Monday, 15 June 2026

Humorous Quips

Quips – a witty or funny observation or response, usually made on the spur of the moment, or it could be a clever, usually taunting remark.

Enjoy this selection of humorous quips. They are funny but at the same time, there is truth in some of these quips.

Life is too short to waste it worrying about things you have no control over. So, relax, laugh as heartily as you can, as often as you can. It is through humour, and laughter, that we soften some of life’s demand on us. And once we can find laughter, no matter how painful the situation might be, we can survive it.

May your days be filled with laughter.

Image created on Canva

I have been a believer in the magic of language since, at a very early age, I discovered that some words got me into trouble and others got me out. - Katherine Dunn

To get back my youth I would do anything in the world, except take exercise, get up early, or be respectable. - Oscar Wilde

I always read the last page of a book first so that if I die before I finish I’ll know how it turned out. - Nora Ephron

You don’t need to know all the answers. No one is smart enough to ask you all the questions. - Unknown

Now, as always, the most automated appliance in a household is the mother. - Beverly Jones

During a test, people look up for inspiration, down in desperation, and left and right for information. - Unknown

In department stores, so much kitchen equipment is bought indiscriminately by people who just come in for men’s underwear. - Julia Child

For disappearing acts, it’s hard to beat what happens to the eight hours supposedly left after eight of sleep and eight of work. - Doug Larson

A woman is always ready to describe another woman as charming, but only if the other woman is not charming. - Evan Esar

Always acknowledge a fault. This will throw those in authority off their guard and give you an opportunity to commit more. - Mark Twain

Image created on Canva

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Sunday, 14 June 2026

Underwater World

Try to learn something about everything and everything about something. Nothing we learn in this world is ever wasted.

“To be conscious that you are ignorant is a great step to knowledge.” - Benjamin Disraeli

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

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In the open ocean, birth happens without shelter — only the presence of others who stay. As a calf is born, a circle begins to form around the mother. But what stands out is how quickly and deliberately that formation takes shape.

In many cases, members of the pod move into position within moments. One stays close to the mother’s side, another supports beneath the calf, while others spread outward, creating a protective boundary.

A newborn Dolphin cannot swim with full control at first. Its movements are unsteady, and reaching the surface for its first breath is critical. The surrounding adults assist — gently guiding and nudging the calf upward to ensure it reaches air.

Meanwhile, the pod provides protection. By staying close and organized, they reduce the risk from predators and help stabilize the situation in open water.

The mother is not alone in this moment. Instead, the group shares the responsibility, turning a vulnerable beginning into a coordinated effort. In the vast ocean, survival often begins together. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough

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Scientists say orcas appear to be getting smarter… and scarier.

Orcas are proving that their social intelligence is a powerful tool for survival in an increasingly human-dominated ocean. Orcas are demonstrating that they are much more than just apex predators; they are strategic thinkers capable of rapid cultural evolution.

Recent observations have documented pods coordinating attacks on blue whales, outsmarting commercial fishing lines, and even teaching one another to disable vessels. This surge in complex behaviors isn’t a result of biological evolution, but rather an extraordinary capacity for social learning. By sharing specialized techniques within their pods, orcas are effectively building a collective knowledge base that allows them to master new challenges and pass those skills down through generations in real-time.

This cognitive agility is being pushed to the limit as human activities, such as overfishing and climate change, reshape the marine landscape.

Scientists suggest that the increasing frequency of these sophisticated behaviors — from scavenging to navigating melting Antarctic ice — is a direct response to environmental stressors.

While there is no evidence that these marine mammals are intentionally targeting humans, their ability to innovate and pass on survival strategies highlights a form of intelligence that mirrors human culture.

As we continue to alter their habitats, we are witnessing the emergence of a highly adaptable apex intelligence that is redefining the rules of the ocean. – A Facebook post

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If any other fish touches the Sea Anemone, it is instantly paralyzed and eaten alive. So how does Nemo survive?

He literally steals its identity!

We all know the Clownfish lives safely inside the venomous tentacles of the Sea Anemone to hide from sharks and larger predators. But they are NOT naturally immune to the venom!

