling and reheating rice can be one simple way to support gut microbiota diversity while still enjoying a common staple food as part of a balanced diet. – A Facebook post by ‘Health Knowledge’

While milk is famous for calcium, the calcium in Kale is easier for the body to absorb because it is low in oxalates that usually block mineral uptake. Per serving, kale provides roughly 150mg of Calcium, outperforming the 120mg in a standard glass of milk. It also contains double the Vitamin C of a medium orange, making it a dual-threat for bone health and immunity. – A Facebook post by ‘Fruit IQ’

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Visceral belly fat affecting 40 percent of Americans even at normal body weight as the metabolically active adipose tissue releasing the inflammatory adipokines driving cardiovascular disease and blood circulation impairment driving the peripheral vascular symptoms affecting millions represent conditions whose specific nutritional solution through lychee's extraordinary oligonol content has been validated by Japanese clinical research producing results that pharmaceutical anti-obesity and vasodilatory drugs struggle to match!

Lychee litchi chinensis contains oligonol — a proprietary oligomeric form of polyphenols derived from lychee fruit through enzymatic polymerization that achieves dramatically superior intestinal absorption compared to conventional polyphenols due to its reduced molecular weight enabling passive diffusion through intestinal epithelial cells. Oligonol demonstrates specific activity against visceral adiposity through two complementary mechanisms — inhibition of preadipocyte differentiation into mature visceral adipocytes reducing new fat cell formation and activation of adipose tissue lipolysis increasing free fatty acid release from existing visceral fat stores for mitochondrial oxidation.

Research from the journal Phytotherapy Research found oligonol supplementation for 12 weeks significantly reduced visceral fat area measured by CT scan reduced waist circumference and improved adiponectin levels in overweight adults. For circulation oligonol inhibits the angiotensin II-mediated vasoconstriction and reduces the oxidative stress impairing endothelial nitric oxide production restoring the vasodilation that maintains peripheral circulation. Research confirmed significant reduction in fatigue and improvement in circulation markers! – A Facebook post by ‘Health Knowledge’

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The darker the banana, the more it changes its purpose. What looks spoiled is quietly becoming more active. But the detail most people miss is what that ripening actually unlocks.

As a banana moves past yellow into spotted brown, its internal chemistry shifts fast. Starches break down into simple sugars, but alongside that, the fruit begins producing higher levels of compounds similar to tumor necrosis factor, a signal the body uses to target abnormal cells.

In controlled studies, extracts from heavily ripened bananas have shown stronger interaction with certain malignant cells than their greener counterparts. The browning is not just age. It is a buildup phase, where antioxidants and immune signaling molecules rise together.

The softened texture also plays a role. With cell walls breaking down, these compounds become easier to absorb, making the fruit not just sweeter, but more biologically accessible.

It does not turn a banana into medicine. But it does change what “overripe” really means. Sometimes the moment we label something as finished is exactly when it becomes most useful. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

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THE MOST UNDERRATED SEED IN YOUR GROCERY STORE — AND WHY MEN ESPECIALLY NEED IT

If there is one food that the average American should be eating more of and almost certainly isn't, it may be pumpkin seeds. Small in size, extraordinary in nutritional density — and backed by a growing body of research that makes their benefits impossible to ignore.

Pumpkin seeds are one of the richest dietary sources of zinc — a mineral that serves as a cofactor in over 300 enzymatic reactions in the human body. Despite this critical importance, zinc deficiency is remarkably common in the US, particularly among older adults, vegetarians, and frequent exercisers who lose significant zinc through sweat.

For men's health specifically, zinc is indispensable. The prostate gland contains the highest concentration of zinc of any organ in the male body. Research has shown that zinc deficiency is associated with benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) — prostate enlargement — and that zinc supplementation may help reduce prostate size and urinary symptoms. Additionally, zinc is required for testosterone synthesis and sperm production, with deficiency linked to measurable declines in both.

For hair health, zinc plays a critical role in protein synthesis within hair follicles. Low zinc is one of the most common and reversible nutritional causes of hair thinning and shedding.

Pumpkin seeds also provide magnesium, iron, manganese, phosphorus, and a unique fatty acid profile including cucurbitacins — plant compounds studied for bladder health and potentially anti-parasitic properties. A small handful daily. Massive return on investment.

