Saturday, 9 May 2026

Crawlies

Live to learn and you will really learn to live. - John C. Maxwell

No matter what else, we can be daily grateful we have been put in touch with knowledge, for its source is inexhaustible. – Unknown

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

A baby cobra does not get a training period. It enters the world already carrying the family business. The real detail is how little drama nature gives it.

Many cobra hatchlings are only a few inches long, but they arrive with working fangs, venom glands, and the defensive reflexes to use them. No mother has to teach the strike. No parent has to explain the bite. The warning system is installed before the snake has even seen its first meal.

That matters because young cobras are born into a brutal world. Birds, mongooses, larger snakes, and even other cobras can turn a hatchling into lunch. So evolution skipped the cute helpless stage and went straight to armed and irritated.

King cobras take the drama even further. Females famously build and guard nests, rare behaviour for snakes, but the babies still emerge prepared to handle trouble alone.

Tiny does not mean harmless. It means the danger has been compressed. Some creatures grow into power. A cobra hatches with it. – A Facebook post by ‘Strangest Facts’

If you look at the top of this reptile's head, you won't just see scales. You will find a highly functional, fully formed literal THIRD EYE staring directly up at the sky!

Welcome to New Zealand, home of the Tuatara.

Looking like a standard lizard, the Tuatara is a biological orphan. It belongs to an ancient order of reptiles (Rhynchocephalia) that thrived 200 million years ago, making it a true living dinosaur!

Its most mind-blowing feature is the Parietal Eye (A Third Eye). Located perfectly on the top center of its skull, this third eye isn't just a bump. It is fully biologically equipped with its own lens, cornea, and retina!

What does it do? As the Tuatara grows, the third eye gets covered by a thin layer of scales. It cannot see high-definition images like normal eyes, but it is highly sensitive to ultraviolet light!

The Tuatara uses this upward-facing radar to calculate the exact angle of the sun, regulate its internal biological clock (circadian rhythm), and ensure its body produces the right hormones for the season!

Nature's ultimate built-in solar panel! – A Facebook post by ‘Wildest Facts’

Most people think all snakes lay eggs, but that is not always true. About 30% of snake species give birth to live young. Instead of laying eggs in a nest, these snakes let their babies develop inside their bodies until they are ready to come out.

There are two main ways this happens. Some snakes keep eggs inside them and the eggs hatch while still inside the mother; the babies then crawl out. Other snakes have a placenta-like system, where the mother sends food and oxygen to the developing young, more like mammals do. Both ways let the babies grow inside until they are ready.

Giving birth to live young helps in places that are cold or risky for eggs left outside. It can protect the babies from predators and bad weather, but it also means the mother must carry them for a long time and needs more energy. This variety shows how flexible and surprising snakes can be in how they reproduce. – A Facebook post by ‘Colours of Nature’

The velvet worm looks like a soft little noodle you would never take seriously. That is a mistake.

This thing is a predator, and it hunts with a pair of slime cannons mounted near its mouth. When a small insect gets close enough, the worm fires two fast jets of sticky slime. The streams swing and cross in front of the animal, weaving a tangled net that glues the prey in place almost instantly.

That attack is not random. Scientists showed that the crossing spray pattern comes from the way the slime shooting organs wobble as the fluid blasts out. The result is a sticky trap that can pin down prey before it has time to bolt. For an animal that moves slowly and does most of its hunting at night, that is a perfect weapon.

Once the insect is trapped, the velvet worm moves in and feeds. It does not need speed, claws, or venom like a snake. It just turns the area in front of it into a glue disaster and lets physics do the rest.

The contrast is what makes this animal so good. It looks harmless. It moves like a little forest gummy. Then suddenly it is firing twin slime jets and wrapping bugs in a sticky net. – A Facebook post by ‘Boat of Evolution’

The Japanese oakblue caterpillar forms a relationship with ants that looks almost like control. It secretes a sugary liquid and special chemicals that attract ants and keep them close.

