Wednesday, 24 June 2026

Food For Health

“Some things you have to do every day. Eating seven apples on Saturday night instead of one a day just isn’t going to get the job done.” - Jim Rohn

The benefits of consuming the following food/fruits. The information is taken from Facebook posts by ‘Fruit IQ’, ‘Health Knowledge’, 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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The Andean adaptogen that balances every hormone in your body without adding a single external hormone.

At 14,000 feet above sea level in the Peruvian Andes — in conditions of extreme cold, intense UV radiation, and rocky mineral-poor soil — a root vegetable has been cultivated for over 3,000 years that has no botanical equivalent anywhere else on Earth. Maca (Lepidium meyenii) is the only food plant that can survive and thrive at such extreme altitude, and the same adaptive biochemistry that allows it to flourish in these hostile conditions appears to confer remarkable adaptogenic properties to those who consume it.

What distinguishes maca from most hormonal health supplements is its mechanism. Most substances that improve hormonal health do so by providing external hormones — phytoestrogens that act like estrogen, DHEA that converts to sex hormones, or botanical compounds that stimulate testosterone production directly. Maca does none of these things. Instead, it works on the hypothalamus and pituitary gland — the master endocrine control centers — providing specific nutrients and bioactive compounds called macamides and glucosinolates that appear to help these regulatory centers function more optimally and signal the appropriate hormonal glands more effectively.

The result is genuinely adaptive hormonal normalization — the body produces more of what it needs and less of what it has in excess — rather than simply flooding the system with one hormone at the expense of balance.

For women, four randomized controlled trials have confirmed that maca reduces menopausal symptoms including hot flashes, night sweats, depression, and sexual dysfunction — with one study showing superior results to hormone replacement therapy for symptom management.

For men, multiple trials have confirmed improvements in libido, sperm count, and sperm motility after 12 weeks of daily maca supplementation — without significant changes in serum testosterone levels, confirming a non-direct hormonal mechanism.

For athletes, maca has been shown to improve cycling time trial performance and reduce subjective fatigue in trained cyclists — suggesting meaningful ergogenic effects.

One teaspoon of gelatinized maca daily. Hormonal intelligence in a root.

For 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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Eat this on an empty stomach and watch what happens to your digestion parasites and stomach lining.

Of the thousands of dietary interventions discussed in functional medicine and natural health, few produce results as immediate and viscerally noticeable as consuming raw papaya on an empty stomach. And the mechanism behind this response is one of the most fascinating enzyme interactions in all of nutritional biochemistry.

Raw papaya contains papain — a cysteine protease enzyme of extraordinary potency. Papain's ability to hydrolyze (break apart) protein peptide bonds is so powerful that it is used industrially as a meat tenderizer — literally breaking down the tough protein structures of muscle fiber. The same enzymatic action applied to the human digestive tract has profound implications.

When consumed on an empty stomach, papain acts directly on incompletely digested protein residues that have accumulated in the digestive tract — breaking them down before they can putrefy and ferment in the colon. This putrefaction process is responsible for a significant portion of the gas, bloating, and toxic byproduct production that plagues millions of Americans following high-protein diets. Papain essentially acts as a digestive system reset — clearing the accumulated backlog and creating a cleaner environment for fresh food processing.

The antiparasitic research is striking. A study published in the Journal of Medicinal Food evaluated a preparation of raw papaya seeds and honey in Nigerian children with intestinal parasites. After seven days, 76.7% of treated children showed complete clearance of parasites compared to 16.7% in the control group — a result described by the researchers as comparable to standard pharmaceutical anthelmintic treatment.

The latex of unripe papaya — the milky white fluid present in immature fruit — contains the highest concentrations of papain and chymopapain. Consuming slightly underripe papaya maximizes the enzymatic therapeutic effect.

Raw papaya also provides exceptional Vitamin C, folate, potassium, and lycopene — making its nutritional profile as impressive as its enzymatic properties.

Two cups raw papaya. Empty stomach. Morning. Give your digestive system what it needs.

For 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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Garlic has been used as medicine for over 5,000 years across dozens of civilizations — and modern science is now confirming what traditional healers already knew. The active compound in garlic called allicin is one of the most powerful naturally occurring antibacterial, antiviral, and anti-inflammatory substances found in any food on earth.

Regular garlic consumption has been directly linked to measurable reductions in blood pressure, lower LDL cholesterol, reduced arterial plaque buildup, and a significantly strengthened immune response. Studies have shown that people who eat garlic regularly get sick less often, and when they do get sick, they recover faster. Allicin is only released when garlic is crushed or chopped — whole cloves sitting uncut don’t produce it at full potency.

The most effective way to use it is to crush a clove, let it sit for ten minutes to allow the allicin to fully activate, and then eat it raw or add it to your meal. One clove. Every day. No supplements, no pills — just a piece of food that’s been sitting in your kitchen this whole time quietly capable of doing all of this for your body.

For educational purposes only, not medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider before making changes to your health routine. – A Facebook post by ‘Fruit IQ’

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16 ounces every morning beofre anything else - here is what actually happens in your body.

Few dietary practices have generated as much passionate debate as the celery juice movement — with proponents claiming dramatic health transformations and skeptics dismissing it as wellness theater. The truth, as usual, lies in understanding the actual biochemistry rather than either extreme of the discourse.

Celery is nutritionally modest by many measures — it is primarily water and fiber with modest amounts of vitamins and minerals. But certain specific compounds it contains have been studied independently and found to have genuinely significant therapeutic effects.

Phthalides — organic compounds specific to celery — have demonstrated the ability to relax smooth muscle tissue in arterial walls, allowing blood vessels to dilate and blood pressure to decrease.