If a brand-new Clownfish swims directly into an anemone, it will be stung and killed. The Biological Hack:
To survive, the Clownfish performs an incredibly delicate "dance." It swims up and very lightly taps its belly and fins against the edges of the anemone.

Slowly, the fish rubs the anemone's thick, sugary mucus all over its own body.

The Anemone has no eyes; it hunts entirely by chemical touch. By coating itself in the Anemone's exact chemical mucus, the fish acts like a biological spy!

When the fish swims into the deadly tentacles, the Anemone's chemical sensors get confused. It feels the fish, but smells its own mucus, tricking the Anemone into thinking the fish is just another one of its own tentacles!

Identity theft in the ocean! – A Facebook post by ‘Wildest Facts’

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The triggerfish has a dorsal fin that locks like a gun.

Look at the top of a triggerfish. You'll see three spines. The first is large and strong. It can be raised upright. The second spine — the "trigger" — locks the first in place.

To lower the fin, the fish must press the trigger spine. Like a gun. That's how it got its name.

At night, the triggerfish wedges itself into coral crevices. It raises the first spine. It locks it in place. No predator can pull it out. The fish sleeps safe, locked in its own fortress.

Divers say triggerfish are more dangerous than sharks.

"Bro, I dive with sharks like they're marshmallows. These... I stay away from."

That's a real comment from a diver. On a video with 4.4 million views.

The video shows a triggerfish attacking a diver. The diver wasn't bothering it. He was just swimming. The fish charged at his face. It bit his mask. Then it returned to grazing, leaving the diver stunned and disoriented.

Why? Triggerfish are territorial. During nesting season, they guard their nests aggressively.

A triggerfish's territory extends in a cone shape, upward from the nest to the surface. Swimming upward puts you deeper into its territory. The fish attacks harder. The correct response is to swim horizontally away. Not up. Not down. Sideways.

Triggerfish have powerful jaws and large, sharp teeth. They use them to crush sand dollars, sea urchins, and hard-shelled prey. That same bite can go through a wetsuit. Through skin. Through flesh.

"They eat coral. That means they can pick a chunk off your face like it's made of cake."

The triggerfish is not the biggest fish in the ocean. It grows up to three feet long, 13 pounds. But size doesn't matter when you have zero fear.

The fish with a gun on its back. The fish that attacks divers twice its size. The fish that divers fear more than sharks. And it's been here the whole time. Hiding in shallow water. Waiting for you to swim too close. – A Facebook post by ‘Wild Wonders’

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The mudskipper is a fish that decided water was overrated.

It lives in muddy swamps across Africa, Asia, and Australia. When the tide goes out, other fish hide in tidal pools and wait. The mudskipper crawls out and starts walking.

Using its muscular pectoral fins like tiny arms, it drags itself across the mud, climbs mangrove roots, and can even scale vertical surfaces. Some species can jump two feet in the air. Others can climb six feet up a tree trunk. This is not a fish. This is a tiny, scaly mountain goat with gills.

It breathes through its skin like an amphibian, holds air in its gills like a scuba tank, and males will fight to the death over mud territory.

Mudskippers can drown. Spend too long underwater and they die. They have to come up for air. They keep a bubble of air trapped in their gill chambers like a biological scuba tank. They also absorb oxygen directly through their skin and the lining of their mouth. Triple breathing. A fish with backup plans for its backup plans.

Males are fiercely territorial. They fight by gaping their mouths, raising their fins, and sometimes killing each other. They build elaborate burrows in the mud to attract females. Then they guard the eggs alone, pumping air into the burrow to keep the babies alive.

This is a fish that gave up on water. It walks. It climbs. It fights on land. It breathes like an amphibian. It is, in every way, a creature in the middle of becoming something else.

Evolution takes millions of years. The mudskipper is already there. – A Facebook post by ‘Wild Wonders’

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Saturday, 13 June 2026

Hydrangeas

I captured these beautiful hydrangeas at the ‘Blue Beauties 2026’ display in the Flower Dome recently. From the display, I was able to glean the following information on Hydrangeas.

