Thursday, 23 April 2026

Plants

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

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

A peek into the world of plants. Here are some trivia, and fun facts about plants, courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Strangest Facts’ ‘Colours of Nature’, ‘Ancestral Stories’, ‘Weird Facts’, ‘Unbelievable Facts’, ‘Today I Learned’, ‘Science and Facts’, ‘Crazy Creatures’, ‘The Knowledge Factory’, ‘The Study Secrets’ etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

Researchers find English ivy dramatically reduces mold and fecal particles in the air in just hours. English ivy may be more than just a decorative houseplant—it could be a powerful natural air purifier.

This find is based on preliminary research presented at the American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology annual meeting in Anaheim, California in 2005.

In an experiment conducted by Hilary Spyers-Duran, FNP, and a colleague at West Coast Clinical Trials, containers were filled with moldy bread and canine feces to simulate poor air conditions.

When English ivy was added, researchers recorded a significant drop in airborne particulate matter, with mold levels falling by 78.5% and fecal particles by 94.25% over 12 hours.

While these findings are promising, it’s important to note that the study has not yet undergone peer review and should be interpreted with caution.

Still, the results suggest that English ivy could play a role in reducing exposure to harmful airborne mold spores, which have been linked to various health problems.

The researchers caution that while ivy may be helpful outdoors where pet waste is more prevalent, it should be kept out of reach of children and pets due to its toxicity.

Nepenthes rajah grows in Borneo's Mount Kinabalu where nitrogen is nearly absent from soil. The digestive fluid takes two months to break down a single rat completely. These giant pitchers can span 16 inches across—wide enough to trap shrews and frogs too. Local guides report finding partially digested lizards floating in the acid pools. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’
They may look soft, white, and harmless, but snowberries are actually toxic. These winter berries contain saponins, a natural compound that can cause nausea and vomiting if eaten. Found across North America and Europe, they’re a reminder that beauty in nature doesn’t always mean safety. Always identify wild plants before touching or tasting them.
The resurrection plant is one of nature’s most fascinating survivors. According to Wikipedia, species like Selaginella lepidophylla can lose more than 90 percent of their water content and remain in a dormant state for months or even years. In this bone‑dry condition, the plant curls into a tight ball and looks completely lifeless.

According to Forbes, once exposed to water, the resurrection plant can revive within just a few hours. Its leaves unfurl, turn green and photosynthesis resumes, making it appear as if the plant has come back from the dead. Some specimens have even been documented to spring back to life after decades of dormancy in desert conditions.

According to scientific studies, this remarkable ability is due to unique cellular adaptations that allow the plant to halt metabolic activity without dying and then restart it once rehydrated. Unlike seeds or spores, which naturally tolerate drying, resurrection plants retain this ability in their fully developed tissues, making them rare in the plant kingdom. – A Facebook post by ‘Brainy Monkey’

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Wednesday, 22 April 2026

Insects

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

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

Today, we take a peek into the world of insects. Some interesting fun facts about insects – courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Colours of Nature’, ‘Ancestral Stories’, ‘Weird Facts’, ‘Unbelievable Facts’, ‘Today I Learned’, ‘Science and Facts’, ‘Crazy Creatures, ‘The Knowledge Factory’, ‘The Study Secrets’ etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

It looks like something built to bite, but it never learned how. All legs, no weapons, just a brief appearance that feels more dramatic than it is. But the part most people miss is what it was before this.

For most of its life, it lives out of sight. Underground, crane fly larvae quietly break down decaying plants and organic debris. That slow process feeds the soil, turning waste into nutrients everything else depends on. That phase can last months, sometimes longer.

The flying form is the final chapter, and it’s short. In many cases, only a few days. No feeding, no hunting, no interest in anything but finishing the cycle. That’s why the flight looks awkward. It isn’t built for precision. It’s built for urgency.

So when one drifts through a yard or taps against a porch light, it isn’t a warning sign. It’s confirmation. The ground beneath is active, balanced, and alive. Not everything that looks like a threat was designed to be one. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

This is Chrysilla volupe, a tiny jumping spider that looks as if nature itself dipped a gemstone in paint. Found across parts of Asia, this miniature marvel dazzles with iridescent hues of electric blue, fiery orange, and regal purple, making it one of the most visually stunning spiders in the world.