A study published in Journal of Medicinal Food confirmed that celery seed extract significantly reduced both systolic and diastolic blood pressure in hypertensive patients. The APG (3-n-butylphthalide) compound isolated from celery has been so impressive in cardiovascular research that pharmaceutical companies have investigated it as a drug candidate.

Luteolin and apigenin — flavonoids present in meaningful concentrations in celery — have demonstrated potent anti-inflammatory activity, specifically inhibiting NF-κB activation — the master inflammation signaling pathway implicated in virtually every chronic disease including cardiovascular disease, cancer, diabetes, and neurodegenerative conditions.

As a natural diuretic, celery acts through phthalide-mediated mechanisms that increase urinary output without depleting potassium — unlike pharmaceutical diuretics. This makes it valuable for reducing blood pressure, flushing excess uric acid (reducing gout and kidney stone risk), and eliminating the tissue fluid retention that produces puffiness and bloating.

Vitamin K content in celery is significant — supporting blood coagulation and bone mineralization. Its high water content and electrolyte profile make it excellent for cellular hydration.

16 ounces. Fresh pressed. Empty stomach. 20 minutes before food.

For 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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The perfect protein with the perfect fat ratio that most Americans confuse with something else entirely.

Hemp seeds are one of the most nutritionally misunderstood foods in America — and the misunderstanding is almost entirely cultural rather than botanical. Hemp (Cannabis sativa L.) is the same plant species as marijuana but an entirely different variety — containing negligible amounts of THC (the psychoactive compound) and no ability to produce any psychoactive effect whatsoever. They are legally sold in every grocery store in America and are simply one of the most nutritionally complete seeds available anywhere on Earth.

The protein story alone is remarkable. Three tablespoons of hemp seeds provide approximately 10 grams of complete protein — containing all nine essential amino acids — with a digestibility coefficient comparable to egg whites and superior to most other plant proteins. The primary proteins are edestin (approximately 65%) and albumin — both globular proteins with structural similarities to proteins found in human blood, which may explain their exceptional digestibility and bioavailability.

The fatty acid profile is where hemp seeds become genuinely distinctive. They contain omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids in an approximate ratio of 1:3 — widely cited in nutritional research as the optimal ratio for minimizing chronic inflammation and supporting cardiovascular, neurological, and immune health. Most Western diets have omega-6 to omega-3 ratios of 15:1 to 25:1 — profoundly pro-inflammatory. Daily hemp seed consumption begins correcting this imbalance from the inside out.

Hemp seeds also provide significant gamma-linolenic acid (GLA) — an omega-6 fatty acid with paradoxically anti-inflammatory rather than pro-inflammatory properties, supporting hormone balance, skin integrity, and nerve function. GLA is particularly beneficial for women experiencing PMS, hormonal skin breakouts, and inflammatory conditions associated with estrogen imbalance.

For heart health, a study in Nutrition and Metabolism found that hemp seed oil significantly reduced platelet aggregation — a primary mechanism of arterial clot formation — suggesting meaningful cardiovascular protective effects.

Three tablespoons daily. On salads, in smoothies, by the spoon. The perfect seed.

For 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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Tuesday, 23 June 2026

Other Creatures

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

Today, we take a peek at other creatures that roam the earth. Here are some interesting fun facts about them – courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Wild Wonders’, ‘Strangest Facts’, 'Plant Care Today', etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

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The glass frog is the only land animal on Earth that can turn itself transparent. Here's how it performs one of nature's most incredible vanishing acts.

During the day, while sleeping on green leaves, glass frogs are extremely vulnerable to predators. So they evolved a bizarre superpower: they pull nearly 90% of their red blood cells out of circulation and pack them into their liver. Without blood flowing through their bodies, they become up to 61% more transparent than when they are awake.

At night, when they wake up to hunt and mate, they release the blood back into their veins. It's the only known land animal with this ability.

Flip a glass frog over and you'll see something no other land animal can show you: its heart beating in real time. Their transparent abdominal skin and muscle allow you to watch the heart's rhythmic pumping, the liver's dark silhouette, and even the coils of their intestines. It's nature's own X‑ray machine – no dissection required.

Male glass frogs are surprisingly aggressive. They have bony spines on their upper arms that they use as weapons, grappling and wrestling while clinging to leaves – sometimes even hanging upside down by their feet while fighting. These "gladiator frogs" battle for territory and mates with a ferocity you'd never expect from such a tiny, delicate creature.

Packing 90% of your blood into a tiny space would cause fatal blood clots in almost any other animal. But glass frogs somehow avoid clotting entirely.

Scientists are studying them to develop new anti‑blood‑clotting medications for humans – a discovery that could save countless lives.

To complete their invisibility, glass frogs coat their liver and other organs with highly reflective white crystals. This mirror‑like layer hides the mass of red blood cells packed inside, making the frog virtually invisible even when you know where to look.

In April 2026, scientists discovered a brand‑new species of glass frog in Ecuador and named it after an Olympic gold medalist. The region where it was found – El Quimi Nature Reserve – is being called a potential "lost world" of amphibian diversity, home to dozens of species science hasn't even described yet. – A Facebook post by ‘Wild Wonders’

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Toads live beneath your steps for years, quietly removing hundreds of insects each night without ever being seen. The overlooked part is how consistent that work becomes over time.

A single toad can consume well over 100 invertebrates in one evening, focusing on whatever is most active. Mosquitoes, ants, beetles, moths, and slugs all fall into that steady intake. They do not chase. They wait, track movement, and strike with precise timing, turning stillness into efficiency.