What most people call a hydrangea ‘flower’ is not a single flower but an inflorescence, or a compound cluster of dozens to hundreds of florets. The large, showy, papery structures are sterile florets, containing no pollen or nectar and serving to attract pollinators. The smaller, star-like fertile florets bear stamens and pistils, producing pollen and nectar and setting seed. The proportion of sterile to fertile florets determines the inflorescence’s overall form.

An interesting fun fact about Hydrangeas which you may not be aware of. Hydrangeas are by default pink or red. In acidic soils, aluminium becomes available to the plant and alters the flower’s anthocyanin pigments from pink to blue, making hydrangea one of the few ornamental plants whose colour responds to its environment.

In acidic soils, aluminium becomes water-soluble and is absorbed by the plant’s roots. It travels to the sepals where it binds with the pigment and alters its light absorption from the red end of the spectrum to the blue.

Without enough aluminium, even acidic soil will produce pink flowers. This is why commercially sold hydrangeas grown blue with added aluminium sulphate in nurseries might turn pink after planting, if the garden soil lacks enough aluminium to sustain the blue complex.

Hydrangea macrophylla cultivar, commonly known as a "Sumida Fireworks" hydrangea.

This is the Panicle Hydrangea (Hydrangea paniculata), recognizable by its elongated, conical flower clusters.
Hydrangea macrophylla – these are the more common hydrangeas

You can click on the picture for a better view.

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Friday, 12 June 2026

Advancement in Science

“Even if the open windows of science at first make us shiver… in the end, the fresh air brings vigour, and the great spaces have a splendour of their own.” - Bertrand Russell

Interesting developments on the Science front – courtesy of Facebook pages, ‘Collective Evolution’, ‘Plant care Today’, ‘Quantum Science’, ‘Science and Facts’, 'Astrophilesz' etc… Although trials, experiments and studies show promise, I guess it will be some time yet before they are a reality.

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Scientists have invented artificial neurons that can actually communicate with real brain cells.

Engineers printed tiny artificial neurons using inks laced with flakes of molybdenum disulfide and graphene on a flexible polymer substrate. When placed next to slices of a mouse brain in a lab dish, the real mouse neurons fired at the same pace as the artificial ones, suggesting the brain tissue could read the artificial signal as if it came from real cells.

This is not science fiction. This is a published study in Nature Nanotechnology happening right now.

The implications go in several directions at once. Better artificial neurons could lead to neuromorphic computers, a new type of computing that mimics the inner workings of the brain and could dramatically improve the energy efficiency of artificial intelligence. But perhaps more profoundly, some scientists have suggested that artificial neurons could one day replace damaged nerve cells or restore lost brain function in degenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's.

Think about what that means. A future where the neurons your brain loses to disease could be replaced by printed artificial ones that speak the same electrical language as your remaining cells.

Current brain-computer interfaces rely on relatively crude pulses to communicate with neurons. The new artificial neurons can generate complex signaling patterns including series of spikes spaced out in time or sudden flurries of activity, far closer to how real neurons actually behave.

We are still in early days. Researchers are clear that artificial neurons cannot yet maintain long term communication with biological tissue. But the fact that they can communicate at all is the breakthrough that changes everything that comes next.

The brain has always been the final frontier of medicine. We just printed a key that might help us open it. – A Facebook post by Astrophilesz

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The human body is an absolute masterpiece of biological engineering.

Take a look at what is keeping you moving, feeling, and thriving every single second of the day:

The Vascular System: An incredible highway of roughly 95,000 km of blood vessels delivering oxygen and life to every single cell.

The Nervous System: The body's electrical grid, running about 72 km of nerves to process every thought, movement, and sensation.

The Human Skeleton: A perfectly designed framework of 206 bones providing strength, structure, and protection.

We often take these systems for granted, but they work in flawless harmony to keep us alive. Take care of your body — it’s the only place you have to live! - A Facebook post

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You're looking at something smaller than the period at the end of this sentence, and it just walked through a blast of radiation that would turn your cells into soup.

The tardigrade—water bear, if you prefer the nickname — has been doing this for half a billion years. While we've been fussing over sunscreen and lead aprons, this eight-legged speck has been strolling through cosmic rays, boiling water, the vacuum of space, and radiation levels that would make a nuclear reactor look gentle. It doesn't avoid the damage. It just doesn't care.