Despite its vivid colors, Chrysilla volupe is a master of stealth and agility. Like other jumping spiders, it relies on exceptional vision and precision to stalk and leap on prey, hunting insects with astonishing accuracy. Its brilliant coloration likely plays a role in courtship and communication, allowing males to impress females while warding off rivals.

Though small in size, this spider embodies the perfect blend of function and artistry, showing how evolution can produce creatures that are as mesmerizing as they are efficient hunters. Chrysilla volupe is a living jewel, a tiny reminder that even the smallest creatures can hold spectacular beauty. - A Facebook post by Patrick Barnes

Wolf spiders look like something to avoid, yet they quietly eliminate some of the most dangerous pests around us. Here’s what that actually means in practice.

They do not spin webs and wait. They hunt on the move, relying on speed, strong vision, and quick reflexes to track prey across floors, soil, and walls.

That hunting style puts them face to face with insects and other spiders people actively fear. Roaches, crickets, and mosquitoes are routine targets, but they will also attack brown recluses and black widows when the opportunity presents itself.

It is not a speciality, it is persistence. A single spider hunts repeatedly, night after night, thinning out populations that would otherwise multiply quickly in hidden corners.

Despite their size and appearance, they are not aggressive toward people. Most encounters end with the spider retreating, more interested in escape than conflict.

What stands out is the contrast. They look like a problem, but function like control. The fear is immediate. The benefit is ongoing. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

Each red shell is a built in defense system, removing pests before damage spreads. A single ladybug can clear dozens of aphids in a single day

Here’s how that quiet control actually works

Aphids multiply fast, often cloning themselves and covering a plant in dense clusters within days. They feed by draining sap, weakening stems and leaving leaves curled and stunted.

Ladybugs step into that cycle early. Both adults and their larvae hunt constantly, moving with steady precision across stems and undersides of leaves where infestations begin.

The larvae are even more aggressive. They look nothing like the familiar spotted beetle, closer to tiny armored predators, and they consume pests at a higher rate before ever reaching adulthood.

This process stays targeted. Plants are left intact, beneficial insects remain untouched, and balance is restored without chemicals or disruption.

That brief flicker of red is not random. It is control in motion. What seems small is quietly decisive. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

Scientists in Thailand discovered something that looks like a science experiment gone wrong – a spider that is literally half female and half male, split perfectly down the middle.

This is bilateral gynandromorphism – an organism with both sexes divided along the midline. It happens when an error occurs during the earliest cell divisions of an embryo, causing one half to develop with male sex chromosomes and the other half with female chromosomes. The result is a living, breathing biological contradiction.

· The new species is called Damarchus inazuma. Its scientific name is inspired by Inazuma, a character from the manga One Piece who can switch between male and female forms. The character’s signature look – orange on one side and white on the other – mirrors the spider’s split coloration perfectly.

· The difference is dramatic. Female Damarchus inazuma are bright orange, larger, and have bigger fangs. Males are grayish-white, smaller, and have smaller fangs. The gynandromorph specimen? It is female on its left side (orange) and male on its right side (grayish-white). Each side has its own distinct sex characteristics.

· This is the first recorded gynandromorph in its entire spider family. It’s also only the third known case in the mygalomorph group – the infraorder that includes tarantulas and other “primitive” spiders.

· Gynandromorphism is NOT hermaphroditism. Hermaphrodites have both sex organs but remain symmetrical. Gynandromorphs are literally split – one side male, one side female, often with visible differences in color, size, and even fang shape.

· The cause remains a mystery. Scientists believe it may result from an error in sex chromosome division during early development, possibly triggered by environmental factors, parasites, or viruses. But the exact trigger is still unknown. A Facebook post by ‘Wild Wonders’

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Tuesday, 21 April 2026

Daisies

are any of several species of flowering plants belonging to the aster family Asteraceae. Plants called daisies are distinguished by a composite flower head composed of white ray flowers surrounding a centre consisting of disk flowers, though other colour combinations are common.

