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Believed to Be Solitary, Male Sperm Whales Actually Hang With the Boys – In Friendships That Can Last Years

Will Falcon aka Vitaly Sokol, CC license
Will Falcon aka Vitaly Sokol, CC license

A Japanese biologist studying the social structure of sperm whales has discovered that the phrase “Saturday’s for the boys,” translates into echolocation.

His research reveals that male sperm whales form strong platonic social bonds among other, normally solitary males—shedding light on the mammalian evolution of bromance.

Famous for spending time hunting in the depths of the ocean, or roaming it lone-wolf style, male sperm whales are not easily researched. Their female halves normally live together in pods of matriarchal leadership, casting males out, much like elephants, when they reach sexual maturity.

It’s long been thought that this was the whole story for male sperm whales, but they actually maintain close male-to-male relationships that can stretch not only across years, but across meetings.

The first evidence that this was the case were mass stranding events that consisted only of males, which led whale biologist Hayao Kobayashi to spend thousands of hours aboard whale-watching vessels collecting observational data.

MORE: Two Beluga Whales Are Free for the First Time Since 2011 With a New Life On The Icelandic Coast

In total, his study reports that twenty pairs of sperm whales observed between 2006 and 2017 in the Nemuro Strait, Japan, were repeatedly seen associating with each other for periods between 2 and 5 years. One pair was found to have spent 26 days hanging out over a period of 5 years. Elephant males associate in similar ways, pairing together for poorly understood reasons outside of the mating season.

Kobayashi’s study reporting the findings suggests that the behavior is down to habitat, and that in areas where food is unreliably available, or where predators are numerous, male sperm whales start associating together.

A whale is a huge animal for any predator to tackle, plus the sperm whale has massive conical teeth. Two together puts them essentially beyond reckoning for even the largest squid or shark.

In terms of hunting, Kobayashi told Hakai Magazine that two males could hunt more effectively or share information about hunting environments through echolocation.

RELATED: Watch Humpback Whales Herd Salmon With Their Fins in Never-Before-Filmed Feeding Behavior

Friendship is a complex animal trait, and understanding it outside of primates is difficult, but knowing whales get the lads together for a weekend fishing trip is a fascinating discovery, and Kobayashi feels that the more we discovery about whales, the more similarities we will discover between them and us.

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Spontaneous Spirit of Humanity Takes Center Stage Around Erupting Iceland Volcano—WATCH

When the recent volcano eruption in Iceland proved to be substantially more harmless than first thought, people began to visit the crater to see what it was like.

For the first time in more than 800 years, Mount Fagradalsfjall began discharging molten lava after Iceland had experienced 50,000 earthquakes in the lead up, bracing locals for some nasty fire-weather.

While the site was originally blocked up, the complete lack of ash and pumice being spewed into the atmosphere eventually meant that thousands of people flocked to see this monumental force of nature in action.

Among those people were Donal Boyd and Frank Nieuwenhuis, a pair of photographers looking for an awe-inspiring moment of solitude with the volcano, and a chance for the shoot of a lifetime.

What they found was that rather than sitting in silence, connecting with the power of nature, listening to the wind and the narration of their thoughts, they had more or less attended something like a music festival.

MORE: Stunning Lava Show Captured by Drone as Icelandic Volcano Erupts for First Time in 6,000 Years

Residents of Iceland since 2015, the two produced a short film entitled Volcano for the People, bravely choosing to devote their precious filming and screen time to the onlookers, with reflections of fire and wonder in their eyes. They hoped to capture the human element, which they felt made the eruption totally unique.

A festival spirit

Donal Boyd

“They could go to this unique type of eruption that wasn’t explosive, that wasn’t spewing ash into the air, and they could sit there and just relax almost, and try to just take it all in,” says Boyd.

“The news spread so fast over social media, that the path formed [as] one footstep turned into five footsteps into 100, and before you knew it there were literally, I think by day four, or five, there were thousands of people going there a day.”

“There was a lot of people sort of looking into the birth of our planet, or the creation of land, because literally land is being created right in front of you; new land,” says Nieuwenhuis. “And this whole country’s been shaped by the lava, so right in front of us this country is being created and shaped even more.”

“People were calling it almost like a performance,” Boyd chimes in, speaking with GNN over Zoom. “Like you go to see some sort of festival and you’re all there together and you’re connecting to it and you’re like ‘oh yeah did you go to that festival?'”

“Some people have been there multiple times like ‘okay I’ve been to day four of Volcano-fest 2021, yeah did you go to day three? Yeah I was at day three,'” he said, pantomiming a conversation.

“What I felt was that everybody who came to that event was so happy to be able to be around people, and so when you saw that people were in need of help, people who were too old or too weak to do the hike, or people who had the wrong shoes, or people who didn’t have flashlights… people started helping each other,” said Nieuwenhuis of the camaraderie.