They return to the same shelter night after night. A damp gap under concrete, a cool space beneath wood, anywhere that holds moisture and cover. That fixed routine is what builds scale. One quiet night becomes thousands, and the numbers accumulate without interruption

Over a decade, that adds up to hundreds of thousands of pests removed before they reproduce or spread. Gardens hold better. Fewer infestations take hold. The balance shifts, often without any visible cause.

They leave no trace of the work. No noise, no disruption, no sign of effort. What feels like nothing happening is often control already in place. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Fats’

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The timing looks like magic, but bats are reading signals most creatures miss entirely.

When trees get heavily pruned, the wounded wood releases tiny bursts of carbon dioxide as it tries to heal. Underground, beetle and moth larvae respond to these chemical changes by accelerating their development cycles.

Bats detect both the CO2 micro-bursts and the ultrasonic frequencies of larvae moving through soil and bark. They position themselves two full days before the insects emerge, claiming the best hunting territories while other predators remain unaware.

When the explosion finally happens, bats are already in place, feeding efficiently while birds and spiders scramble to catch up. What appears effortless is actually the result of reading an invisible timeline that most of nature cannot access. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’

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At first glance, it looks like someone crossed a spider with a scorpion.

A curved tail arches over its body. Its posture screams danger. Predators often hesitate. And that moment of confusion can mean the difference between life and death.

This remarkable arachnid is known as the scorpion tailed spider, one of nature's most convincing impostors. The dramatic "tail" is not a stinger at all. It is actually a modified part of the spider's abdomen that can be raised into a threatening position whenever danger approaches.

The trick works because many animals have learned a simple lesson through evolution: avoid creatures that look like scorpions. The spider takes advantage of that fear.

Its bright green body blends almost perfectly with tropical leaves, making it difficult to spot among the vegetation. Hidden in plain sight, it waits quietly for insects while avoiding birds, lizards, and other hungry hunters.

Look closely and another fascinating detail appears.

Despite its unusual appearance, it is still a true spider, equipped with eight legs, multiple eyes, silk producing organs, and the hunting instincts that have made spiders some of the most successful predators on Earth. The scorpion like shape is simply an extra layer of deception added by evolution.

Scientists often call this type of adaptation mimicry, where one species gains protection by resembling another. Across the natural world, harmless creatures frequently borrow the appearance of dangerous ones. Few examples are as dramatic as this living illusion.

Nature did not give this spider venom powerful enough to scare large predators. Instead, it gave it something else. A costume. And sometimes a good disguise is more powerful than a weapon. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Raw’

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A lizard that looks exactly like Spider‑Man. Red head. Blue body. Only the boss gets the suit.

The Mwanza flat‑headed rock agama (Agama mwanzae) is a living, breathing superhero cosplayer. During mating season, the dominant male’s hormones flood his skin, turning his head and shoulders bright red and his body deep blue — the same colors as your favorite Marvel hero.

Lower‑ranking males stay dull brown, hiding in the rocks to avoid predators.

Here’s how they fight: They don’t bite. They bob their heads up and down like push‑ups. The brightest, most aggressive male wins. The loser slinks away.

Why the colors? S*xual selection. A bright male is a healthy male. But standing out makes him a target for eagles — a high‑risk, high‑reward strategy.

So next time you see red and blue, remember: the lizard inside didn’t buy that suit. He fought for it. – A Facebook post by ‘Wild Wonders’

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Monday, 22 June 2026

Monday Humour

Laughter enhances your intake of oxygen-rich air, stimulates your heart, lungs and muscles, and increases the endorphins that are released by your brain. It's linked with improved cardiovascular health, pain relief, and immune system functioning. Laughter truly is a good medicine.

Take a look at today’s selection of humour. I hope they make you laugh. Have a great week ahead and may your days be filled with laughter.

Image created on Canva

A rather snotty bachelor failed to acknowledge a dinner invitation, and when he met his would-be hostess on the street several days later, he remarked: “If I’m not mistaken, didn’t you ask me for dinner last Monday?”
“Of course,” said the woman. “Weren’t you there?”

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“I’m not happy with the photos you took of me,” said the man to the photographer. “They don’t do me justice.”
“You don’t want justice, mister,” cracked the photographer. “You want mercy!”

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A man woke up in a hospital after a serious accident. He shouted, “Doctor, doctor, I can’t feel my legs!”
The doctor replied, “I know you can’t, I’ve cut off your arms!”

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When asked why he kept a bowl of gold fish on his desk, the harried plant manager answered, “It’s not that I like goldfish. I don’t. But I do like to have something in here that opens its mouth without asking for a raise.”

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Joyce told her husband that she would be overwhelmed with misery while she was away from him!
Her husband said: “Oh darling, if that were true, I’d be so happy!”

Image created on Canva

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!

Sunday, 21 June 2026

Somewhere Out There

“There are no cosmic secrets except as man is ignorant of cosmic phenomena or unable to perceive them.” - Validivar

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

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

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Some of the light reaching your eyes tonight began its journey before humans existed. It left distant stars thousands of years ago and crossed the dark in silence.

Along the way it was bent by gravity, filtered by drifting dust, and stretched as the universe expanded.

Most photons never make it. The ones that do end their long passage inside you, absorbed by molecules in your retina that turn ancient light into a signal your brain can understand.

In less than a heartbeat, a journey across space becomes sight. – A Facebook post by ‘Earth Unreal’

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There’s a place in space where time almost stops…

Near a black hole, gravity is so powerful that it slows down time itself. If you spent just a few hours there… Years could pass on Earth.

That means somewhere in the universe, time is moving so differently that the future is already happening… while you’re still in the present.

