Sunday, 3 May 2026

This Wonderful World

Learn about the wonders that are happening around us. When you are knowledgeable and well informed, life’s mysteries will be lessened. You see the wonders of the world more clearly. You will appreciate life more.

Have holy curiosity. Make your life worth living. – Albert Einstein

What an amazing world we live in. Here are some interesting fun facts, trivias about this wonder-ful world – courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Colours of Nature’, ‘Plant Care Today’, ‘Strangest Facts’, 'Kindness of All Living Things' etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

Along the warm rivers of Africa lives a small bird called the Egyptian plover. It is a brave, curious bird with a thin beak and bright eyes. The plover often comes close to large crocodiles sunning themselves on the mud. When a crocodile lies with its huge mouth open, the little bird hops in and out, pecking gently between the sharp teeth. The sight looks dangerous to people, but the plover moves calmly and carefully.

The plover eats bits of meat and old food stuck between the crocodile's teeth. In doing so it cleans the crocodile's mouth and helps keep the big animal healthy. The bird gets an easy and regular meal from this task. So both animals benefit: the crocodile gets clean teeth and the plover gets food. This kind of friendship in nature is called symbiosis.

The crocodile does not snap at the bird. It stays still and allows the plover to work safely. Their quiet trust shows how very different creatures can live together and help one another. This simple scene by the river teaches us that cooperation and gentle care can bring good results, even between animals that seem like enemies. A Facebook post by ‘Colours of Nature’

I've watched countless cats lose their minds over a clump of *Nepeta cataria* in the garden border. They approach slowly, pupils wide, then suddenly press their cheeks against the stems like they've found religion. The rolling starts next—full-body twisting, paws batting air, that look of absolute bliss spreading across their faces. It's theater. It's devotion. And it turns out, it's also armor.

The molecule responsible is called nepetalactone, a volatile oil the plant releases when those fuzzy leaves get crushed. For cats, this chemical hits receptors in their nose and mouth that trigger something close to euphoria. They're not hallucinating exactly, but they are experiencing intense sensory pleasure that lasts about ten minutes before the receptors reset. The behavior looks wild, but it's actually deeply purposeful.

Here's where it gets strange. That same molecule—the one giving Fluffy her best afternoon—sends mosquitoes into complete retreat. Not because it masks anything or confuses them, but because their olfactory system reads nepetalactone as a full-scale emergency. Studies show it works ten times more effectively than DEET at clearing mosquitoes from a space. The insects don't just avoid it. They flee.

The evolutionary split couldn't be sharper. Cats inherited a neurological setup that makes this compound feel like winning the lottery. Mosquitoes, with their entirely different sensory wiring, experience it as a threat they can't override. Same chemical. Opposite universes.

Researchers started noticing this connection when they studied big cats in the wild. Lions, leopards, and jaguars all show the same catnip response, and they all seek out plants in the *Nepeta* family when they're available. At first, scientists thought it was purely recreational. Then they measured the insect activity around cats after a good catnip session. The numbers dropped dramatically. These animals weren't just indulging—they were dressing for the occasion.

Your housecat, rolling with abandon in that patch you planted near the back steps, is doing exactly what her ancestors did on the savannah. She's coating her fur in a compound that makes her nearly invisible to biting insects. The ecstasy is real, but so is the protection. She'll carry that shield with her for hours, long after the high wears off.

The plant itself evolved nepetalactone as a defense, a way to keep hungry insects from shredding its leaves. It worked so well that it became one of the most potent insect repellents in the botanical world. That cats happened to find it intoxicating was just a bonus — a quirk of brain chemistry that turned a defensive toxin into an interspecies love affair.

Next time you see a cat in the throes of catnip rapture, you're watching two stories unfold at once. One is about pleasure, pure and uncomplicated. The other is about survival, ancient and ongoing. The rolling, the rubbing, the wild-eyed joy—it all serves a purpose that predates our gardens by millions of years.

One molecule. Two wildly different realities. And your cat, blissed out and mosquito-free, caught perfectly between them. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’

Vanilla is special because it is the only common flavor that comes from an orchid. The vanilla plant is not a tree or a bush but a climbing vine. It produces long green pods that look like beans. Inside those pods are tiny seeds and oils that give the sweet, warm taste we call vanilla.

Growing and making vanilla takes a lot of work, which is why it costs so much. Many vanilla orchids must be pollinated by hand, and the pods need months to ripen. After harvesting, the pods go through a slow drying and curing process to develop their full flavor and aroma. These steps take time and skilled labor, so vanilla ends up being the second-most expensive spice in the world, after saffron.