Educational purposes only, not medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider before making changes to your health routine. – A Facebook post by ‘Health Knowledge’

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Wednesday, 27 May 2026

Matthiola Incana

This is another one of the flowers I saw in the Flower Dome on my visits. At first, I thought they were snapdragon flowers. With their upright spikes and beautiful flowers, they look like the snapdragon flowers from far. I did a bit of research on the internet and found that they are Matthiola Incana or hoary stock plants.
Matthiola incana is a species of flowering plant in the cabbage family Brassicaceae. They are also commonly known as Brompton stock, common stock, hoary stock, ten-week stock, and gilly-flower. The common name stock usually refers to this species, though it may also be applied to the whole genus Matthiola. - Wikipedia

Apparently, Matthiola incana is a common garden flower, available in a variety of colours, many of which are heavily scented and also used in flower arrangement. They symbolise love, loyalty and happiness. Hence, these flowers are often used at weddings and celebrations.

Stock flowers (Matthiola incana) are cool-season flowers grown as a bedding plant. They are some of the most fragrant spring-blooming flowers, famous for a sweet, spicy scent often compared to cloves. Their long, sturdy stems and long vase life make them a florist favourite. Unfortunately, they are "one and done," meaning they do not re-bloom once the main stem is harvested.

Stock varieties produce either single or double blooms. Double flowers are fluffier and highly desired for bouquets, while single flowers are often more fragrant. The blossoms are said to be edible and can be used as garnishes or added to salads.

You can click on the picture for a better view.

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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!

Tuesday, 26 May 2026

Crawlies And Other Creatures

Today, we take a peek into the world of crawlies and other creatures that roam the earth. Here are some interesting fun facts about them – courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Strangest Facts’, ‘Wildest Facts’, ‘Wildlife Explained' etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

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They don’t stick to walls. They negotiate with them. Every step is a quiet agreement between surface and skin. But the part most people miss is how little force it actually takes.

A gecko’s foot is covered in millions of microscopic hairs called setae, each splitting into hundreds of even finer tips. These tips press so close to a surface that they tap into van der Waals forces, faint molecular attractions that exist between all matter.

One bond is almost meaningless. Millions acting together can hold the entire animal upside down.

A single toe can support far more than the gecko’s weight, yet release is just as precise. By shifting the angle of its foot, the animal switches those forces off instantly, step by step, leaving no trace behind.

No glue. No suction. No residue. Just controlled contact at the smallest possible scale.

This is why geckos can sprint across ceilings or hang from one foot without slipping. Engineers still struggle to replicate it cleanly in labs. It looks effortless because it is invisible.

The strongest grip in nature is built from the weakest forces, perfectly aligned. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

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Okay. You think you know the camel spider. You think it's the 30 mph screaming sand demon that eats camel stomachs. That's all lies.

This is the true story of the world's most terrifying arachnid relationship.

Meet the Solifugae. It isn't a spider or a scorpion. It's something older, something utterly alien. It doesn't carry venom. It doesn't need it. Instead, it has a flagellum — a bizarre, whip-like sensory organ coiled on its massive jaw that looks like a relic from an alien autopsy.

These giants have the largest jaws relative to body size in the entire animal kingdom. When it catches a beetle, it doesn't "suck the juices" like a spider. It tears them apart with a "cheliceral mill," chewing the prey so violently you can hear the crunching from several feet away. Then it uses its rostrum (a built-in straw) to vacuum up the liquefied remains.

But the real nightmare is the mating ritual. The female is two-thirds larger. She is bigger, stronger, and hungrier. In the lab, researchers witnessed females killing and devouring the male before they could even start mating. So how does any male survive? He has to use extreme psychological warfare.

He approaches her from behind and begins stroking her with his pedipalps (those long feelers). He uses the "flagellum" to distract or "anesthetize" her into a passive state. He literally has to hypnotize her to avoid being eaten. The moment she falls into that trance, it's a desperate race. He deposits his sperm onto the ground, scoops it up with his massive jaws, and forces it into her body. Once the spell breaks, his job is over—and so is his life. This is the "death waltz." And it's the only reason these creatures still exist.

The male camel spider is the James Bond of the desert. He seduces the assassin just long enough to save his species, knowing it will likely get him killed. – A Facebook post by ‘Wildlife Explained’

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For over 2,000 years, people believed the fire salamander was born from flames.

The ancient world was convinced: this black-and-yellow creature could not only survive fire — it could extinguish it. They believed the salamander was so cold that it would put out any flame it touched.