Space isn’t just vast… it bends reality. – A Facebook post by ‘Study Facts’

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The Discovery of the Cosmic Vine

Deep in the early universe, the James Webb Space Telescope has captured a massive structure that challenges our understanding of how the cosmos was built. This gargantuan arrangement, known as the Cosmic Vine, is a sprawling chain of at least 20 galaxies connected in a thread-like filament. Stretching over 13 million light-years, this structure was found in a region of space as it appeared when the universe was only about 830 million years old.

Immense Dimensions and Scale
The sheer scale of this discovery is difficult to grasp, as it represents one of the largest known structures from the infancy of the universe. To put its size into perspective, its length is significantly greater than the distance between our Milky Way and the neighboring Andromeda galaxy.
* The chain includes 20 densely packed galaxies.
* It spans a total length of approximately 13 million light-years.
* The structure is significantly larger than other galaxy groups found at similar distances.

A High Redshift Environment
Finding such an organized and massive structure so early in cosmic history suggests that the building blocks of the universe formed much faster than previously thought. The Cosmic Vine is anchored by a very bright quasar, a supermassive black hole that is actively consuming material and emitting incredible amounts of light. This quasar sits at one end of the vine, acting as a gravitational anchor for the surrounding galaxies.

Insights into Galactic Evolution
The discovery provides a unique laboratory for astronomers to study how galaxies evolve within a cosmic web. Researchers are particularly interested in two massive galaxies within the vine that appear to be in the process of shutting down their star formation. This process, often referred to as quenching, is usually seen in older parts of the universe, but seeing it happen so early suggests that the environment plays a critical role in galactic life cycles.

Rewriting Cosmic History
The existence of the Cosmic Vine supports the theory that galaxies are not scattered randomly but are instead distributed along vast, invisible filaments of dark matter. These filaments act as the highways of the universe, funneling gas and matter into dense nodes where massive clusters can form. By mapping these structures, scientists can better understand the underlying skeleton of the cosmos and how it has expanded over billions of years. – A Facebook post

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When we really sit with the numbers - 3.2 trillion planets just in our galaxy, 200 billion stars in the Milky Way, two trillion galaxies in what we can observe - something profound starts to shift in how we see ourselves. What does it mean that we're having this conversation on one small planet among trillions?

The vastness doesn't diminish us, it reveals a pattern that connects the microscopic to the galactic. Just as we depend on soil microbiota for our existence, we're part of larger living systems that extend beyond what we can currently comprehend. The mystery isn't just "what's out there" but "what are we as conscious beings within this interconnected web?"

The scale invites us to hold both humility and profound responsibility. If we're among the universe's ways of knowing itself, then how we show up, how we treat each other and our planetary home, becomes part of the cosmic story. What would change if we approached our current civilizational challenges from this expanded sense of who we are? A Facebook post by ‘Collective Evolution’

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The universe may be far stranger than our everyday experience suggests.

For decades, physicists have explored the possibility that everything in existence — from stars and galaxies to atoms and people — could ultimately arise from tiny vibrating strings of energy. In this view, the particles that make up reality are like different notes played on a cosmic instrument, each vibration creating a different aspect of the universe.

That idea inspired one of the most beautiful metaphors associated with modern physics: if the cosmos is a symphony of vibrations, then every star, planet, and living being is part of that grand composition.

Whether or not string theory turns out to be the final description of nature, it reminds us that reality may be deeper, more elegant, and more interconnected than we can currently imagine.

Context: This quote is not a verified word-for-word statement by Michio Kaku. It is best understood as a poetic paraphrase inspired by his explanations of string theory, where he often describes the universe as being composed of tiny vibrating strings whose harmonies give rise to the particles and forces we observe. – A Facebook post by ‘Cosmo Curious’

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Saturday, 20 June 2026

"The Soup Restaurnt"

Last Saturday, I met up with some friends for dinner at ‘The Soup Restaurant’ to celebrate a birthday in the group.

‘The soup restaurant’ is a home-grown, mid-level chain of restaurants known for its family recipes and traditional home-cooked style dishes.

We had the set menu for seven. These were the dishes.

Crab meat seafood soup.
Samsui ginger Chicken
Samsui Ginger Chicken is their signature dish featuring gently steamed, tender chicken served with a fragrant minced ginger sauce. It is typically eaten by wrapping the chicken and a spoonful of the savoury ginger sauce inside a crisp lettuce leaf, creating a refreshing contrast in texture and flavour.
Diced thick mushroom with beancurd skin and broccoli.
Pumpkin steamed rice with sakura prawns.
Honey truffle pork chop. This is nice
Sweet soya prawn.
Doubled-boiled peach gum with snow pear and red dates.
This is the 'Eight Treasure' tea
The steamed samsui chicken was very nice. The honey truffle pork chop was not too bad. The dessert was refreshing. The other dishes are nothing to write home about. Maybe the others will disagree with me.

We brought a birthday cake – a cheese cake.

The branch that we went to – in ‘Vivo city’, had just recently opened and they were offering a 35% discount on their menus. Needless to say, with it being newly opened and having special offers, they were very busy. Luckily, we had booked a table.

Customers were allowed one and half hours to finish their meal and leave. There was ample time to finish the meal in one and half hours, but we did not have the luxury of staying behind after the meal for a drink and a chat. Anyway, we were able to move on to another place for that.

A view from inside the restaurant.

The mall was very busy. There were queues everywhere. I couldn’t wait to get out of there.
Anyway, we all had a pleasant evening.

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, 19 June 2026

Our Feathered Friends

“The bird is powered by its own life and by its motivation.” – A. P. J. Abdul Kalam

A peek into the world of our feathered friends.