Although native to Europe, daisies can be found growing all over the world due to its adaptive nature.

This is the Argyranthemum frutescens, commonly known as Marguerite daisies or Moroccan daisies. They are flowering perennials often grown for their long blooming period. 

They feature daisy-like flowers with distinct colored centers and ray florets, commonly pink or white. They thrive in full sun and well-drained soil, making them popular in temperate climates and decorative garden displays. 

You can click on the picture for a better view.

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Monday, 20 April 2026

Witty Humour

A little humour to start the week.

Aphorisms and quotes that are witty and humorous have an advantage. They make us smile and are therefore more easily remembered.

Take a look at today’s selection of witty aphorisms. Remember the ones you like, and go impress your friends with your wit and humour. You will be very popular. We all like a witty and humorous person.

Have a great week ahead and may your days be filled with laughter.

Image created on Canva

When a man retires and time is no longer a matter of urgent importance, his colleagues generally present him with a watch. - R. C. Sherriff

A person will sometimes devote all his life to the development of one part of his body – the wishbone. - Robert Frost

The fellow that agrees with everything you say is either a fool or he is getting ready to skin you. - Kin Hubbard

The first day, a guest; the second, a burden; the third, a pest. - Edouard R. Laboulaye

If you are irritated by every rub, how will you be polished? - Mevlana Rumi

Nobody ever forgets where he buried a hatchet. - Unknown

A study of economics usually reveals that the best time to buy anything is last year. - Marty Allen

Only some of us can learn by other people’s mistakes. The rest of us have to be the other people. - Unknown

If the grass on the other side of the fence appears greener … it must be all the fertilizer they are using. - Kevin Rodowicz

The inherent vice of capitalism is the unequal sharing of the blessings. The inherent blessing of socialism is the equal sharing of misery. - Winston Churchill

Image created on Canva

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Sunday, 19 April 2026

Health Food

Eat to live, not live to eat. - Socrates

The benefits of consuming the following food/fruits. The information is taken from Facebook posts by ‘Food IQ’. 👉 HERE

This content is shared purely for educational and awareness purposes. The information provided is based on scientific research and studies. 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!

Yogurt is a primary source of Calcium and Vitamin D, but these minerals are fat-soluble and require a high-quality lipid carrier for maximum absorption. Almonds provide the specific monounsaturated fats and Vitamin E that act as the chemical catalyst. This pairing ensures that the calcium doesn't just circulate in your blood (where it can harden arteries), but is physically transported and "cemented" into your bone matrix by activating the body's mineralization proteins. – A Facebook post by ‘Fruit IQ’
Onions are one of the most underappreciated and nutritionally powerful vegetables consumed daily by billions of people worldwide! This humble kitchen staple belongs to the allium family alongside garlic and contains an extraordinary concentration of quercetin, one of the most extensively studied flavonoid antioxidants in nutritional medicine. Quercetin demonstrates powerful anti-inflammatory properties by inhibiting the release of histamine and other inflammatory mediators, making onions particularly beneficial for allergy sufferers and those with chronic inflammatory conditions. The organosulfur compounds released when onions are cut — the same compounds responsible for eye irritation — have demonstrated remarkable antimicrobial activity against a broad spectrum of harmful bacteria including Salmonella, E. coli, and Staphylococcus aureus in laboratory studies. Regular onion consumption has been associated with significantly reduced cardiovascular disease risk through multiple mechanisms including blood pressure reduction, platelet aggregation inhibition, and LDL cholesterol lowering effects. Epidemiological studies consistently show populations with high allium vegetable consumption have substantially lower rates of stomach and colorectal cancers. Raw onions preserve maximum quercetin content while cooking reduces bioactive compounds significantly. This extraordinary vegetable deserves far more recognition as a genuine functional medicine food! – A Facebook post by ‘Health Knowledge’
When you cook a potato and then cool it to 4°C, it undergoes Retrogradation. This turns digestible starch into Resistant Starch Type 3. This starch escapes the small intestine and goes straight to the colon, where it feeds "good" bacteria instead of spiking your insulin. This effectively cuts the caloric load of the potato by 20% even if you reheat it later. – A Facebook post by ‘Fruit IQ’
As a banana ripens, its Resistant Starch (which the body cannot digest) converts into simple sugars (sucrose and glucose). A banana with a "green tip" is loaded with Resistant Starch Type 2, which passes through your small intestine untouched and feeds the "lean-body" bacteria in your colon. This results in a 40% lower insulin response compared to a fully yellow banana, effectively turning your snack into a prebiotic tool rather than a blood-sugar spike. – A Facebook post by ‘Fruit IQ’
When chia seeds are soaked in water, they form a simple "mucilage" gel. However, when mixed with yogurt, the fats and proteins in the dairy coat the seeds, creating a more complex "lipid-fiber" matrix. This structure takes longer for the body to break down, slowing digestion and preventing insulin spikes. As a result, the energy from the meal is released more steadily, keeping energy levels stable for up to 5 hours. – A Facebook post by ‘Fruit IQ’