In return, the ants protect the caterpillar from predators. But it goes a step further. The chemicals can influence the ants’ behavior, making them more aggressive and more focused on guarding the caterpillar than doing their usual colony work.

Calling it “drugs” or “mind control” is a bit dramatic, but the effect is real. It’s a kind of chemical communication that benefits the caterpillar by turning ants into loyal bodyguards.

This is known as mutualism, though slightly one-sided. The ants get food, the caterpillar gets protection. – A Facebook post by ‘Streamers Tea’

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Friday, 8 May 2026

Tulip Flowers

A display of tulips in the Flower Dome
Contrary to popular belief, tulips do not originate from the Netherlands. They are originally from the Central Asian steppes and highlands of Anatolia. It was the European ambassadors who carried the bulbs back to Europe where it started the tulipmania.

The word ‘tulipmania’ refers to the Dutch tulip craze that occurred during the 17th century. At that time, tulips were a symbol of ‘wealth and good taste’.

The name “Tulip” was derived from the shape of the flower that resembled the turban (dulbend or tülband) of Sultans of the Ottoman Empire, now known as Türkiye.

A tulip begins as a bulb in the soil and only becomes known to the world once it is given a name.

Tulips come in a wide variety of vivid colours, with each colour signifying a different meaning. Their appearance signals the arrival of spring.

For hundreds of years, the tulip has been one of the most-loved flowers in the Netherlands. An enduring icon, it's as synonymous with the country as clogs, windmills and cheese.

Some of the tulips on display in the Flower Dome.

Some fun facts about tulips. Tulips are often associated with affection, admiration, and passionate love, making them a popular choice for romantic gestures. Their association with spring also connects them to ideas of rebirth and new beginnings. Tulips generally last between 5 to 10 days in a vase with proper care. 
‘Tulipmania’ is now on at the Flower Dome until the 17th of May. Admission fees apply. Adults pay $12 SGD, Seniors and children below 12 years old pay $8 SGD.

You can click on the picture for a better view.

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Thursday, 7 May 2026

World of Avians

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

You live and learn. Or you don't live long. - Robert A. Heinlein

A peek into the world of our feathered friends.

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

The hoatzin is a South American bird that lives mostly on leaves. Unlike most birds that have simple stomachs, the hoatzin has a special part of its gut where bacteria help break down the tough plant matter. This process is much like what happens in a cow’s stomach, where microbes ferment the food so the animal can get nutrients from leaves.

Because of this fermentation, the hoatzin’s digestion produces a strong, unusual smell. The bird often gives off a sour, cheesy odor that people notice easily. For that reason, many locals call it the “stinkbird.” The smell comes from the gases and waste created as bacteria work on the leaves inside the bird’s gut.

This way of eating makes the hoatzin very different from other birds. It can eat leaves that many birds cannot digest, but the trade-off is the bad smell and a slower metabolism. Still, the hoatzin has found its own niche in the forests and swamps where leafy food is plentiful, and its strange digestion is part of what makes it special. – A Facebook post by ‘Amazing World’

In the sunlit savannas and open woodlands of northeastern Africa, the Nubian Woodpecker moves with sharp focus along tree trunks and branches.

Its golden back catches the light against rough bark as it pauses, taps, and listens before striking. Each movement is deliberate.

What sets this bird apart is its ability to detect what lies beneath the surface. By sensing subtle vibrations and sounds within the wood, it can locate insects hidden deep inside. To the woodpecker, a tree is not solid — it’s a landscape filled with signals.

Once it identifies movement, it drills with precision, uncovering larvae concealed beneath the bark.

A brief flash of gold on a tree trunk may seem like a simple moment, but beneath it is a highly skilled hunter reading a world we cannot hear. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough

What appears to us as empty ground is filled with signals an Eagle can interpret with remarkable precision. From high above, very little escapes its notice. But what most people underestimate is just how refined that vision truly is.