Because of its scent and taste, vanilla is used in many foods, drinks, and perfumes. Just a little bit can change the flavor of a whole recipe. People value vanilla for its aroma and versatility, and chefs and bakers often prefer pure vanilla even though imitation extracts are cheaper. The effort to grow and cure real vanilla explains why it remains so prized. – A Facebook post by ‘Amazing World’

The most successful aerial predator on your property weighs less than a paperclip. Not the hawk. Not the swallow. A dragonfly — the iridescent blur you barely register when it crosses your lawn — intercepts flying prey at a higher success rate than most predators that make it into documentaries.

She doesn't chase. She intercepts — calculating where a mosquito will be a fraction of a second from now and flying there first. She was doing this long before birds existed. Before flowers existed. She's one of the oldest flying predators on earth.

Her compound eyes cover nearly her entire head, processing visual information fast enough to track a moving insect against a moving background while she's also in flight. Her four wings operate independently — she can hover, fly backward, and pivot without slowing down. She catches prey in a spiny leg basket assembled mid-flight and often eats without landing.

Before she could do any of this, she spent years as a nymph at the bottom of a pond, hunting mosquito larvae in the mud. When she finally climbed out of the water and unfolded wings for the first time, she went from hunting mosquitoes below the surface to hunting them above it. Same target. New dimension.

She patrols a fixed territory — the same stretch of pond edge, the same garden section, day after day — and the mosquito pressure around your home drops in proportion to how many dragonflies are working the airspace.

How to support them:
- A garden pond or even a consistent low spot that holds water through spring and early summer can produce dragonflies all season — the larvae develop underwater
- Tall plants at the water's edge give emerging adults something to climb when they leave the water for the last time
- Avoid mosquito dunks or broad-spectrum treatments in water features where dragonfly larvae are also developing — the larvae eat mosquito larvae naturally
- She'll be over your yard at first light. If you see one patrolling the same route daily, she lives there. She's been running this math longer than almost anything else that flies. – A Facebook post by ‘Kindness for All Living Things’

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Saturday, 2 May 2026

The World of Avians

"There is nothing in which the birds differ more from man than the way in which they can build and yet leave a landscape as it was before." - Robert Wilson LyndBirds

A peek into the world of our feathered friends.

Some interesting fun facts about birds – courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Strangest Facts’, ‘Wild Wonders’, etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

A bird built like a weapon quietly keeps a forest alive. Danger walks through the jungle, planting its future with every step. But the part most people miss is what travels inside it.

Cassowaries can swallow fruits too large for most animals, some the size of small apples, seeds that would otherwise fall and rot beneath their parent trees.

Their digestive system does something rare. It carries those seeds miles away, then returns them to the ground intact, often with just enough natural fertilizer to give them a better start.

In dense tropical forests, where sunlight and space are limited, distance is survival. Without that movement, entire plant species begin to cluster, weaken, and slowly disappear.

Some large rainforest trees rely almost entirely on cassowaries to spread. Remove the bird, and the forest begins to change in ways that are slow, but permanent.

And yet, one well-placed kick from that same animal can shatter bone. It is both risk and renewal moving through the same body. Sometimes the most dangerous thing in a landscape is also the reason it still exists. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

Birds don’t have teeth, so every bite they eat is ground internally using swallowed stones.

Here’s how that hidden system actually works.

Inside the gizzard, a specialized muscular organ, birds store small stones known as gastroliths. As food enters, the gizzard contracts with force, pressing it against those stones and breaking it down into smaller, digestible pieces.

The stones themselves don’t dissolve. They tumble, grind, and gradually wear smooth over time before being replaced with new ones the bird intentionally selects from its environment.

This process is essential for birds that consume seeds, grains, or tough plant fibers. Without it, their digestive system would struggle to extract nutrients from food that was never mechanically broken down.

Some species are surprisingly selective, choosing stones of specific sizes to improve efficiency, turning digestion into a quiet, continuous system of internal processing.

What appears simple from the outside is actually a precise, ongoing interaction between muscle and mineral. Every meal is shaped by tools the bird carries within, working silently long after the swallow. – A Facebook post by ‘Strnagest Facts’

The great gray owl is a ghost with a built‑in satellite dish. It hears your heartbeat through two feet of snow and never makes a sound.

The great gray owl's huge facial disc is not just for looks — it acts as a parabolic reflector, channeling sound directly into its asymmetrically placed ears. One ear sits higher than the other, allowing the owl to pinpoint the exact vertical and horizontal location of a sound source. Scientists believe it can hear a vole's heartbeat beneath a foot of snow — or even up to two feet in ideal conditions. It doesn't need to see its prey. It just needs to listen.