Some interesting fun facts about birds – courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Wild Wonders’, ‘Zootopia’, ‘David Attenborough’, ‘Plant Care Today’, ‘Build For Evolution' etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

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A male palm cockatoo does not just sit in a tree and yell until a female gets impressed. That would be too easy. He makes an instrument first.

In the rainforests of northern Australia and New Guinea, male palm cockatoos have been seen breaking off sticks or seed pods, holding them in one foot, and beating them against hollow tree trunks. Not random tapping. Not a nervous habit. A real display.

Researchers documented this in wild palm cockatoos and found something rare. These birds were not just using tools. They were using tools to make sound.

That matters because most animal tool use is practical. Get food. Crack something open. Reach something hidden. Palm cockatoos are doing something different. They are making noise for display, which puts them in a very small club. And they do not all drum the exact same way.

Some males have their own rhythm. Some prefer certain tool shapes. One male might use a short stick. Another might use a seed pod. That makes the performance feel less like a preset bird behavior and more like a guy showing up with his own style.

The female is not just watching feathers. She is watching tool choice, timing, confidence, and whether this bird can turn a tree trunk into a stage.

Imagine standing in a rainforest and hearing a slow knock coming from somewhere above you. You look up expecting a branch hitting bark. Instead, there is a black cockatoo with a red cheek patch holding a stick like he booked the venue. – A Facebook post by ‘Build By Evolution’

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The pheasant-tailed jacana is one of the most remarkable wetland birds found across parts of Asia. Known for its extremely long toes and elegant appearance, this bird can walk across floating vegetation such as lily pads and lotus leaves with surprising ease.

Among dense reeds and wetland plants, the jacana builds a floating nest made from aquatic vegetation resting directly on the water’s surface. The flexible nest rises and falls naturally with changing water levels, helping protect the eggs from flooding.

Newly hatched chicks are also highly adapted to wetland life and can quickly hide among floating plants and marsh vegetation when danger approaches.

With delicate movements across the water and an ingenious nesting strategy, the pheasant-tailed jacana is perfectly adapted to life in floating marsh ecosystems. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough

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You think the mafia is strictly human. You're wrong.

Deep in the woodlands of Europe, a feathery Don Corleone runs a protection racket so ruthless that scientists named it after the mob.

THE CUCKOO MAFIA:
The great spotted cuckoo doesn't just sneak its eggs into magpie nests. It returns to check on them. If the magpie has rejected the cuckoo's egg and thrown it out, the cuckoo does something that shocked the scientific community. It comes back for revenge.

The cuckoo destroys the magpie's entire nest. It smashes the magpie's own eggs. It kills the magpie's chicks. It leaves nothing but carnage.

THE EXPERIMENT:
In a study published in Animal Behaviour, researchers removed cuckoo eggs from 29 magpie nests. They left cuckoo eggs untouched in 28 others.

The results were staggering. Cuckoos destroyed 16 of the 29 experimental nests — over 55% — within days. Only 3 of the 28 control nests were destroyed. One nest was found "completely destroyed." Eggs were "smashed." Magpie chicks were "injured".

THE EXTORTION:
This isn't random violence. It's calculated. By destroying the magpie's nest, the cuckoo forces the magpie to rebuild elsewhere. Then the cuckoo returns to parasitize the new nest.

The message is clear: raise our chick, or your whole family dies.

THE TRAGEDY:
Magpies that comply actually raise more of their own young than those that resist. In cowbirds, complying warblers raised three of their own chicks. Rejecters raised only one. The mob's offer is simple: accept our egg, and at least some of your babies survive.

A bird that runs a protection racket. A nest that becomes a hostage situation. A species that has been running this extortion scheme for millions of years. The cuckoo mafia is real. It's been hiding in our forests this whole time. – A Facebook post by ‘Wild Wonders’

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The Lyrebird is native to the forests of southeastern Australia, where it spends most of its time hidden on the forest floor.

It is considered one of the greatest mimics in the animal kingdom, capable of copying camera shutters, chainsaws, car alarms, and even other birds with incredible accuracy.

Some lyrebirds can remember and repeat sounds they heard years earlier, turning the forest into a bizarre natural soundboard. – A Facebook post by ‘Zootopia’

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There's a ritual happening in your garden that looks completely absurd until you understand what's really going on. A robin lands on your lawn, grabs an ant, and instead of swallowing it, starts rubbing the squirming insect all over its wings and tail feathers. Over and over. Methodical. Deliberate. Sometimes for ten minutes straight.

This is anting, and it's one of nature's most sophisticated self-care routines.

When a bird rubs a live ant across its plumage, the ant does exactly what ants do when threatened — it releases formic acid as a defense chemical. That's the same compound that makes ant bites sting. But the bird isn't being attacked. It's being medicated. The formic acid acts as a natural pesticide, killing feather mites, lice, and other parasites that burrow into the spaces between feathers. It's topical treatment, applied with precision to the places a beak can't easily reach.

More than two hundred bird species have been observed anting. Jays do it. Starlings do it. Even crows, which we think of as scavengers with iron stomachs, take time to run ants through their feathers before eating them. Some birds go passive — they'll actually lie down on an anthill and let the insects swarm over them, turning their bodies into a treatment zone. Others go active, picking up individual ants and applying them like tiny tubes of ointment.

What makes this even more remarkable is that birds aren't born knowing how to do it. They learn. Young birds watch older ones and pick up the behavior, which means this knowledge is being passed down, generation to generation, in your backyard right now. It's culture. It's medicine. And it's happening just outside your window.