Here's what happens when radiation hits you. Those high-energy particles slice through your DNA like a hot wire through butter, snapping the double helix into fragments. Your cells try to repair it, but if the breaks come too fast or too messy, the whole system crashes. That's why radiation sickness looks the way it does — your body can't keep up with the destruction.

The water bear's DNA gets shredded too. Same physics, same breaks. But it carries a protein called Dsup — damage suppressor — that wraps around the broken strands like a molecular bandage. It doesn't prevent the cuts. It holds everything in place long enough for the repair crews to work. Think of it as scaffolding around a collapsing building. The structure stays upright while you fix it.

A few years ago, researchers took that Dsup protein and slipped it into human cells growing in a lab dish. Then they hit those cells with radiation. The cells with Dsup shrugged off forty percent more damage than the ones without it. Same dose, same species, completely different outcome. The protein didn't change the human DNA — it just stood guard while the cell did what it already knew how to do.

That got people thinking beyond the petri dish. A journey to Mars isn't a quick trip. It's three years of exposure to solar wind, cosmic radiation, and particles that pass straight through metal like it isn't there. Astronauts on that voyage would absorb more radiation than a lifetime on Earth, and there's no ducking behind the atmosphere when it flares. The math says Dsup might cut that cellular damage in half.

But here's the thing I keep coming back to. We didn't invent this. We found it. A creature the size of a grain of pollen had already solved a problem we're only now beginning to understand. It didn't need a lab or a theory or a grant. It just needed to survive long enough to pass the solution forward.

That's what gets me every time I look at the small things in the garden. The moss holding moisture through drought. The fungi trading nutrients no one taught them to share. The beetle larva that knows exactly when to pupate even though it's never done it before. They're all carrying answers we haven't thought to ask about yet.

The water bear isn't trying to teach us anything. It's just being what it's always been. We're the ones finally paying attention. - A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’

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Science is catching up to something many people have felt for a long time. Being near water doesn’t just feel good, it can actually shift your brain into a calmer, more meditative state.

Researchers call it “Blue Mind.” Studies show that looking at water, listening to it, or floating in it can lower stress, reduce blood pressure, restore attention, and even boost creativity. Some scientists say the rhythmic movement and sound of water helps the brain disengage from constant focus and mental overload, creating a trance-like state that feels restorative.

And it doesn’t have to be the ocean. Lakes, rivers, pools, baths, fountains, even the sound of running water can have similar effects. Which might explain why so many of us instinctively feel better the moment we’re near it. – A Facebook post by ‘Collective Evolution’

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A single drop… could one day clear cataracts without surgery.

Cataracts are the world’s leading cause of vision loss, affecting over 65 million people most of them in regions where surgery is either too risky or too expensive. For decades, the only real fix has been invasive surgery: removing the cloudy lens and replacing it with an artificial one. But now, scientists may have found a much simpler solution eye drops.

Researchers at Anglia Ruskin University have developed a new drug called VP1-001 that’s showing serious promise. This compound works by targeting the clumps of proteins in the eye’s lens the very thing that makes it cloudy in cataracts. Instead of removing the lens, the drop tries to reorganize the proteins, allowing light to pass through more clearly.

In mouse trials, a single drop led to major improvements:
61% of the treated lenses regained better focusing power.
46% became visibly clearer under the microscope.

It’s a huge step forward proof that non-surgical cataract treatment is possible. While it doesn’t work on all types of cataracts just yet, it opens the door to more personalized, less invasive solutions.

We're still years away from seeing these drops in drugstores, but the potential impact is massive especially for people in low-resource areas where eye surgery is hard to access. For now, protecting your vision with good lighting, sunglasses, and regular eye exams still matters.

But the future of eye care? It might just be as easy as a drop a day.

What do you think is the most exciting medical breakthrough on the horizon? How could an innovation like this change lives around the world?

Informational content. Sources are available in scientific publications. – A Facebook post by ‘Quantum Science’

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Thursday, 11 June 2026

The World of Plants

“Knowledge is like a deep well, fed by perennial springs, and the mind of man is like a bucket that is dropped into it. He will get as much as he can assimilate.” - K. Sri Dhammananda

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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That single flower took seven springs underground to build. Trilliums stockpile energy in their roots like botanical piggy banks, waiting for the perfect moment. When three petals finally unfurl, you're seeing a decade's worth of patience.