The myth was so powerful that Emperor Francis I of Austria had his own personal "salamander" coat — a garment he believed could protect him from fire.

The truth is far more fascinating.

When threatened, the fire salamander oozes a sticky, milky-white substance from glands behind its eyes. This isn't just any secretion. It contains samandarin and samandaron — powerful alkaloid neurotoxins that attack the nervous system.

The effects on predators are immediate and terrifying:
· Muscles convulse uncontrollably
· Blood pressure spikes dangerously
· Breathing becomes labored and can stop entirely

A single bite from a dog can lead to death in under an hour unless emergency treatment is administered immediately. The toxin is so potent that documented cases show dogs dying after nothing more than mouth contact with the amphibian's poison.

Their bright yellow spots aren't for beauty. They're a warning. A neon sign that screams: "DO NOT EAT ME."

The "fire proof" myth didn't come from nowhere. People saw these creatures crawl out of damp logs thrown onto fires—logs where they had been hibernating. To ancient observers, they appeared to be writhing in the flames yet emerging alive. They had no way of knowing the amphibians were desperately fleeing the heat, not thriving in it.

Instead of becoming prey, the fire salamander became legend. People were so afraid of the mythical fire-dwelling beast that they avoided it entirely. That fear—born from a misunderstanding — may have been the salamander's greatest defense.

The irony is breathtaking. The myth that could have gotten them killed... saved their lives. And the truth is even more remarkable than the legend.

A tiny amphibian that can paralyze a predator with a single touch. A creature whose very existence changed human history. And a secret hidden in plain sight, right under their bright yellow spots. – A Facebook post by ‘Wildest Facts’

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If you can't run fast, and you don't have venom, how do you survive a hungry coyote? You run into a tight space and literally turn your own body into an immovable, biological balloon!

Welcome to the harsh deserts of North America, home to the Chuckwalla.

This lizard is large, chubby, and notoriously slow. When an eagle, snake, or coyote spots it, the Chuckwalla doesn't try to sprint across the open sand. Instead, it makes a mad dash for the nearest pile of jagged rocks. It squeezes its flat body deep into a narrow, dark crevice.

Once inside, the magic happens. The Chuckwalla wears a "suit" of incredibly loose, baggy skin. It opens its mouth and gulps down massive amounts of air, violently filling its lungs and inflating its entire body like a high-pressure rubber tire!

The inflated body presses aggressively against the rough rock walls. The pressure creates a friction lock so incredibly tight that no predator on Earth has the physical strength to pull the lizard out of the hole!

When the predator finally gives up and leaves, the lizard simply exhales, deflates, and walks away! – A Facebook post by ‘Wildest Facts’

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What does a cold-blooded, 800-pound reptile do when its swamp completely freezes over with 3 inches of solid ice? It literally lets itself be frozen into the glacier!

Meet the American Alligator, the ultimate prehistoric survivor.

Reptiles cannot generate their own body heat. If the water drops below freezing, an alligator should suffer severe hypothermia and drown.

The Glitch: Brumation.
When an unexpected, brutal winter storm hits places like Texas or North Carolina, the alligators know they can't escape. So, right before the lake freezes, they swim to the surface, tilt their heads up, and stick just the very tip of their nostrils out into the freezing air.

They hold perfectly still. The water physically freezes completely solid around their snouts, locking their jaws in a vice of pure ice! The alligator's body goes into a deep state of suspended animation (Brumation). Its heart rate plummets to just 3 beats per minute.

It simply hangs there, suspended like a biological popsicle under the ice, breathing faintly through its frozen nose for weeks until the sun finally melts the ice and sets it free!

Evolution creates indestructible monsters. – A Facebook post by ‘Wildest Facts’

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Monday, 25 May 2026

Witty Humour

Laughter, and a sense of humour will help us get over the rough patches in life. Laughter keeps us in a better frame of mind. When we are in a better frame of mind, life will not appear so depressing and things will not seem hopeless.

It is also said that a sense of humour can give our immunity system a boost. So, laugh whenever you can. It is cheap medicine.

Take a look at today’s selection of witty aphorisms. I hope they can bring on a smile, or a chuckle. May your days be filled with laughter.