This owl is 100% silent in flight. Its wing feathers have comb‑like edges and a velvety surface that break up turbulence and absorb sound. A great gray owl can glide within inches of a mouse without the mouse ever knowing it's there. When it dives, there's no whoosh, no flutter, no warning — just a sudden impact from an invisible source.

Unlike other owls that must land before grabbing prey, the great gray owl uses its long, powerful legs to punch through snow and snatch small mammals without stopping. It can break through a crust of ice thick enough to support a human's weight, all while maintaining perfect silence. The prey never hears death coming.

Great gray owls are known to cache uneaten prey near their nests — often wedging rodents into tree forks or hanging them on branches like a frozen pantry. This behavior allows them to survive during extreme cold snaps when hunting is impossible.

Scientists only discovered the owl's snow‑punching hunting technique in the late 20th century. Before that, they assumed the owl must be landing first — but high‑speed footage proved otherwise. For decades, the great gray owl was hiding one of nature's most extraordinary adaptations in plain sight. – A Facebook post by ‘Wild Wonders’

The umbrella bird looks like it was assembled by a committee that couldn't agree on anything.

Male umbrella birds have a long, feathered tube dangling from their throat called a wattle. When relaxed, it hangs loosely against the chest. But during courtship, the male inflates this wattle using specialized muscles, transforming it into a giant, bristly pine cone that can be longer than his entire body – up to 14 inches (35 cm) in the long‑wattled species . When fully extended and the feathers are spread, it also looks like a feather duster. The wattle is so long that the bird has to retract it against his chest during flight so it doesn't get in the way.

But the real mind‑blower is the sound.

That inflatable wattle isn't just for looks – it's also a sound amplifier. When the male calls, he inflates the wattle, which acts like a resonating chamber, helping him produce one of the lowest‑pitched calls of any bird. The call is a deep, resonant "boom" that has been compared to the rumble of distant thunder, the moo of a cow, or the low idle of a motorcycle engine . It's so low and powerful that human observers sometimes feel the vibration in their chest before they actually hear the sound. The call can travel for over a kilometer (more than half a mile) through the dense rainforest , letting females know where the displaying males are gathering.

A bird with a wattle longer than its own body that looks like a pine cone and a feather duster, producing a call so deep it shakes your chest before it reaches your ears. The umbrella bird is nature's most ridiculous instrument – and it's been hiding in the cloud forests of South America the whole time. – A Facebook post by ‘Wild Wonders’

Hummingbirds don’t just visit flowers, they map them against time, light, and moisture. Their routes shift through the day as nectar itself changes.

Here’s how it actually works.

At dawn, flowers that sat in cool night air hold more concentrated nectar. Hummingbirds start there, moving quickly through sunlit blooms that offer the highest energy return before heat begins to dilute or dry them out.

As the morning warms, those same flowers lose value. Nectar thins, sugar drops, and the birds pivot. Shaded beds become the next target, where cooler conditions slow evaporation and keep nectar richer for longer.

They are not guessing. Hummingbirds memorize individual plants, how fast each refills, and even how your watering schedule affects that cycle. A freshly watered bed can shift their entire route within hours, quietly redrawing their map of reliable stops.

What looks like random hovering is tightly scheduled movement, guided by memory and changing chemistry. Their flight paths are not wandering. They are timed circuits shaped by the rhythm of water and sun. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

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Friday, 1 May 2026

King Protea Plant

I saw these unique flowers in the Flower Dome recently. I was keen to know more about them. So, I took some photos and did a bit of research on the internet. The following are what I found out.
Protea cynaroides, also called the king protea, is a distinctive member of Protea, having the largest flower head in the genus. - Wikipedia

The species is also known as giant protea, honeypot, or king sugarbush because of the incredible amount of nectar produced by the flower heads.

The king protea is an incredibly hardy plant. They grow in harsh environments with dry, hot summers and wet, cold winters, and can survive a wildfire! It has thick underground stem, which contains many dormant buds. These will produce new growth after a fire. The King Protea can live up to 15 years naturally in the wild!

Proteas look amazing, which is why they are used as ornamental plants. They have large and velvety flower heads that smell faintly like honey. They are also popular in flower arrangements because their flowers have a long vase life.

The leaves of certain protea species can be used to make tea, and the nectar produced by the flowers can be used for medicinal purposes. 

King protea, is the national flower of South Africa and represents change and hope. In European nations, the beautiful flower also symbolises diversity and courage.