Most wildflowers race through their life cycle in a season or two. Not the trillium. From the moment a seed lands in forest duff, this plant commits to the slowest autobiography in the woodland garden.

The first year, nothing. Just a root hair, thinner than embroidery thread, feeling its way through darkness. The second year, maybe a tiny storage structure forms underground, no bigger than a match head. By year three, if conditions hold, a single leaf might appear above ground, round and shy, pulled back into the earth before anyone notices.

This isn't procrastination. It's strategy refined over millennia. The trillium is building infrastructure the way you'd build a house, one room at a time, making sure the foundation can hold what's coming. That fleshy rhizome beneath the soil becomes a vault, stockpiling starches and sugars like a squirrel hoarding acorns. Every spring, the plant makes a calculation: do I have enough stored energy to risk flowering, or do I bank another year?

When the three-petaled bloom finally appears, usually around year seven but sometimes as late as year ten, the plant has crossed an invisible threshold. It's ready to reproduce, to enter the world of pollen and partnership. Those three white petals aren't just beautiful. They're a declaration of readiness, a flag planted after nearly a decade of silent preparation.

Here's what makes this timeline even more remarkable: the trillium doesn't speed up once it blooms. It keeps that same patient rhythm. A single plant in your woodland garden might live forty years, blooming each spring with the calm assurance of something that knows time differently than we do. It watched your children grow. It'll watch your grandchildren plant their first seeds.

This is why the conservation community treats trillium colonies like sacred groves. When you stumble across a hillside carpeted in white blooms, you're looking at centuries of accumulated effort. Each plant represents years of underground architecture. The colony itself might be older than the oldest tree shading it.

And it's why the worst thing you can do is dig one up from the wild. You're not just taking a flower. You're interrupting a decade-long conversation between root and soil, severing relationships that took years to establish. The transplanted trillium almost always declines, not from shock exactly, but from displacement. It built itself for one specific spot, one particular arrangement of fungi and moisture and shade.

When you plant trillium in your garden from a responsible nursery, you're not buying a flower. You're adopting a timeline. You're agreeing to move at the speed of geology, to measure success in presidential terms rather than growing seasons. That three-petaled face looking up at you each April is showing you what patience actually looks like when it takes physical form. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’

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Ever wonder why your spider plant suddenly pushed out those delicate white flowers? It's basically going into overdrive mode — and your indoor air quality is reaping the benefits.

When spider plants bloom, they're not just showing off. They're opening their stomata (those tiny breathing pores) wider and for longer periods to fuel the flowering process. Think of it like your plant doing deep breathing exercises, except instead of relaxing, it's actively pulling formaldehyde, benzene, and other nasties out of your air at peak efficiency.

That 87% boost in air purification? It happens because blooming requires so much energy that every leaf becomes a more powerful filter.

Most people snip off the flowers thinking they're stealing nutrients from the foliage, but you're actually cutting off your plant's most productive detox phase. Those tiny white blooms mean your spider plant is working harder than a HEPA filter — naturally.

So next time you see those flower stalks emerging, resist the urge to trim. Let them do their thing. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’

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There's a chemistry lesson happening in your September soil that most gardeners never witness. When you tuck garlic cloves into the ground before frost, you're not just planting — you're setting a biological timer that won't start ticking until the temperature drops.

Inside each clove lives a singular instruction: wait for the cold. Garlic evolved in Central Asian mountains where winter isn't optional, and it carries that ancient memory in its DNA. The bulb won't even begin forming distinct cloves until it experiences sustained temperatures below 40°F for four to eight weeks. Scientists call this vernalization, but I think of it as the plant's way of counting the seasons.

Here's what's actually happening down there. Cold temperatures trigger specific genes that redirect the plant's energy from making leaves to building storage structures. Without that chill period, the garlic keeps producing foliage but never gets the signal to divide into separate cloves. You end up with something that looks like a small onion — a single round of undifferentiated tissue instead of the segmented architecture you're hoping for.