The timing matters too. Birds tend to ant most during molting season, when old feathers are being replaced and the skin is more vulnerable. That's when parasites move in, trying to colonize the new growth. The formic acid disrupts that invasion before it starts. After the treatment, many birds will eat the ant — waste not. But the meal was never the point. The point was the pharmacy.

Once you know what you're looking at, you start seeing it everywhere. That odd little dance a blue jay does on the lawn. The way a grackle pauses mid-hunt and seems to rub something invisible into its wing. They're not confused. They're not playing. They're taking care of themselves with a technology older than anything we've ever bottled.

Your garden isn't just a place where birds stop to eat. It's a clinic. A spa. A место where ancient knowledge gets practiced in the open air, right next to the tomatoes. And the ants — those same ants we spend so much energy trying to relocate — are the ones making it all possible. They're walking medicine cabinets, and the birds know it.

Every time you see a bird behaving strangely with an insect, pause. You might be watching something that's been happening since before we had words for it. The garden has always been smarter than we give it credit for. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’

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Thursday, 18 June 2026

The World of Animals

“Animals are, like all living things, self-building, self-maintaining, and self-protecting embodiments of their genetic designs, and they are therefore in human eyes objects of their own operations.” - A.Van Ginkel

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

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

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The Arctic wolf is one of nature's most resilient predators. It survives months of darkness, temperatures as low as -70°F, and hunts prey ten times its size. But its most astonishing feat is one you've probably never heard of.

In the 1930s, commercial hunters exterminated the Arctic wolf from eastern Greenland. For 40 years, the region was wolf‑free. Scientists assumed they were gone for good. Then, in 1978, military patrols in northern Greenland encountered a pair of wolves. By 1979, a wolf pair had appeared in the abandoned territory. A slow, silent invasion had begun. The wolves had traveled hundreds of miles across treacherous sea ice and glaciers to reclaim their ancestral home. By the 1990s, a new population was firmly established. A ghost that refused to stay dead.

Since 1930, Arctic wolf skulls have been getting smaller. Their braincases have widened, their facial regions have shortened, and their teeth have shrunk. Scientists believe this progressive reduction is the result of wolf‑dog hybridization – the Arctic wolf is literally breeding itself into a smaller, less specialized form. Evolution is happening in real time, and we're watching it.

For four months of the year, the Arctic wolf lives in 24‑hour darkness. There is no sun, no moon – only stars and the faint glow of the aurora borealis. During this time, temperatures can drop to -53°C (-63°F). Yet wolves remain active, hunting muskoxen and arctic hares in complete blackness, using only their hearing and sense of smell to track prey. They are the undisputed masters of the polar night.

Due to the scarcity of prey, Arctic wolf packs require territories of well over 1,000 square miles – much larger than their southern relatives. A single pack may roam hundreds of miles in a year, following migrating caribou herds and tracking the movements of muskoxen. Their home ranges are so vast that they rarely encounter other packs or humans. Arctic wolves typically hunt muskoxen, caribou, and arctic hares. But there are two documented records of wolf packs killing polar bear cubs. It's an incredibly risky strategy – adult polar bears are massive and formidable opponents – but desperate times call for desperate measures. The wolves target cubs that have wandered from their mothers, using their superior teamwork to overwhelm the young bears. – A Facebook post by ‘Wild Wonders’

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The opossum is a 65‑million‑year‑old biological miracle. It’s walked with dinosaurs, shrugged off snake venom, and helped control deadly diseases. Yet most people see it as a rat with a weird tail.

Scientists have known since the 1940s that opossums are immune to rattlesnake venom. But in 2015, researchers discovered the exact compound responsible: a peptide called Lethal Toxin Neutralizing Factor (LTNF). In lab experiments, mice given rattlesnake venom that had been incubated with this peptide showed no signs of sickness. The peptide also neutralized the venom of Russell’s vipers, and even the plant toxin ricin. This could lead to a universal antivenom, yet 80 years later, we still haven't brought it to humans.

Opossums are the only marsupial in North America, and they’ve been around for over 65 million years — meaning they coexisted with dinosaurs. Their gestation period is just 12 days, shorter than any other mammal. Newborns are the size of honeybees and must crawl into their mother’s pouch to finish developing.

A single opossum can eat up to 5,000 ticks per season. This directly helps control the spread of Lyme disease, making them nature’s own public health workers.

Opossums have 50 teeth — more than any other North American mammal. That’s a lot of dental power for an animal that mostly eats garbage and ticks.

Beyond snake venom, opossums are also immune to botulism, honeybee stings, and scorpion venom. Their low body temperature (around 94°F) makes them resistant to rabies, and they’ve been used in scientific research to study Zika virus and other diseases.

Opossums are marsupials, more closely related to kangaroos than to rats. Female opossums have two sets of reproductive organs, a fur‑lined pouch, and even a forked penis in males — a trait that once convinced colonial settlers that they bred through the female’s nostrils.

When “playing possum,” the opossum’s body involuntarily seizes up, its tongue lolls out, and it releases a foul‑smelling greenish fluid from its anal glands that mimics the smell of a rotting corpse. This macabre performance can fool even the hungriest predator.

Most opossums die young, often hit by cars while scavenging roadkill. In the wild, they seldom survive more than a year. Yet their short lives are packed with ecological benefits: cleaning up carcasses, eating thousands of ticks, and controlling venomous snakes. – A Facebook post by ‘Wild Wonders’

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Flat-headed cats are built for water, hunting like small otters with teeth instead of paws. Their flattened skull is a precise adaptation, not an accident.

The overlooked part is how specialized that design really is.