You can click on the picture for a better view.

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Thursday, 30 April 2026

The World of Animals

Animals are more than ever a test of our character, of mankind's capacity for empathy and for decent, honourable conduct and faithful stewardship. We are called to treat them with kindness, not because they have rights or power or some claim to equality, but in a sense because they don't; because they all stand unequal and powerless before us. Animals are so easily overlooked, their interests so easily brushed aside. Whenever we humans enter their world, from our farms to the local animal shelter to the African savanna, we enter as lords of the earth bearing strange powers of terror and mercy alike. - Matthew Scully

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

Here are some fun facts and trivia about animals, courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Colours of Nature’, ‘Strangest Facts’, ‘Mind Blowing Facts’, etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

A thirsty camel can gulp down 20–30 gallons (75–115 liters) in just a few minutes—sometimes up to 3 gallons per minute. That’s faster than a bathtub faucet on full blast.

A few reasons they can pull this off:
Oval red blood cells let their blood rehydrate without bursting.
Their mouths and throats are built to swallow continuously without choking.
Their bodies can handle huge swings in hydration that would kill most animals.
It’s one of the most extreme drinking feats in the animal kingdom.
– A Facebook post by ‘Mind Blowing Facts’

The saliva spreads thin on impact, seeping into every groove of an insect’s body to maximize contact before it thickens and locks on.

Inside the mouth, it switches again to release the meal. Precision chemistry, zero hesitation. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

“Boxing” in Brown hare is a well-documented springtime behavior, especially visible during the breeding season (often peaking in March in Europe). While people long assumed it was males fighting, wildlife studies and field observations show it’s usually a female striking a male that is chasing her too aggressively. It’s a form of rejection or testing persistence, not a duel between rival males.

Male–male fights can happen, but the classic upright boxing posture most often involves a female telling a male to back off. – A Facebook post

A polka-dotted zebra was seen in Kenya’s Maasai Mara and researchers were amazed. Instead of the usual clear black-and-white stripes, this zebra had extra dark patches that made it look like it had spots. The sight was striking because zebras are known for their neat stripe patterns, so a spotted coat stood out right away on the plains.

Scientists say the unusual look comes from a rare genetic change called pseudomelanism. That means the genes that control color made more dark pigment in some places than normal. It is not the same as being all black or albino — it just changes the usual stripe pattern into blotches or extra stripes. This kind of change is very uncommon, so seeing it in the wild is special.

Researchers were excited and surprised because rare animals like this can teach us about how genes work and how animals adapt. They took photos and notes, hoping to learn more without disturbing the zebra. The sight also reminded people how important it is to protect wild places like the Maasai Mara, where unexpected and beautiful animals can still be found. - A Facebook post by ‘Colours of Nature’

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Wednesday, 29 April 2026

Fun Facts and Trivia

Our planet is far more complex, adaptive, and mysterious than we give it credit for.

What an amazing world we live in. Here are some interesting fun facts, trivias about this wonder-ful world – courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Colours of Nature’, ‘Space World’, ‘Beauty of Nature’, 'Hashem AI-Ghaili', ‘Hidden Facts’ etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

Scientists in Ireland discovered a fungus capable of infecting spiders and altering their behavior, creating what researchers describe as a “zombie-like” effect. The study was conducted by scientists from the National University of Ireland Galway, helping expand knowledge about how certain fungi influence animal behavior.

The fungus belongs to a group known for controlling the actions of insects and spiders. After infection, the fungus affects the nervous system, causing the spider to move differently and often seek environments that help the fungus grow and spread its spores.

This behavior change increases the chances of the fungus reproducing successfully. Similar fungi have been observed affecting ants and other small creatures, showing how some organisms can manipulate host behavior to survive. Researchers consider the discovery important for understanding parasitic relationships in nature. The finding highlights the complex interactions between fungi and animals, demonstrating how evolution can produce highly specialized survival strategies.

Scientists in Ireland discovered a fungus capable of infecting spiders and altering their behavior, creating what researchers describe as a “zombie-like” effect. The study was conducted by scientists from the National University of Ireland Galway, helping expand knowledge about how certain fungi influence animal behavior.

The fungus belongs to a group known for controlling the actions of insects and spiders. After infection, the fungus affects the nervous system, causing the spider to move differently and often seek environments that help the fungus grow and spread its spores.

This behavior change increases the chances of the fungus reproducing successfully. Similar fungi have been observed affecting ants and other small creatures, showing how some organisms can manipulate host behavior to survive.