This is why fall planting isn't just preferred; it's practically required in most climates. When you plant in September or October, you're giving the cloves time to grow roots in still-warm soil, then letting winter do the work of flipping that internal switch. By the time spring arrives, your garlic has already logged its cold hours and immediately shifts into bulb development mode.

Spring-planted garlic, by contrast, emerges into warming weather without having satisfied its winter requirement. It grows, certainly — puts up green shoots, looks healthy enough — but come harvest time, you'll pull bulbs that never fully divided. They're edible but disappointing, like opening what you thought was a chocolate bar and finding it's just one solid piece instead of the squares you can break apart.

The temperature threshold is surprisingly specific. Garlic needs that stretch below 40°F but above freezing. Too warm, and the clock doesn't start. Too cold for too long, and you risk damage. This narrow window is why garlic grows so reliably in places with proper winters and struggles in climates that stay mild year-round.

Even the variety you choose reflects this cold dependency. Hardneck types need more winter chill and thrive in northern gardens, while softneck varieties can manage with less cold and suit southern regions better. Both types want autumn planting, but hardnecks won't even attempt to make a proper bulb without a solid winter.

I've watched first-time growers plant garlic in March with such optimism, then wonder in July why their bulbs look like marbles. The plant wasn't lazy or sick. It simply never received the environmental cue it evolved to wait for. No amount of fertilizer or attention can replace what only winter provides.

This is one of those moments where working with a plant's nature instead of against it makes all the difference. Garlic asks for one thing: let it sleep through winter. Give it that, and come summer, you'll pull fat bulbs with distinct cloves that peel apart cleanly — exactly what the plant was designed to produce when the seasons align. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’

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You'd think avocado roots need acres to spread. Truth is, they're shallow feeders that naturally hug the surface—perfect for wide containers. Give them 24 inches across and they'll fruit happily in a pot for decades.

Most people picture avocado trees sending roots deep into California hillsides, drilling down like they're searching for underground rivers. But watch an avocado root system develop and you'll see something completely different. These roots spread horizontally, staying in the top foot of soil, sometimes even closer to the surface than that. They're opportunists, designed to catch rainfall before it percolates down where competition gets fierce.

This shallow habit comes from their native cloud forest origins. In those misty Mexican highlands, nutrients concentrate in the leaf litter and topsoil. Deep roots would be wasted energy. So avocados evolved to be surface miners, sending out a wide fibrous net instead of a deep taproot. It's the same strategy strawberries use, just scaled up to tree size.

Here's where it gets interesting for container growers. That wide-not-deep pattern means you can work with the tree's natural architecture instead of fighting it. A pot that's broad and relatively shallow mimics exactly what the roots want to do anyway. They'll fill that horizontal space happily, never knowing they're not in the ground. The tree reads the width as abundance.

This is why a 24-inch-wide container works magic while a narrow deep one leaves the tree confused and underperforming. The roots hit the sides of a skinny pot and start circling, sensing limitation. But in a wide bowl-shaped home, they spread the way their genetics tell them to, each root tip thinking it's found prime real estate. The tree responds by investing in fruit instead of stress hormones.

The same principle shows up in how these trees handle drought. Those surface roots can't reach deep water reserves, so avocados developed thick waxy leaves that conserve every drop. In a container, this translates to a tree that's surprisingly forgiving between waterings, as long as you water deeply when you do. The shallow roots take up moisture fast and efficiently when it's available, then coast on their built-in conservation system.

What really changes the game is understanding that container growing isn't about cramming a big plant into a small space. It's about matching container shape to root behavior. When you give an avocado the lateral room it's genetically programmed to use, everything else gets easier. The tree grows at a pace you can manage. It flowers reliably. The fruit sets and actually makes it to harvest size instead of dropping off in frustration.

I've watched potted avocados thrive on apartment balconies for twenty years and counting, fruiting season after season, because someone gave them width instead of depth. The trees never grew huge, but they never knew they were supposed to. As far as their root systems could tell, they'd found exactly what they were looking for.

That's the thing about working with plant biology instead of against it. You stop forcing and start partnering. The tree does what it's always done. You just gave it the right shaped room to do it in. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’

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Some of the world’s oldest living trees were already standing long before many ancient civilizations reached their peak. These extraordinary giants have survived for thousands of years, silently witnessing human history unfold across generations.