Image created on Canva

If you believe the doctors, nothing is wholesome; if you believe the theologians, nothing is innocent; if you believe the military, nothing is safe. - Lord Salisbury

Barring that natural expression of villainy which we all have, the man looked honest enough. - Mark Twain

The instinct of a man is to pursue everything that flies from him, and to fly from all that pursue him. - Voltaire

It’s better for people to miss you than to have seen too much of you. - Edward Norton

Don’t worry about what people think. They don’t do it very often. - Unknown

The best angle from which to approach any problem is the try-angle. - Unknown

When a fellow says, “It ain’t the money but the principle of the thing,” it’s the money. - Kin Hubbard

The man who is asked by an author what he thinks of his work, is put to the torture, and is not obliged to speak the truth. - Samuel Johnson

If people were forced to eat what they killed, there would be no more wars. - Abbie Hoffman

When a man forgets himself, he usually does something everybody else remembers. - Unknown

Image created on Canva

You can click on the picture for a better view.

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Sunday, 24 May 2026

The World of Animals

"Animals are reliable, many full of love, true in their affections, predictable in their actions, grateful and loyal. Difficult standards for people to live up to." - Alfred A. Montapert

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 ‘Strangest Facts’, 'Wild Wonders' etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

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Kopi luwak is coffee that passes through an animal first, then becomes one of the most expensive brews on Earth. Value here begins after digestion, not before.

Here is what actually changes inside the civet.

Asian palm civets instinctively choose the ripest cherries, acting as selective harvesters without realizing it. Once eaten, the fruit is broken down, but the beans remain intact, moving through a digestive process that alters them at a molecular level.

Enzymes reduce certain proteins that contribute to bitterness, while fermentation reshapes the compounds tied to aroma and taste. By the time the beans are excreted, cleaned, and roasted, the result is a cup that is smoother, less acidic, and often described as unusually round in flavor.

Originally, farmers collected these beans out of necessity, not luxury, using what was left behind in the fields. Over time, that accidental method turned into one of the most expensive coffees in the world, driven as much by rarity and story as by taste

What was once overlooked became something pursued. The value was never added at the end, it was revealed along the way. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

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The bat‑eared fox is one of the strangest canids on Earth. It’s a fox that hears the dinner menu from inches underground and lives on a diet of bugs.

Its ears aren’t just huge — they’re biological satellites. Reaching up to 5.3 inches long (almost as big as its head) and packed with blood vessels, they serve two superpowers: cooling the fox like built‑in radiators and acting as parabolic reflectors that amplify the faintest sounds. The bat-eared fox can hear termites chewing wood or beetles wriggling through soil from several inches underground. This “living metal detector” allows it to pinpoint prey with such accuracy that it will freeze, tip its head, and then dig up a snack in seconds, even in pitch darkness.

Unlike every other member of the dog family, this fox has almost completely given up meat. Over 80% of its diet is insects, mainly harvester termites, which it laps up with a specialized long tongue. A single bat-eared fox can devour up to 1.15 million termites a year—a critical service for the African savanna. The rest of its menu includes beetles, grasshoppers, scorpions, spiders, and the occasional fruit or berry.

To process all those crunchy insect exoskeletons, evolution gave it the most teeth of any placental mammal — 46 to 50 in total. Its jaw is built for speed, with a special bone structure that lets it chew at an astonishing 3 to 5 times per second. Combined with an extra set of molars, the bat-eared fox is a living, crunching machine.

Bat-eared foxes are socially monogamous, but here’s the twist: the male takes on the majority of parenting. After the female gives birth to a litter of 1 to 6 pups, she focuses on producing milk. The male does almost everything else: grooming, defending, huddling, chaperoning, and even carrying the young between den sites. Scientists have found that a father’s time at the den is the single best predictor of how many cubs survive to weaning. If you see a fluffy fox with a litter of pups, it’s almost certainly dad in charge.

Bat-eared foxes are highly social, living in small family groups that often include a mated pair and their young from previous years. They are prolific diggers, constructing elaborate burrow systems with multiple entrances to escape predators. They typically sleep in these dens during the heat of the day, emerging around twilight to hunt and socialize. Unlike many foxes, they are rarely solitary, and their close‑knit family structure is key to their survival in the harsh savanna. – A Facebook post by ‘Wild Wonders’

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Deer freeze in headlights because their eyes are built for darkness, not sudden bursts of light. What looks like hesitation is actually a complete loss of visual control.

Here’s what makes that moment so misleading.

Deer rely on a reflective layer in their eyes called the tapetum lucidum, which amplifies even the faintest light at night. It allows them to detect movement and navigate in near darkness with precision.

But when bright headlights hit, that same system overloads. Light reflects back too intensely, flattening depth and erasing contrast. The world in front of them stops making sense.