Researchers consider the discovery important for understanding parasitic relationships in nature. The finding highlights the complex interactions between fungi and animals, demonstrating how evolution can produce highly specialized survival strategies. – A Facebook post by ‘Space World’

Scientists found that house cats and tigers share about 95.6% of the same DNA. That means much of their basic biology is very similar, since DNA is the set of instructions that builds and runs an animal. Even though one is small and lives in homes while the other is huge and lives in the wild, their genetic makeup shows they are close relatives on the family tree of cats.

This similarity helps explain why house cats and tigers can show some of the same behaviors, like stalking, pouncing, and grooming. Small differences in their genes, and changes that affect when and how genes work, lead to big differences in size, strength, and lifestyle. So a few key genetic shifts can turn a tiny pet into a powerful wild hunter over many generations.

Knowing how alike they are is useful for science and care. Studying one can give clues about the other, helping vets, conservationists, and researchers learn about health, diseases, and behavior. It’s a reminder that the familiar cat on your lap and the mighty tiger in the wild share a deep biological link, and both deserve respect and protection. – A Facebook post by ‘Colours of Nature’

Charles Darwin once called them "hideous-looking creatures," but they are actually one of the most remarkable evolutionary success stories on Earth.

Found exclusively in the Galápagos Islands, the Marine Iguana is the only lizard in the world that has learned to forage in the ocean. Because the volcanic islands offer almost no green vegetation, these reptiles dive into the freezing ocean waters to scrape algae off underwater rocks.

To survive the freezing depths, their heart rate drops to half its normal speed to conserve heat. But their biggest problem is the seawater they swallow while eating. If they absorbed that much salt, it would kill them. Evolution provided a bizarre solution: they have specialized glands right above their eyes that filter the salt out of their blood. When they return to the sunny rocks to warm up, they forcefully sneeze the pure saltwater out of their noses, which is why their heads always look like they are covered in white snow!

Which of these facts surprised you the most? – A Facebook post by ‘Beauty of Nature’

NASA sent thousands of jellyfish to space. They all came back different…

In the 1990s, NASA launched 2,000 moon jellyfish polyps into orbit to study biological development in microgravity, a mission that saw the population boom to 60,000. While these jellyfish developed physically normal structures in space, their return to Earth exposed a critical biological failure. The space-raised creatures suffered from severe pulsing abnormalities, leaving them unable to swim or orient themselves correctly against the pull of Earth's gravity.

This disorientation stems from the malformation of statoliths, calcium-based crystals that function like the human inner ear to detect balance and movement. Without the guiding force of gravity during their development, these sensory systems failed to calibrate, rendering the jellyfish functionally incapacitated on their home planet. These findings highlight a daunting hurdle for long-term space colonization: organisms born in the void may be biologically tethered to microgravity, unable to survive on a planetary surface. – A Facebook post by Hashem AI-Ghaili

Did you know fungi might be the Earth’s original internet?

Beneath our feet, massive underground networks called mycelium connect trees, plants, and entire ecosystems — sharing nutrients, water, and even signals.

This hidden system keeps forests alive, balanced, and thriving in ways we’re only starting to understand. Nature isn’t just beautiful… it’s incredibly intelligent. – A Facebook post by ‘Hidden Facts’

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Tuesday, 28 April 2026

Geraniums

Geranium is a genus of 422 species of annual, biennial, and perennial plants that are commonly known as geraniums or cranesbills. They are found throughout the temperate regions of the world and the mountains of the tropics, with the greatest diversity in the eastern part of the Mediterranean region. - Wikipedia

Geraniums can survive a few hours in the full sun, and also tolerate partial shade. They look great in borders mixed with other bedding plants as well as in hanging baskets, pots or in window boxes. Annual geraniums are popular for their wide range of brilliant flower colours and attractive leaves.

Geraniums are easy to look after. They do not require watering once they have settled in unless it is a particularly dry period. Geraniums grown in pots will need more regular watering. With proper care, they can live up to 40 years.

Geranium leaves are unique – soft, large with a horse-shoe shaped marking. Geranium leaves, particularly from scented-leaf Pelargonium varieties, are highly fragrant, edible, and versatile, used for aromatherapy, culinary flavourings, and herbal remedies. They vary in shape and texture – often fuzzy or serrated – and contain aromatic oils (rose, lemon, mint) that are released when crushed.
Fun Fact: The Geranium represents friendship, and good health. It conveyed sentiments of comfort and domestic harmony, often sent to wish someone well or to express cheer after hardship.

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!