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Saturday, 18 April 2026

Feathered Friends

A bird does not sing because it has an answer. It sings because it has a song. - Lou Holtz

A peek into the world of our feathered friends.

Some interesting fun facts about birds – courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Colours of Nature’, ‘Ancestral Stories’, ‘Weird Facts’, ‘Unbelievable Facts’, ‘Today I Learned’, ‘Science and Facts’, ‘Crazy Creatures’, ‘The Knowledge Factory’, ‘The Study Secrets’ etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

One claw. One kick. Hospital record. There is only one. One creature that can claim this. One species that holds this title.

The cassowary stands alone at the top of this particular mountain. No other creature on Earth can make this claim. Not because others have not tried. Millions of species have existed on this planet. Billions of individual creatures have lived and competed and evolved. Because others have failed.

Evolution is competition. Relentless, patient, merciless competition across millions of years. Every generation is a test. Every survival is a small victory. Every lineage is a series of wins against impossible odds.

And competition has winners. This is what winning looks like. Not a trophy. Not a ceremony. Just quiet dominance in a category no one created on purpose.

Nature does not award medals. It does not keep score. It simply allows some things to continue existing while others fade away. This one continues. – A Facebook post

A crow isn’t just watching you. It’s sizing you up. And once it decides what you are, it doesn’t forget. But the part most people miss is how personal that memory becomes.

In controlled studies, crows learned to recognize individual human faces, even when those faces were hidden behind masks. When a person handled or threatened them, the birds didn’t just react in the moment. They stored it.

Years later, they still responded to that exact face. Not vaguely. Not randomly. Precisely.

Even more striking, they shared that information. Other crows, with no direct experience, began reacting the same way. The knowledge spread through the group like a living memory.

At the same time, they solve multi-step problems that require planning, not instinct. Some bend wires into hooks to pull food from tight spaces. Others use traffic to crack nuts, then wait for the signal before safely retrieving them. This isn’t reflex. It’s judgment, timing, and adaptation working together.

A brain small in size, but built for decisions that last. Which means when a crow looks at you, it isn’t guessing. It already knows what you are. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

A forest that feeds on timing just gave a species another chance. When the rimu trees finally fruited, the silence broke with new life. But the part most people miss is how precise that moment has to be.

Kākāpō do not breed on a schedule. They can wait two to five years for rimu trees to produce the heavy fruit that fuels egg-laying and chick rearing. That means an entire generation depends on a single ecological signal arriving at just the right time.

Today, that rhythm alone is not enough. Conservation teams track each bird, monitor weight shifts, and step in when needed, from managed pairings to hand-raising the most vulnerable chicks.

This surge of hatchlings is not just a lucky season. It is timing aligned with constant human attention. Each chick exists because the window opened and someone was ready. For a species once reduced to a few dozen individuals, survival now lives in rare alignments like this. Sometimes, saving a species is not about control. It is about being ready when the forest finally says yes. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

They enter the world already moving, already visible, already at risk. No slow beginning, just instant survival on open ground. But the part most people miss is how little room there is for error.

An ostrich chick can run within hours of hatching, its body already built for distance. The striped down across its back is not just soft, it is camouflage that fractures its shape against dry grass and heat shimmer, making it harder for predators to lock on.