General Sherman, the famous giant sequoia in California’s Sequoia National Park, is considered the largest tree on Earth by volume and is estimated to be more than 2,000 years old.

The Vouves Olive Tree in Greece is believed to be over 3,000 years old and still produces olives today, making it one of the oldest fruit-bearing trees in the world.

In Chile, the ancient Patagonian cypress known as “Gran Abuelo” may possibly be more than 5,000 years old, according to recent scientific estimates still under study.

Brazil’s legendary “Patriarch of the Forest,” an ancient pink jequitibá tree, is also considered one of the oldest recorded trees in the country, with roots stretching back thousands of years.

These remarkable trees are living reminders of Earth’s deep history, resilience, and natural beauty. - A Facebook post by David Attenborough

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Wednesday, 10 June 2026

The World of Insects

"Learning makes a man fit company for himself." - Thomas Fuller

"Knowledge is the key to a high path. Knowledge is that which brings calmness and peace to life, which renders man indifferent to the storms of the phenomenal world." - Unknown

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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If you are walking barefoot in a muddy lake, watch your step. This massive insect delivers one of the most agonizing bites on Earth, and it uses biological acid to melt snakes from the inside out!

Meet the Giant Water Bug (famously nicknamed the Toe Biter).

Growing up to 4 inches long, this terrifying insect hides in the muddy weeds of ponds and lakes. When a fish, frog, or even a small snake swims by, the bug grabs it with massive pincers and stabs it with a needle-like beak. It injects a highly potent cocktail of digestive enzymes that literally liquefies the prey's internal organs into soup, allowing the bug to drink it alive!

The Bizarre Parenting Hack: While the bug is a ruthless killer, the males are heavily abused parents.

After mating, the female bug aggressively tackles the male and physically GLUES up to 100 eggs directly onto his back!

She leaves forever. The male is forced to carry the heavy, cumbersome eggs for weeks, aggressively protecting them and doing "push-ups" in the water to flow oxygen over them until they hatch!

Even apex predators have to babysit. – A Facebook post by Wildest Facts’

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The velvet ant walks around in warning colors because subtlety would be false advertising. The real detail is that almost everything about it says, “Try me once.”

Despite the nickname, it is a solitary wasp, not an ant, and only the wingless females carry the famous sting. That stinger is not just long. It is flexible, precise, and built for defense when teeth, claws, or careless fingers get too confident.

Predators learn quickly. Velvet ants have a tough, rounded exoskeleton that is famously difficult to crush, bright colors that advertise trouble, and a squeaking alarm produced by rubbing body parts together. It is basically a walking security system in red fuzz.

The “cow killer” name is drama, not biology. Its sting is brutally painful, but it is not out there dropping livestock. The real trick is psychological warfare: look dangerous, sound dangerous, survive pressure, then punish whatever ignores the warning.

Nature gave this wasp no wings and still made it untouchable.

Some creatures escape danger. This one makes danger reconsider. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

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A tarantula burrow should be a nightmare for anything frog-sized. But in parts of the Amazon, the tiny frog gets a pass. The real detail is how practical the arrangement is.

The guest is often a narrow-mouthed frog, small enough to look like a snack with legs. Yet the spider lets it stay, because the frog handles the kind of trouble fangs cannot fix neatly.

Ants and tiny insects can raid spider eggs, and those are exactly the pests the frog is built to eat.

In return, the frog gets shelter, leftover food, and a bodyguard with enough legs to make the whole neighborhood reconsider its plans.

Scientists think the spider may recognize the frog by chemical cues on its skin, because similar frogs do not always receive the same mercy. That makes this less like a pet and more like a very strict roommate agreement.

Still, the image is hard to beat: a giant predator sharing its dark little fortress with a frog that pays rent in ant removal. Nature does not always choose friendship.

Sometimes it chooses useful weirdness. – A Facebook post by ‘Wildlife Explained’

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I watched her land on a rose leaf yesterday morning, all sharp angles and geometric armor plating. She moved like a tiny tank with purpose. Most people see these bugs and reach for a shoe or a spray bottle. But this assassin — and that's her real name, the wheel bug — has been perfecting her craft for over a hundred million years.