Monday, 27 April 2026

Laughter, The Best Medicine

As is my wont, I like to start the week with some humour. I enjoy all sorts of humour – even the cheesy ones. I appreciate anything that can make me smile or laugh out loud.

They say laughter is the best medicine, and the most wasted of all days is that which one has not laughed. So, laugh whenever you can.

If you are finding it difficult to laugh in these troubled times, I hope the following humour, cheesy ones, I admit, will bring on a smile – at least. May your days be filled with laughter.

Image created on Canva
A pessimist sees a dark tunnel.
An optimist sees light a the end of the tunnel.
A realist sees a freight train.
The train driver sees three idiots standing on the tracks.

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A little girl asked her mother, “Can I go outside and play with the boys?”
Her mother replied, “No, you can’t play with the boys, they’re too rough.”
The little girl thought about it for a few moments and asked, “If I can find a smooth one, can I play with him?”

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“May I take your order?” the waiter asked.
“Yes. I’m just wondering, how do you prepare your chickens?”
“Nothing special sir,” he replied. “We just tell them straight out that they’re going to die.”

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“I certainly wish you could bake bread the way my mother used to,” complained the husband.
“And I sure wish you could make the dough my father used to,” retorted the wife.

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“I’m stuck with one word on this crossword, the clue is a ten-letter word, similar to being silly.”
“Oh, well that’s ridiculous.”
“I know, I've been stuck on it for hours.”

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Image created on Canva

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Sunday, 26 April 2026

Mysteries of the Deep

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.

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

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

This tiny cephalopod lives in shallow sandy reefs across the Indo-Pacific. Despite its name, the Striped Pyjama Squid is actually closer to cuttlefish than true squid. Its bold brown stripes help camouflage it against sand and coral shadows. At night it hunts small shrimp and crustaceans. When threatened, it can release ink and quickly bury itself in the sand to hide. Its large eyes help it see clearly in low light. - A Facebook post by ‘All About Animals’
Delicate looking, endlessly hungry. A seahorse survives on a digestive system that never pauses. But the detail most people miss is what that actually means for its daily life.

Seahorses are one of the few animals on Earth that live without a stomach. Food slides straight from their narrow snout into a short intestine, moving through so quickly that much of the energy barely stays in the body. Nothing is stored. Everything must be replaced. That is why a seahorse hunts almost constantly.

Anchored to seagrass with its curled tail, it waits in the current like a tiny ambush hunter. When a drifting copepod or shrimp passes too close, the snout snaps forward and the prey vanishes in a fraction of a second.

The process repeats again and again, sometimes thousands of times a day. From the outside, they look slow and ornamental, floating gently through quiet water. Up close, their world is a steady rhythm of watch, strike, swallow, repeat.

Fragile is an illusion. A seahorse survives by turning every passing speck of life into fuel before the current carries it away. – A Facebook Post by ‘Strangest Facts’

The tongue‑eating louse is the only parasite on Earth that doesn't just destroy an organ — it BECOMES the organ. The female louse enters a fish through its gills, latches onto the tongue, and begins to suck blood from the organ using three pairs of front claws. Over time, this blood loss causes the tongue to atrophy, wither, and eventually drop off. The fish is now missing a vital part of its mouth.

Once the tongue is gone, the louse attaches itself to the remaining stub using its powerful legs. It physically replaces the lost organ, and the fish begins to use the parasite as if it were its own tongue — to manipulate prey and swallow food. It’s the only known case of a parasite functionally replacing a host organ.

The fish gets a working “tongue.” The louse gets a steady supply of blood and mucus, and also shares the meal every time the fish eats, snatching floating food particles. This horrifying relationship can last for the fish's entire life.

The creature hit the headlines in 2005 when a horrified shopper found one inside a red‑snapper fillet bought from a London supermarket. It normally lives off the Gulf of California, leading scientists to wonder if the parasite is expanding its range.

Adult Cymothoa exigua is a parasitic isopod, a relative of woodlice, measuring only 3–4 cm (1.2–1.6 inches). Yet this small crustacean pulls off one of the most bizarre life‑history strategies in the animal kingdom — turning its victim into a mobile home and feeding platform in one fell swoop. – A Facebook Post by ‘Wild Wonders’

The pigbutt worm is one of the strangest, most bizarre creatures in the deep sea — and it’s been hiding off the coast of California the whole time.

The pigbutt worm lives between 2,700 and 7,200 feet (820–2,200 meters) below the surface – in the ocean’s “midnight zone,” where sunlight never reaches. It’s neutrally buoyant, meaning it drifts motionless in the dark, with its mouth facing downward, waiting for food to drift into it.