An eagle’s eyes are built for both distance and detail. With a much higher density of photoreceptors than humans, they can detect subtle movements from extraordinary ranges — then lock onto a target with sharp clarity. They don’t just see farther. They see differently.

Some birds of prey can perceive parts of the ultraviolet spectrum, revealing traces that remain invisible to us. What looks like bare ground may hold hidden patterns of movement — faint signals left behind by animals passing through. Every movement leaves a trace. Every trace can be read.

By the time an eagle folds its wings and begins its dive, the decision has already been made. What we call invisible is often simply beyond the limits of human perception. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough

When a Red-headed Vulture is born, it is small, naked, and totally helpless. It cannot fly or feed itself. The parents must bring food and keep it warm until the young bird grows feathers and grows stronger. This early time is fragile, and the chick depends completely on its family for care and protection.

As it grows, the vulture changes quickly. Feathers come in, muscles get stronger, and soon it can take to the air. Adult Red-headed Vultures are very large, with wings that can spread up to nine feet across. With these wide wings they can glide for long hours above the land, using wind currents to help them travel without much effort.

One of the vulture’s greatest gifts is its sharp eyesight. From high above open plains and fields it can spot dead animals from far away. By finding and eating carrion, it helps clean the land and prevent disease. Though it starts life weak, the Red-headed Vulture becomes a powerful and important bird in the places where it lives. – A Facebook post by ‘Colours of Nature’

Meet the "glitch cardinal"—a living creature split perfectly down the middle. Half red, half gray. Half male, half female.

In Erie, Pennsylvania, lifelong birdwatchers Jeffrey and Shirley Caldwell saw something they couldn't explain at first. A cardinal landed in the dawn redwood tree ten yards from their home—one side blazing vermilion red like a male, the other side soft taupe gray-brown like a female. The line ran perfectly down the middle.

They weren't wrong. The anomaly has a name: bilateral gynandromorphism—a biological event so rare it's considered a "one-in-a-million" encounter.

"When a friend showed me a blurry cell phone photo, my heart started pounding," said Jamie Hill, a retired ornithologist who has searched for the long-thought-extinct ivory-billed woodpecker for nearly two decades. "Photographing this gynandromorph northern cardinal was almost as exciting as I think I would get if I actually found the woodpecker".

This cardinal is what scientists call a chimera—two individuals fused into one. It began as a female egg cell that developed with two nuclei: one carrying a male Z chromosome, one carrying a female W chromosome. Two separate Z-carrying sperm simultaneously fertilized each nucleus. The result was a single egg containing both a ZZ male embryo and a ZW female embryo, fused together.

Every cell on the bright red male side carries ZZ chromosomes. Every cell on the taupe female side carries ZW chromosomes. This bird has lived its entire life with two genetic identities fighting for control of one body.

And the reproductive organs match the plumage. This cardinal has one functioning ovary on its female side and one functioning testis on its male side. Theoretically, it could mate with a male cardinal and lay fertile eggs as a female, or mate with a female cardinal and father eggs as a male.

Daniel Hooper, a postdoctoral fellow at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, explains: "Cardinals are one of the most well-known sexually dimorphic birds in North America—their bright red plumage in males is iconic—so people easily notice when they look different".

This condition likely occurs across all bird species, but it goes unnoticed in species where males and females look identical. In cardinals, the split is impossible to miss.

In 2014, the Inland Bird Banding Association caught a similar bilateral gynandromorph cardinal in central Texas. That bird returned to their feeders every winter, wearing its split colors like a badge of impossible survival.

Bilateral gynandromorphism occurs in insects, bees, snakes, butterflies, and even lobsters. One of the first documented discoveries dates back to the 18th century, when a lobster was found to have "all the parts of generation double". But nothing hits like the cardinal. Half red. Half gray. Split down the middle. Evolution's most beautiful glitch. – A Facebook post by ‘Wild Wonders’

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Wednesday, 6 May 2026

Tulipmania 2026

Tulipmania returns to the Flower Dome for its 12th edition with a vibrant tribute to the Netherlands' rich artistic legacy. Presented in collaboration with the Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in Singapore, the display marks a fresh direction where time-honoured tradition meets contemporary expression.