She doesn't chase her prey. She waits. When a Japanese beetle or a caterpillar wanders too close, she unfolds this weaponized mouthpart called a rostrum. It's hollow, curved, and wickedly sharp. One precise strike, and she's through the beetle's armor. But here's where it gets wild.

She doesn't tear or chew. She injects. Those enzymes she pumps in start breaking down everything inside the beetle — muscles, organs, tissues — turning solid matter into liquid. Then she simply drinks. A smoothie bar for a predator. The whole process can take twenty minutes, and when she's done, all that's left is an empty shell.

I know it sounds brutal. But think about what happens without her. Japanese beetles can strip a rose bush bare in an afternoon. Caterpillars can demolish young vegetable plants overnight. Chemical sprays kill everything — the pests, the pollinators, the soil microbes. They disrupt the whole web. But this single wheel bug? She's surgical. She targets exactly what's doing harm.

The wheel on her back isn't decoration. That cog-shaped ridge is part of her defense system, making her difficult to swallow for birds. She doesn't need speed or venom or numbers. She's built to last, built to hunt, built to keep populations in check without throwing the garden into chaos.

I used to think pest control meant me walking out with a bucket and a purpose. Now I know my best work is recognizing who's already on the job. These assassins patrol my tomatoes and my zinnias. They climb the bean poles and inspect the underside of every leaf. They work the night shift and the dawn patrol.

Here's what changed for me. I stopped seeing bugs as two categories — good and bad. I started seeing systems. This wheel bug isn't eating my plants. She's eating what eats my plants. She's part of an intelligence that's older than gardens, older than agriculture, older than our entire species. She was hunting when magnolias first bloomed. She was here when the first flowering plants figured out how to make fruit.

When you let her work, something shifts in your garden. You stop being the enforcer. You become the observer. You start noticing who's eating what, who's hunting whom, how balance finds itself without your intervention. It's humbling and a little magical.

So that armored bug on your tomato plant? She's not the problem. She might just be the solution you've been spraying over for years. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’

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The crane fly is nature’s worst PR disaster. It looks like a mosquito that found a gym membership, yet most of the time it is just wobbling through life with no weapon, no bloodlust, and no plan for your ankles. The real detail is almost funnier than the myth.

Many adult crane flies live only long enough to mate, lay eggs, and accidentally terrify someone in a bathroom. Some barely feed at all. Others sip nectar from flowers, quietly helping with pollination while being falsely accused of vampire behavior.

Their larvae, called leatherjackets, do the heavier ecological lifting. Down in damp soil, leaf litter, and decaying plant matter, they help break things down and move nutrients through the system.

Not glamorous work, but ecosystems are built on jobs nobody claps for.

So the “giant mosquito” panic gets the story backward. This fragile, leggy insect is not hunting you. It is trying to finish a short life without being flattened by someone holding a flip-flop and a bad assumption.

Sometimes the scariest-looking thing in the room is just balance wearing long legs. – A Facebook post by 'Strangest Facts’

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Tuesday, 9 June 2026

‘Blue Beauties 2026’

“Blue Beauties 2026” explores connections through both botany and material culture, pairing hydrangeas with architectural references, decorative arts, and stories, drawn from across present-day Turkiye and the wider Anotolian region.

Apart from the captivating hydrangeas – over 30 varieties of them, in hues of pink, blue and purple – the display also takes you on a journey through one of Turkiye’s most magnificent civilisations.

Information signboards at the display tell the history, and information on the Cappadocia – a volcanic plateau in central Turkiye, The Topkapi Palace, The Legends of the Maiden’s Tower, Ottoman Gardens, The Iznik Ceramics, The Geometry and Pattern in Ottoman Design, The Turkish Textile Production and Trade in the Ottoman Empire among other trivias. All very interesting. The display is definitely worth a visit.

Iznik ceramics are vessels and tiles made on a high-quartz fritware body.

Turkish carpet and Kilim production represent two technically distinct traditions that occupy the same geography.
It is another impressive display at the Flower Dome – a collaboration between the Turkish Embassy and the Gardens by the Bay. The display is on now until the 21st of June. 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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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!