Growth is relentless. Nearly a foot each month, fueled by constant feeding and the urgency to outgrow vulnerability. By six months, they are close to adult height, but size does not mean safety.

They move in tight family groups, often with several adults watching at once. When danger appears, the chicks do not scatter. They drop low and freeze, relying on pattern and stillness to disappear in plain sight. Every step is calculated, even before they understand why. For them, childhood is not protected. It is practiced. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

They share the sky, but not the same life. One thrives in crowds, the other keeps its distance. But the real difference is not just where they live, it is how they think within those spaces.

Crows are urban tacticians. They memorize human faces, recognize patterns, and even teach other crows which people to trust or avoid. In cities, they drop nuts onto roads and wait for cars to do the hard work, returning only when it is safe to collect the reward.

Ravens move with intention rather than urgency. Often traveling in bonded pairs, they play, plan, and problem solve in ways that look almost deliberate. They cache food across wide territories and remember each location, sometimes months later, navigating vast landscapes with quiet precision.

Their voices reflect it. A crow’s caw is quick and communal. A raven’s call is deeper, slower, carrying farther through empty space.

Even in flight, the distinction is written clearly. One spreads wide and steady. The other cuts the air with a wedge shaped tail.

Same family. Same intelligence. Two completely different ways of being in the world.

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Friday, 17 April 2026

Freedom of Speech

Freedom of Speech – what does that even mean? Should freedom of speech include the freedom to tell lies, and provoke violence? At which point should hate speech be banned?

Freedom of speech is a dangerous thing. People want freedom of speech. But they don’t want to be responsible for the consequences of their speech. Maybe if they were held accountable for what they say, they would be more careful.

Not all things are to be spoken of freely even if you are granted the freedom of speech. What you say might be offensive and it would be better if you keep them to yourself. You have the freedom to say what’s on his mind, but you do not have the right to be offensive. Your words should not be hurtful or to the extent of causing public dissent.

I think people who demand freedom of speech are the people who should not be granted freedom of speech.

Just a thought.

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Thursday, 16 April 2026

The World of Animals

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

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

A peek into the world of 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’, ‘Ancestral Stories’, ‘Weird Facts’, ‘Unbelievable Facts’, ‘Today I Learned’, ‘Science and Facts’, ‘Crazy Creatures’, ‘The Knowledge Factory’, ‘The Study Secrets’ etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

The handstand is not random. It exposes bold markings, makes the skunk look larger, and startles predators into hesitating. That moment of shock often buys time to escape without spraying. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’
Hibernating bears don’t pee for months… Instead, they transform toxic waste into vital protein.

During their months-long winter slumber, bears exhibit a biological marvel by completely ceasing urination and instead recycling their own waste products. Their bodies undergo a sophisticated metabolic shift that converts urea—a byproduct of protein breakdown that is typically toxic if left to accumulate—back into usable amino acids. This internal loop prevents the build-up of nitrogen in the bloodstream while ensuring the animal remains healthy throughout an extended period of total fasting.

This unique adaptation does more than just keep the bear's system clean; it serves as a critical defense against muscle atrophy. By repurposing waste into protein, bears can maintain their physical strength and vital organ function without consuming a single calorie for up to half a year. This evolutionary strategy allows them to emerge from the den in the spring with their muscle mass remarkably intact, a feat that continues to fascinate medical researchers looking for ways to treat human muscle wasting. – A Facebook post by Hashem Al-Ghaili

They shadow parents and older siblings almost immediately, copying how to chew, carry, and seal leaks through observation rather than instruction. By the time they leave the lodge, they have already helped shape wetlands that protect wildlife and transform entire ecosystems. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’
The world's first known white Iberian lynx has been discovered.

In a groundbreaking moment for wildlife enthusiasts, a photographer in Spain has captured what is believed to be the world’s first white Iberian lynx.

This rare find occurred within a species already celebrated as one of the planet’s rarest wild cats, typically known for its tawny, spotted fur. The sighting has been described by researchers as "practically mythical," as such a distinct color variation has never before been recorded in the history of the Iberian lynx.