Their eyes face forward for depth, their ears sit low to reduce drag, and their teeth angle backward to grip fish that would otherwise slip free. When they strike, they do not bat or chase. They bite first, locking onto prey in a single, efficient motion.

Their paws are partially webbed, giving them control in slow, muddy streams where visibility is poor and every movement has to be exact. This is not a generalist predator. It is a cat engineered for water, operating where most of its kind would struggle.

For decades, that specialization became a liability. Wetlands disappeared, forests thinned, and by the early 1990s the species was widely feared extinct after vanishing from sightings.

Then in December 2025, a camera trap recorded a mother moving through shallow water with a cub behind her, both perfectly at ease in a habitat that had nearly erased them.

They did not return. They were simply never noticed. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

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Meerkats don’t just stand guard. They climb onto warthogs, turning a moving animal into a higher vantage point for spotting danger.

The key detail is what that extra height changes.

From a warthog’s back, a meerkat can see farther across open ground without sacrificing mobility. Instead of freezing upright on its hind legs, it stays elevated while the warthog keeps moving, extending both range and reaction time in one simple shift.

Warthogs tolerate it because the cost is negligible and the benefit is real. Meerkats are often the first to react, scanning constantly for predators like eagles or jackals. A sudden alert from above can trigger a faster escape, giving both animals a better chance to avoid an ambush.

There is no formal partnership, just overlapping instincts that happen to align. One animal gains height, the other gains awareness, and neither has to change much to make it work.

What looks like a small, almost playful behavior is actually a precise adjustment, where a few extra inches of vision can quietly tip the balance between calm and chaos. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

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In parts of South America, some people say jaguars look for the roots of the caapi plant and chew on them. The roots are believed to have strong effects that can make animals see or feel things in a strange way. Jaguars, being curious and bold, may try the plant out of interest.

When they gnaw on the roots, the big cats can act different. They might sway, move slowly, or seem confused, and observers describe this as the jaguars being “high.” These scenes can be surprising to watch, since jaguars are usually quiet and focused hunters.

Local people and visitors in the forests sometimes report seeing jaguars do this, and the stories are part of the region’s natural lore. Scientists study animal behavior to learn more, and it is not always clear how common the practice really is. Whether rare or regular, the idea of jaguars using caapi roots is a striking and memorable part of Amazon life. – A Facebook post by ‘Amazing World’

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Wednesday, 17 June 2026

Trivia

We live and learn. That is one way to make our lives more interesting and meaningful. And there is so much to learn about this amazing, wonder-ful world we live in.

What an amazing world we live in. Here are some interesting fun facts, trivias about this wonder-ful world – courtesy of Facebook pages ‘David Attenborough', 'Ovean Nova' etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

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During the 1960s, Switzerland faced a serious rabies outbreak among wild foxes. The disease was spreading quickly, and the government needed a way to stop it before it became an even bigger problem for animals and humans.

At first, officials considered vaccinating foxes by hand. But catching wild foxes one by one across mountains and forests was far too difficult and expensive. They needed a smarter solution.

That’s when they came up with an unusual idea: placing rabies vaccines inside chicken heads and dropping them across the countryside for foxes to eat. Since foxes naturally hunted and scavenged for food, they eagerly ate the bait without realizing they were being vaccinated.

The strategy worked surprisingly well. Over time, more and more foxes became immune to rabies, the spread of the disease slowed down, and eventually rabies disappeared from the fox population in Switzerland.

What sounded like a strange experiment turned into one of the most successful wildlife vaccination campaigns ever. – A Facebook post

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For more than 2,000 years, people lived on the remote island of Hirta in Scotland’s isolated St Kilda archipelago.

In the 1800s, the islanders built a row of stone cottages with chimneys and slate roofs known as the “main street,” replacing older blackhouses damaged by severe storms.

Life on Hirta was harsh and deeply isolated. Families survived through crofting, raising livestock, growing crops, and collecting seabirds and eggs from towering cliffs surrounding the island.

The surrounding Atlantic waters were dangerous, making regular fishing and travel extremely difficult.

By the early 20th century, disease brought by visitors, economic hardship, and the impact of World War I slowly reduced the population. In 1930, the remaining residents requested evacuation after life on the island became unsustainable.

Today, Hirta stands empty of permanent human residents but remains protected as part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site, famous for its dramatic landscapes, rare Soay sheep, and enormous seabird colonies.

The stone cottages still overlook the sea — silent reminders of one of the most remote communities in British history. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough

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A town of 2,600 people in northwest Iceland got tired of drivers ignoring the speed limit on their narrow streets, so they did something no one in Iceland had ever done before — they painted a crosswalk that isn't really there.

The stripes are flat on the ground like any other zebra crossing, but thanks to carefully calculated shadows and shading, they appear to float several inches above the road. Drivers approaching it see what looks like a row of concrete blocks hovering in the street and instinctively hit the brakes.

The idea came from Ísafjörður's environmental commissioner Ralf Trylla, who stumbled across a similar design in New Delhi while searching for alternatives to speed bumps. He teamed up with a local road-painting company, spent several weeks perfecting the technique, and had all the necessary permits from police and transport authorities within a fortnight.

The town's speed limit was already 30 km/h. Residents felt that wasn't slow enough.

The crosswalk went on to inspire cities across the United States, Europe, India, and China to try the same trick. Kansas City built one modeled directly on Ísafjörður's design. Town officials were reportedly flooded with inquiries from urban planners around the world wanting to know how it was done.

All of it traces back to one small fishing town, a mountain backdrop, and a paint crew that understood geometry better than most drivers understand road signs. - A Facebook post

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More than 500 years ago, the Portuguese ship Bom Jesus vanished while sailing from Lisbon. For centuries, its fate remained one of history’s mysteries — until its remains were unexpectedly uncovered in the Namibia desert during diamond mining operations near the Atlantic coast.