Its scientific name, Chaetopterus pugaporcinus, comes from Latin roots meaning “resembling a pig’s rear.” Scientists gave it that name because it looks exactly like a tiny, disembodied pig butt. It also looks like “Mick Jagger’s lips from the other side,” according to one of the researchers who discovered it.

When threatened, the pigbutt worm performs a magical disappearing act. It releases very small bioluminescent green particles into its mucous cloud, creating a glowing decoy that lingers for 1–2 seconds before fading away. While predators attack the glowing cloud, the worm drifts off unseen in the dark. It also flashes blue light when physically disturbed.

To eat, the worm “casts out a web of snot” to catch organic debris raining down from above – dead animals, fecal pellets, and other particles collectively known as marine snow. It’s a 3D snot web, floating in total darkness.

Discovered in 2007 by the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI), the pigbutt worm is a biological mystery. It displays a strange mix of larval and adult characteristics, leading scientists to believe it may be in the middle of an evolutionary leap – neither fully larva nor fully adult, but something in between. – A Facebook Post by ‘Wild Wonders’

Meet the Flowerhorn cichlid – a fish that doesn't exist in nature, can cost more than a house, and has a personality as big as its bulbous head.

Flowerhorns don't exist in the wild. They are entirely man‑made, created in Malaysia and Taiwan in the mid‑1990s by crossbreeding several Central American cichlid species, including the red devil cichlid and the blood parrot cichlid. The exact genetic recipe is a closely guarded secret, making each lineage a unique "designer" creation. Biologists call them a "genetic abomination" – a mishmash of species that would never meet in nature.

That massive forehead isn't a tumor – it's a nuchal hump called a "kok," a fat‑filled protuberance involved in mate attraction. The bigger the kok, the more valuable the fish. In 2009, a Golden Monkey variety sold for an eye‑watering $600,000 at a Malaysian exhibition – more than most luxury cars. The fish's hump resembles the Chinese god of longevity, and owners believe that as the hump grows, so does their fortune.

Flowerhorns are notoriously aggressive and highly territorial. They will fight any fish that enters their space – including their own reflection. They lock lips, butt heads, and will relentlessly attack until one fish is dead. They are so aggressive that even large, "mean" fish like oscars are no match for a determined Flowerhorn. This is a fish that should always be kept alone. A living rage machine in a glass box.

Flowerhorns are surprisingly intelligent. They can learn tricks, respond to their name, and most notably, recognize their owners. They will often swim to the front of the tank when their owner approaches, following fingers along the glass or even "begging" for food. Some owners report their Flowerhorn will flare its fins or perform a little dance as a greeting. It's a thinking, feeling creature inside that aggressive, bulbous body.

Flowerhorn markings aren't just decorative – some owners believe the black "flowers" along their sides can form numbers that predict winning lottery digits. One woman reportedly won $1 million after reading the numbers from her fish's markings. This superstition has fueled a multi‑million dollar industry where breeders selectively breed for specific patterns and colors. – A Facebook Post by ‘Wild Wonders’

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Saturday, 25 April 2026

Science Today

"All our science, measured against reality, is primitive and childlike – and yet it is the most precious thing we have." - Albert Einstein

Interesting developments on the Science front – courtesy of Facebook pages, ‘Weird Facts’, ‘Unbelievable Facts’, ‘Today I Learned’, ‘Science and Facts’, ‘The Knowledge Factory’, ‘The Study Secrets’ etc… Although trials, experiments and studies show promise, I guess it will be some time yet before they are a reality.

Recent research highlights a fascinating connection between the gut microbiome and muscle strength, with particular focus on the bacterium Roseburia inulinivorans.

In a study involving young adults (aged 18–25) and older adults (aged 65–75), scientists analyzed gut microbiomes and measured muscle performance through tests like handgrip strength, leg press, and bench press.

They discovered that higher levels of Roseburia inulinivorans consistently correlated with greater muscle strength across these metrics. Notably, older participants who carried detectable amounts of this bacterium exhibited about 29% stronger handgrip strength compared to those without it, even without differences in aerobic capacity.

This species appears less abundant in older adults than in younger ones, potentially contributing to the natural decline in muscle function with age, known as sarcopenia.

Experiments in mice reinforced the findings: introducing Roseburia inulinivorans led to improved grip strength and altered muscle fiber composition toward fast-twitch types, which support explosive power and short bursts of activity. The bacterium influences muscle metabolism, possibly via metabolites or signaling pathways along the emerging gut-muscle axis.