Without clear visual input, movement becomes risky. In the wild, staying still is often safer than stepping blindly into danger. That instinct works against predators that depend on motion. It does not work against a fast moving vehicle that keeps coming.

The stillness is not confusion or panic. It is vision shutting down in real time. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

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Sheep and goats can interbreed, producing a rare hybrid called a ‘geep’ where wool, hair, and instinct combine in one animal.

What makes this unusual is how rarely it actually works.

Sheep carry 54 chromosomes while goats have 60, and that mismatch creates a steep biological barrier. Most pregnancies fail early, which is why confirmed geeps are so uncommon and often documented case by case rather than seen in herds.

When one does survive, the result can look like a quiet contradiction. Some grow uneven coats that shift between soft wool and coarse goat hair. Others carry a goat’s upright stance but graze with the steady rhythm of sheep. Even their behavior can drift between following a flock and wandering off with independent curiosity.

There have been cases where a single animal shows a split lineage in its body itself, with patches that clearly resemble each parent species rather than blending smoothly. It is not a clean hybrid. It is a visible negotiation between two genetic systems that were never meant to align.

This is not a new species forming. It is a rare exception holding together against the odds. Nature permits the crossing, but it draws the line almost immediately after. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

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Wild gorillas don’t step blindly into danger. They test the ground first, using sticks to measure what they cannot see.

Here’s how it actually works.

In swampy forest clearings, the ground can shift without warning. What looks solid may hide deep mud or sudden drop-offs, turning a single step into a serious risk.

Gorillas respond by selecting sturdy branches and pressing them into the ground ahead. They watch how far the stick sinks, how stable it feels, and whether the surface will support their weight before moving forward.

This behavior is deliberate, not accidental. Younger gorillas often learn by watching older ones, repeating the same careful probing as they grow. It becomes a shared habit, refined through experience.

The result is a simple but effective system for navigating uncertainty. One small action that prevents injury and keeps the group moving safely through unpredictable terrain. It looks like a cautious pause, but it is actually a decision.

Sometimes, survival is just knowing when to test the ground before you trust it. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

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Saturday, 23 May 2026

Knitting

Knitting necessities – A pair of knitting needles and some yarn.

I tried knitting some years ago. A friend of mine had taken an interest in knitting then. She said she learned how to knit from YouTube videos. I was impressed and expressed my interest in knitting too. She gave me some spare yarns of hers for me to practice, to see if I really like to knit before investing in the knitting materials.

I managed to knit a couple of beanies and scarves – all learned from YouTube videos. It was a sort of challenge to myself, to see if I could do it. I succeeded. I am proud of myself for that minor accomplishment.

The knits were not perfect. But if one didn’t know better and didn’t look too closely, they wouldn’t have noticed the amateurish workmanship. They worked fine keeping the head and the neck warm from the cold weather without falling apart.

Knitting is fun. It has a meditative and calming effect on the mind. If I didn’t have other interests fighting for my time and attention, I would have continued knitting. But time seems so limited nowadays. There seem to be so many things to do. So, I had to give up on knitting. It was good that I tried, enjoyed it and succeeded in knowing how to knit simple patterns.

Anyhow, I was going through my stuff the other day and noticed that there were some spare yarns lying about. I wondered what to do with them. I could throw them out or leave them there taking up space. In the end, I decided to make the most of them instead of just throwing them out.

After some ‘revision’ from the videos, I knitted some coasters. I think they will come in useful at some point. If not, they will be souvenirs from my knitting. They are not perfect knits. But they have no problem serving their purpose. Perfectly useable.

A simple pattern using garter stitch, the most basic of knitting stitches.
A rib stitch pattern using single knit stitch, and single purl stitch.
A double rib stitch pattern using two knit stitches and two purl stitches.
Once you know the basic stitches you can play around with the designs. For more complicated designs, and knitting more complicated stuff like a sweater or a pair of socks etc.., it would be better to sign up for a knitting class. It is better to have expert guidance, a teacher to guide you and impart the finer points of knitting to you. This will save you the frustrations when you go wrong. I found some uses for my knits.
g) My sister used to crochet in her younger days. She has got a small box of unused yarns. Seeing me knit, she said she will leave the yarns with me to do as I please. So, I guess my next project would be to learn how to crochet. I will let you know how that turned out. But don’t hold your breath. I would like to do a bit of sketching and painting first.

You can click on the picture for a better view.

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