The discovery became one of the most remarkable archaeological finds in recent history. Inside the wreck, researchers uncovered Portuguese and Spanish gold coins, thousands of copper ingots, and over 100 elephant tusks, helping experts identify the lost vessel. The treasure and artifacts found aboard were estimated to be worth millions of dollars.

The shipwreck, hidden beneath desert sands for centuries, offered a rare glimpse into the global trade routes and maritime history of the 16th century. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough

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What an incredible creature

Cut open an octopus... and what you find will rewrite everything you thought you knew about life. Three hearts — not one. Two pump blood exclusively to the gills. The third pushes it to the rest of the body. And that blood? It's blue.

Copper-based. Running through a system so ancient, it predates dinosaurs by hundreds of millions of years. Its brain wraps entirely around its esophagus — meaning every single bite of food passes through the center of its mind.

One wrong meal... and it damages its own intelligence. Hidden inside that mantle: a ink sac loaded with chemical weaponry, a funnel that jets water for instant escape, and a liver so complex it acts as both digestive organ and immune system simultaneously. This is not a simple sea creature. This is a living machine — engineered by evolution over 300 million years — into something so sophisticated, so alien, so perfect... that science is still struggling to fully understand it. – A Facebook post by ‘Ocean Nova’

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Tuesday, 16 June 2026

This Wonderful World

“People learn more on their own rather than being force fed.” - Socrates

“Knowledge is like a rare gem; the more facets it has, the greater its brilliance.” - Validivar

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

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Near Franklin, the sky recently displayed a rare and striking optical phenomenon often called a “fire rainbow.”

Despite the dramatic name, it is neither fire nor a traditional rainbow. The effect is scientifically known as a Circumhorizontal arc — a band of vivid color that appears when sunlight passes through hexagonal ice crystals suspended in high-altitude cirrus clouds.

Under the right conditions, these crystals refract light in a way that spreads colors across the sky in bright, flame-like patterns.

Because this phenomenon requires very specific angles of sunlight and precise atmospheric conditions, it is rarely seen — making each appearance especially remarkable.

The result is a soft yet brilliant display of color that seems almost unreal, briefly transforming the sky into something extraordinary. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough

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Every year, something amazing happens high above our heads. Huge clouds of dust rise from the vast Sahara Desert and begin a long journey across the Atlantic Ocean.

Carried by strong winds, about 182 million tons of this fine dust travel thousands of kilometers through the sky until they finally reach the lush Amazon rainforest.

At first, it might sound strange — why would dust matter to a rainforest? But this is no ordinary dust. It is rich in important nutrients, especially phosphorus, which plants need to grow. The soil in the Amazon, surprisingly, isn’t very rich on its own. Heavy rains often wash nutrients away. That’s where the Saharan dust plays a crucial role.

When this dust settles over the Amazon, it acts like a natural fertilizer. It replaces lost nutrients and helps trees and plants stay healthy and strong. Without this yearly delivery, the rainforest would struggle to support its incredible variety of life.

This natural process shows how connected our planet really is. A desert in Africa helps feed a rainforest in South America, all through the power of wind and nature. It’s like Earth has its own system for sharing resources — quietly working in the background to keep ecosystems alive and balanced. – A Facebook post

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If you’re planning a hike through Canyonlands National Park, don’t miss the striking formation known as Black Crack. Located in the Island in the Sky district, this remarkable geological feature is a deep, narrow fissure—dropping roughly 65 feet—formed over millions of years through erosion and tectonic activity.

The Black Crack is part of a broader network of fractures that run across the park, offering a powerful glimpse into the forces that shaped the Colorado Plateau over vast stretches of time. Its dramatic appearance and depth make it both fascinating and humbling to witness.

Visitors should be aware that the surrounding terrain can be steep, uneven, and exposed. Proper footwear, sufficient water, and caution are essential when exploring this area. With the right preparation, experiencing this natural wonder can be a truly unforgettable part of your Canyonlands adventure. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough

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For centuries, a unique community known as the Tanka people has lived almost entirely on the water along the southern coasts of China. Often referred to historically as “sea gypsies,” they have built a culture deeply connected to the ocean.

Their homes are traditional houseboats, many equipped with living spaces for everyday life, including cooking and sleeping areas. Important life events — from marriages to funerals — have long been held on these boats, reflecting a lifestyle centered on water.

The Tanka people have traditionally relied on fishing as their main livelihood, while some have also worked in salt production or pearl diving. Their daily routines, economy, and identity are closely tied to the sea.

Although it is commonly said that they have lived this way for over a thousand years, the idea that they have never set foot on land is more symbolic than literal.

Today, many Tanka people have transitioned to living on land, though their cultural heritage remains strongly rooted in maritime traditions. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough

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The Atlantic Ocean Road in Norway is one of the most visually striking drives in the world. Known for its dramatic ocean views and winding bridges, it offers a unique and unforgettable driving experience.

Stretching about 8 kilometers, this section of County Road 64 connects a chain of small islands between Molde and Kristiansund in the Møre og Romsdal region. The road crosses open sea via a series of low bridges, creating the illusion of a highway floating above the ocean.

While breathtaking, the route can become hazardous during severe weather. Strong winds and waves from the nearby Hustadvika can crash over the roadway, making driving challenging. Travelers are advised to check weather and road conditions before setting out.

In calmer conditions, the area offers peaceful views and even opportunities to spot marine life such as whales and seals, making it both a scenic and dynamic destination. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough

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