I was there to have a look at the display last week. The Flower Dome put up an impressive display of Tulips and other bulb flowers that bloomed together with the tulips.

At the entrance of the Dome is a large-scale Delftware Tulipiere – a distinctive vase design unique to the Netherlands. A tulipiere (or tulip-holder) is a specialized, multi-spouted vase, typically made of Delftware, designed to display tulips individually. Originating in the 17th-century Netherlands, these vessels allowed single stems or bulbs to be arranged securely, making them highly fashionable status symbols used to showcase valuable flowers.

A replica of the De Kat Windmill. The De Kat windmill is the world’s last remaining windmill that still grinds raw materials into natural pigments for the world’s finest art.
A recreation of the iconic Rijksmuseum set amidst a breath-taking sea of tulips. The Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam is the national museum of the Netherlands.
Van Gogh’s Sunflowers and Starry Night.
Delft Blue Houses, each a miniature masterpiece modelled after historic Dutch landmarks and architectural treasures. In the early years of the 17th century, potters in the city of Delft, observing the great esteem in which Chinese porcelain was held, set themselves to its imitation. From this endeavour arose what is now termed Delftware: an earthware coated in a white tin glaze and painted with designs in cobalt blue.
Traditional Dutch clogs, or ‘klompen’, are iconic wooden shoes with over 800 years of history, historically worn by farmers and factory workers for protection in muddy fields. While rarely worn today, they remain a cultural symbol, and are often sold as souvenirs.
Tulip field – said to be perhaps the most enduring image of the Netherlands in spring. Bulbs are planted in parallel rows, each cultivar kept distinct. At flowering, the landscape resolves into continuous bands of colour extending across a level horizon.
‘Tulipmania 2026’ is now on until the 17th of May. Admission fees apply. Adults pay $12 SGD, Seniors and children below 12 years old pay $8 SGD.

You can click on the picture for a better view.

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Tuesday, 5 May 2026

The World of Animals

Animals are not property or "things" but rather living organisms, subjects of a life, who are worthy of our compassion, respect, friendship, and support. - Marc Bekoff

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’, etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

The baby rabbit sits very still, like an old teacher deep in thought. Its small body seems calm and steady. The way it holds its paws and the quiet look in its eyes make you think of someone who has learned a lot. Even its soft fur looks like a simple robe worn by a wise person who does not need attention.

You can imagine a whole life behind that gentle face. Maybe it once leaped from branch to branch, faced tough days, and learned the right moves to stay safe. Now it rests in a sunny corner, showing the young ones a slow hop or a careful blink. It does not brag. It only moves when needed, like a master who has no hurry.

Seeing this little rabbit makes people smile and feel calm. It reminds us that strength can be quiet and simple. You do not have to be loud to be strong. Watching it, you remember to slow down, breathe, and be kind — as if you, too, have learned a gentle lesson from a retired kung fu master. - A Facebook post by 'Amazing World'

Many people think camels keep water in their humps, but that’s not true. The humps are actually full of fat. This fat acts like a storage pack the camel can use when food and water are hard to find in the desert. The hump is a handy place to keep extra fuel without making the camel too heavy all over its body.

When the camel needs energy, its body breaks down the fat. This process also creates water as a byproduct, so the camel gets both energy and some water from the same source. That helps the animal stay alive during long trips or when it cannot find water for days. Camels can go a long time without drinking because of this fat reserve and other special features like reducing water loss.

Keeping the fat in the hump instead of all over the body also helps the camel stay cooler in extreme heat. If the fat were spread under the skin, it would trap more heat. You can even see a healthy camel’s hump standing tall, and a hungry or thirsty camel’s hump sagging as the fat is used up. This clever design helps camels survive in tough desert conditions. – A Facebook post by 'Amazing World'

This isn’t a cute pet. It is a hormone-fueled hostage situation. If a female ferret doesn’t get a date, she literally dies of a toxic overdose.