The animal’s striking appearance is caused by leucism, a rare genetic condition that results in a partial loss of pigmentation. Unlike albinism, the lynx retains its striking natural eye color and displays faint, ghost-like spots across its snowy fur. This discovery not only provides a fascinating look at the species’ genetic makeup but also emphasizes the vital importance of ongoing conservation efforts in the Iberian Peninsula to safeguard these magnificent predators from extinction. – A Facebook post

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Wednesday, 15 April 2026

Health Food

Every living cell in your body is made from the food you eat. If you consistently eat junk food then you’ll have a junk body. - Jeanette Jenkins

The benefits of consuming the following food/fruits. The information is taken from Facebook posts by ‘Food IQ’. 👉 HERE I do not know how true, or accurate they are. But I do know that consumed in moderation, they will not do you any harm.

Tomatoes are famous for Lycopene, a powerful antioxidant linked to UV protection and heart health. In raw tomatoes, lycopene is trapped inside tough cellular walls. High-heat processing (like canning) breaks these walls down, making the lycopene significantly easier for your gut to absorb. While "fresh" is better for Vitamin C, the canned version is the high-performance choice for the heavy-hitting antioxidants. – A Facebook post by ‘Fruit IQ’
This tiny ancient seed is quite possibly the most nutritionally dense food ever discovered on planet earth! The Aztec and Mayan warriors consumed chia seeds as their primary fuel source for sustained energy during battles and long distance running, and modern nutritional science has revealed exactly why these tiny seeds were so prized. Gram for gram, chia seeds contain more omega-3 fatty acids than Atlantic salmon, making them the richest plant-based source of these essential brain and heart-protecting fats on earth. They also provide more calcium than whole milk, more iron than fresh spinach, more antioxidants than fresh blueberries, and a complete protein profile containing all essential amino acids. Just two tablespoons daily delivers 11 grams of fiber that feeds healthy gut bacteria, reduces cholesterol, stabilizes blood sugar, and keeps you feeling full for hours. Chia seeds expand to 10 times their size in liquid, making them extraordinarily filling. Add them to water, smoothies, yogurt, or oatmeal daily and experience the transformation!
Ginger contains prokinetic compounds (gingerols) that stimulate the Migrating Motor Complex (MMC), the "housekeeping" waves of the digestive tract. By accelerating gastric emptying, ginger prevents the fermentation of food that causes gas and systemic inflammation—a primary hidden trigger for cognitive fatigue. – A Facebook post by ‘Fruit IQ’
Beets are concentrated in Inorganic Nitrate. When you consume them, your mouth bacteria convert them into Nitrite, which then becomes Nitric Oxide in your blood. Nitric Oxide relaxes your blood vessels (vasodilation), allowing more oxygen to reach your muscles. Studies show this can increase time-to-exhaustion by 15% because your muscles become more efficient at using the oxygen they already have. – A Facebook post by ‘Fruit IQ’
Garlic contains allicin, a potent antimicrobial that loses strength when heated, while Honey contains hydrogen peroxide and phenolic acids that soothe inflammation. When raw garlic is crushed and submerged in honey, they undergo a biochemical exchange that stabilizes the allicin and creates a "bio-layer" that adheres to the throat and gut. This duo physically blocks viruses from attaching to cell receptors and stimulates the production of white blood cells at the site of infection. – A Facebook post by ‘Fruit IQ’

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Tuesday, 14 April 2026

Clematis Plant

This plant is a Clematis 'Multi-Blue' vine, known for its unique, large-flowered blooms.

Clematis is a genus of about 300 species within the buttercup family, Ranunculaceae. - Wikipedia

They are divided into three groups, early flowering, early large flowered Clematis and late flowering Clematis with many hybrids and cultivars. They are known by many names including ‘traveller’s joy’, ‘old man’s beard’, ‘leather flower’ and ‘vase vine’.

Clematis are perennials and they grow best in cool, moist, well-drained soil in full sun. This perennial flowering vine plant comes in many colours, shapes and sizes. They attract bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds.

I saw this Clematis plant in the Flower Dome during one of my visits.

You can click on the picture for a better view.

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