These insights suggest that nurturing or supplementing beneficial gut bacteria like Roseburia inulinivorans—perhaps through targeted probiotics—could one day help preserve muscle mass and strength during aging, combating frailty and supporting healthier, more independent later years.

While promising, further human trials are needed to confirm causality and practical applications. – A Facebook post by ‘Science Acumen’

Researchers are studying camel tears to understand how they might help fight toxins, diseases, and even certain snake venoms.

Sometimes nature hides incredible abilities in the animals we think we understand.

Camels are famous for surviving the harsh deserts of the world, enduring extreme heat, long journeys, and very little water. Scientists studying camel biology have discovered something fascinating about their immune systems. Camels produce unusually small and powerful antibodies that behave differently from those found in most other animals.

Because of their tiny size and strong structure, these camel antibodies can reach places in the body that normal antibodies cannot. Researchers are studying them to understand how they might help fight toxins, diseases, and even certain snake venoms. Viral claims about a single camel tear neutralizing dozens of venoms are exaggerated, but the real science behind camel immunity is still remarkable.

This discovery has made camels surprisingly important in modern medical research. Nature often carries powerful biological tools in the most unexpected creatures. What once seemed like just a desert survivor may actually help scientists develop life-saving treatments in the future. – A Facebook post by ‘Spirit Science’

According to research published in the International Journal of Molecular Sciences (2018), Cordyceps mushroom showed anticancer effects against lung cancer, breast cancer, liver cancer, prostate cancer, leukemia, and glioblastoma by stopping cancer cell growth, causing cell cycle arrest, and triggering programmed cell death through pathways such as caspases and MAPK signaling.

The study also reported that Cordyceps mushroom reduced cancer spread by inhibiting metastasis-related enzymes and interfering with DNA and RNA processes. It affected key receptors like adenosine receptors and EGFR involved in tumor growth, suggesting its potential as a supportive or combination approach in cancer treatment.

“Science is broken,” they say… but in reality, it might just be revealing something even more incredible than we ever expected.

Scientists have discovered that oxygen can be produced in complete darkness—deep on the ocean floor, where sunlight never reaches. For decades, we believed oxygen production depended almost entirely on photosynthesis, powered by sunlight. But this discovery challenges that idea, showing that nature still holds secrets far beyond what we understand.

In the crushing depths of the ocean, certain chemical reactions and possibly unique microbial processes are creating oxygen without light. It’s a reminder that life doesn’t always follow the rules we think it does—and that our planet is far more complex, adaptive, and mysterious than we give it credit for.

Rather than proving science is broken, discoveries like this show science is *working exactly as it should*—constantly evolving, questioning, and uncovering new truths. Every breakthrough doesn’t end the story; it expands it.

And if something as fundamental as oxygen can still surprise us… imagine what else is waiting to be found. – A Facebook post

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Friday, 24 April 2026

Loneliness

Are you feeling lonely or alone?

There is a difference between being alone and feeling lonely – in case you are not aware. You can be alone without feeling lonely. You can also be in a crowd and feel terribly lonely. ‘Alone’ is a situation, ‘lonely’ is a negative feeling of isolation, or a longing for connection.

We are born alone, we lead our lives alone, and we die alone. This is a fact of life – an inevitable fact of human existence. It is great to have some company along life’s journey, but despite the company of family and friends, or a spouse, we travel life’s journey on our own. They cannot accompany us throughout life. Each of us has our own destiny.

Being alone can be very nice. You enjoy the solitude and are free to do whatever you like, or you can do nothing at all if you do not wish to. You have ‘alone time’, or ‘me time’ and for those who enjoy their own company, that is one of the best things to have. It is a chance to retreat from the busy, chaotic world outside. No distractions, just pure self indulgence. 

However, not everyone likes the idea of being alone. Indeed, for those who hate being alone, loneliness can be a terrible thing. There is an ache and emptiness in the heart. Some people will do anything to fill that emptiness. If they are not careful, they could end up with bad companies, or bad habits that could ruin their lives.

If you are feeling lonely, take up a hobby, something that you enjoy doing. Or, join a community that has activities that you are interested in. Community gives people a sense of belonging. You mix with people who have the same interest. You make friends. Or you can be a volunteer with a community. The idea is to get active, do something you enjoy! When you are having fun, when you are busy helping others, you have no time to feel lonely.

The people in our lives will not stay with us forever. At some point, we will find ourselves all alone. So, learn to appreciate the pleasure of being alone, learn to enjoy your own company. If you are comfortable with your own company, you will never be lonely.

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