We look at ferrets and see adorable, dancing carpet-noodles. Evolution looks at them and sees a biological ticking time bomb.

Here is the dark truth about female ferrets:
When they go into heat, their bodies flood with estrogen. Most animals cycle out of heat naturally after a few days. Not the ferret. Once her cycle starts, it refuses to stop until she successfully mates. The estrogen just keeps pumping, and pumping, and pumping.

If she doesn't find a male, that extreme level of estrogen actually becomes highly toxic. It attacks her own bone marrow, destroys her ability to produce red blood cells, and she literally dies from a condition called aplastic anemia. Her own reproductive system actively assassinates her if she stays single.

So, how does the male save her?

He doesn't bring flowers. The mating process is an absolute wrestling match. Because females are "induced ovulators," the male literally has to grab her by the scruff of the neck and drag her around just to trigger her ovulation and shut off the toxic estrogen factory.

It looks like a crime scene, but it is the only thing keeping her alive. Nature really made a creature so desperate for romance that being single is a terminal illness. – A Facebook post by 'Cronus'

An elephant can weigh six tons and still run from a sound no louder than a hum. Size means nothing when the pain lands in the wrong place. But the detail that changed conservation surprised everyone.

Bees do not need to pierce thick hide to win. They target soft tissue, slipping into trunks, stinging around the eyes, crawling inside sensitive ears. One swarm can turn confidence into chaos in seconds.

Researchers in Kenya tested this instinct by stringing working beehives along farm boundaries. The result was practical and immediate. When elephants nudged the fence wire, the hives shook, the buzzing rose, and most herds retreated before breaking through.

Crop raids dropped sharply in participating areas. Farmers gained protection without bullets or trenches, and they harvested honey as a second income stream.

Over time, elephants learned the association. Even recorded buzzing now causes hesitation or full retreat. Memory carries the lesson forward.

The solution is elegant because it respects both sides. No walls, no weapons, just biology doing what it already does. A creature built like a tank still yields to a winged warning.

Sometimes survival is decided by who listens first. – A Facebook post by 'Strangest Facts'

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Monday, 4 May 2026

Humorous Quips

A new day, and a new week. Here’s a little humour to help you start the week on a positive note.

A sense of humour can help us get over life’s diffiuclt moments. All problems will be resolved one way or another eventually. So, why brood, worry and be unhappy. It doesn’t solve anything. We have to be able to laugh, no matter what life throws at us. If we can maintain a sunny disposition, the lingering dark clouds will disperse.

Anyhow, here are some humorous quips. I hope they can bring on a smile, or a chuckle. May your days be filled with laughter.

Image created on Canva

There are three proven rules for good teeth: brush after every meal; see your dentist twice a year; and mind your own business. - Henry Boyd

The old begin to complain of the conduct of the young when they themselves are no longer able to set a bad example. - Francois de La Rochefoucauld

Democracy means that anyone can grow up to be president, and anyone who doesn’t grow up can be vice president. - Johnny Carson

I can’t understand why a person will take a year to write a novel when he can easily buy one for a few dollars. - Fred Allen

The great charm of cats is their rampant egotism, their devil may care attitude toward responsibility, and their disinclination to earn an honest dollar. - Robertson Davies

Despite all the good the world seems to offer, true happiness can only be found in one thing – shopping. - Ling Woo

I’ve finally reached the age where my Wild Oats have turned into All-Bran! - Tom Wilson

You can always get a facelift, tummy tuck, breast implants, etc. but you can’t fix stupid. - Ron White

A male gynaecologist is like an auto mechanic who has never owned a car. - Carrie Snow

The great advantage of being in a rut is that when one is in a rut, one knows exactly where one is. - Arnold Bennett

Image created on Canva

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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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