“I think really because of COVID, because we didn’t have people around us [for so many months], we were so much more appreciative to be around other people, and I think that maybe if there [hadn’t been] COVID, people would have been a bit more selfish there.”

RELATED: Aerial Video of Iceland’s Green Volcano Can Soothe Your Lockdown Stress

A totally democratic natural phenomenon, the only controls placed on the event by Icelandic Search and Rescue involved shepherding people away from areas which were being bathed in noxious gases, but based on one of the most sacred laws of Iceland, there was nothing the government could do to prevent people from coming to see the volcano, since Icelanders have the “right to roam” on any uncultivated land they please.

“I actually think now, having experienced this with so many people, maybe before this event I would have been more selfish and I would have said ‘I know I wish this was more controlled and I would love to experience this by myself,'” said Nieuwenhuis. “But I actually hope that there’s going to be no restrictions except for safety, in the future.”

(WATCH the short film from Mount Fagradalsfjall below.)

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Tiny ‘Mouse Deer’ Born at English Zoo is the Height of a Pencil — And Adorable

SWNS
SWNS

A husband and wife were taking in the sights at the Bristol Zoo Gardens when they came upon a tiny creature that stood about eight inches tall, had round dark button eyes, and delicate shell-pink pointed ears.

“Is that a mouse, dear?” asked the wife.

“No,” the husband answered, “it’s a mouse deer.”

While this conversation can’t be reported as verbatim, it could well have taken place because mother mouse deer Brienne and proud papa mouse deer Jorah welcomed a new addition to their family a little over a month ago.

Proving the adage that good things come in small packages, the bouncing baby lesser Malaysian mouse deer fawn is the height of a standard pencil.

It’s only the second of its species to be born at the Bristol Zoo in the past 10 years. (Its predecessor, a female named Missandei was sent to the Ouwehands Zoo in the Netherlands to participate in the breeding program there.)

Native to southeast Asia, mouse deer, also known as chevrotains, are the smallest hoofed mammals in the world. While diminutive (fully grown, a lesser Malayan mouse deer will weigh only about three pounds), the Bambis are classed as even-toed ungulates, which puts them in the same category as pigs, sheep, giraffe, camels, and hippos.

CHECK OUT: Orphaned Polar Bear That Loved to Hug Arctic Workers Gets New Life

Brienne and Jorah’s offspring remains unnamed at present, as its gender has yet to be determined. Bristol Zoo’s senior mammal keeper Paige Bwye explains that because mouse deer are so small and shy it’s difficult to make the call.

MORE: Chimps From Two Czech Zoos are Zooming Each Other Every Day

According to Tim Rowlands, Hoofstock Team Leader at the Marwell Zoo in Hampshire, the tiny family’s hide-and-seek behavior isn’t unusual. “All deer species will hide their young until they are older, so they will only really come out to feed then hide again,” he told the BBC.

The young mouse deer with its mother, SWNS

Rowlands speaks from experience. Earlier this year, another mouse deer baby—a 13-ounce Javan chevrotain—was delivered to parents Gus and Gwen at Marwell’s Tropical House habitat.

LOOK: Adorable Pictures Show A Critically Endangered Female Chimpanzee Cradling Her Newborn Baby

“There are very few zoos who care for any of the mouse deer species as they are so small in size, very secretive, and nocturnal, so any youngster born is great news for the conservation breeding program,” Rowlands said. “It’s vitally important that we work to ensure these wonderful animals do not disappear for good.”

Bwye reports that Mama B. and ‘Baby Doe’ are thriving. “Brienne is being a fantastic first-time mother and has been very attentive to her infant,” Bwye noted. “It’s doing really well… and has recently started to discover new tastes, such as sweet potato.”

And what could be more ‘fawntastic’ than that?

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North Carolina-based writer Judy Cole has a new rom-com murder mystery debuting at Amazon: And Jilly Came Tumbling After (from Red Sky Presents).

“Long live impudence! It’s my guardian angel in this world.” – Albert Einstein

Quote of the Day: “Long live impudence! It’s my guardian angel in this world.” – Albert Einstein

In Einstein: A Biography, author Jürgen Neffe wrote of the physicist, “His peculiar combination of charm and superciliousness yielded an arrogance that delighted him no end.”

Photo: Federico Scarionati

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quote of the Day page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

 

Tick-Borne Infection Immune to Most Antibiotics May Be Blocked Using Special ‘Nanobodies’

Tiny molecules called nanobodies, which can be designed to mimic antibody structures and functions, may be the key to blocking a tick-borne bacterial infection that remains out of reach of almost all antibiotics, new research suggests.

The infection is called human monocytic ehrlichiosis (HME), and is one of the most prevalent and potentially life-threatening tick-borne diseases in the United States. The disease initially causes flu-like symptoms common to many illnesses, and in rare cases can be fatal if left untreated.

Most antibiotics can’t build up in high enough concentrations to kill the infection-causing bacteria, Ehrlichia chaffeensis, because the microbes live in and multiply inside human immune cells. Commonly known bacterial pathogens like Streptococcus and E. coli do their infectious damage outside of hosts’ cells.

Ohio State University researchers created nanobodies intended to target a protein that makes E. chaffeensis bacteria particularly infectious.

A series of experiments in cell cultures and mice showed that one specific nanobody they created in the lab could inhibit infection by blocking three ways the protein enables the bacteria to hijack immune cells.

“If multiple mechanisms are blocked, that’s better than just stopping one function, and it gives us more confidence that these nanobodies will really work,” said study lead author Yasuko Rikihisa, professor of veterinary biosciences at Ohio State.

RELATED: U.S. Department of Defense Funds New Lyme Disease Vaccine Development

The study provided support for the feasibility of nanobody-based ehrlichiosis treatment, but much more research is needed before a treatment would be available for humans. There is a certain urgency to coming up with an alternative to the antibiotic doxycycline, the only treatment available. The broad-spectrum antibiotic is unsafe for pregnant women and children, and it can cause severe side effects.

“With only a single antibiotic available as a treatment for this infection, if antibiotic resistance were to develop in these bacteria, there is no treatment left. It’s very scary,” Rikihisa said.

The research has been published this month in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The beginnings of the breakthrough

The bacteria that cause ehrlichiosis are part of a family called obligatory intracellular bacteria. E. chaffeensis not only requires internal access to a cell to live, but also blocks host cells’ ability to program their own death with a function called apoptosis—which would kill the bacteria.

CHECK OUT: Scientists Develop New Test That Can Diagnose Lyme Disease in Just 15 Minutes

“Infected cells normally would commit suicide by apoptosis to kill the bacteria inside. But these bacteria block apoptosis and keep the cell alive so they can multiply hundreds of times very rapidly and then kill the host cell,” Rikihisa said.

A longtime specialist in the Rickettsiales family of bacteria to which E. chaffeensis belongs, Rikihisa developed the precise culture conditions that enabled growing these bacteria in the lab in the 1980s, which led to her dozens of discoveries explaining how they work. Among those findings was identification of proteins that help E. chaffeensis block immune cells’ programmed cell death.

The researchers synthesized one of those proteins, called Etf-1, to make a vaccine-style agent that they used to immunize a llama with the help of Jeffrey Lakritz, professor of veterinary preventive medicine at Ohio State. Camels, llamas and alpacas are known to produce single-chain antibodies that include a large antigen binding site on the tip.

The team snipped apart segments of that binding site to create a library of nanobodies with potential to function as antibodies that recognize and attach to the Etf-1 protein and stop E. chaffeensis infection.

“They function similarly to our own antibodies, but they’re tiny, tiny nano-antibodies,” Rikihisa said. “Because they are small, they get into nooks and crannies and recognize antigens much more effectively.

“Big antibodies cannot fit inside a cell. And we don’t need to rely on nanobodies to block extracellular bacteria because they are outside and accessible to ordinary antibodies binding to them.”

After screening the candidates for their effectiveness, the researchers landed on a single nanobody that attached to Etf-1 in cell cultures and inhibited three of its functions. By making the nanobodies in the fluid inside E. coli cells, Rikihisa said her lab could produce them at an industrial scale if needed—packing millions of them into a small drop.

She collaborated with co-author Dehua Pei, professor of chemistry and biochemistry at Ohio State, to combine the tiny molecules with a cell-penetrating peptide that enabled the nanobodies to be safely delivered to mouse cells.

MORE: Potential Treatment for Lyme Disease Kills Bacteria That May Cause Lingering Symptoms, Study Finds

Mice with compromised immune systems were inoculated with a highly virulent strain of E. chaffeensis and given intracellular nanobody treatments one and two days after infection. Compared to mice that received control treatments, mice that received the most effective nanobody showed significantly lower levels of bacteria two weeks after infection.

With this study providing the proof of principle that nanobodies can inhibit E. chaffeensis infection by targeting a single protein, Rikihisa said there are multiple additional targets that could provide even more protection with nanobodies delivered alone or in combination. She also said the concept is broadly applicable to other intracellular diseases.

“Cancers and neurodegenerative diseases work in our cells, so if we want to block an abnormal process or abnormal molecule, this approach may work,” she explained.

We’ll be sure to share more news on this hopeful new approach to blocking diseases in our cells.

Source: Ohio State University

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Scientists Make Microplastics Breakthrough, Devising Method to Trap And Remove Them

Microbiologists have found a way to use bacteria to trap microplastics, removing them from the environment and making them easier to recycle.

The new technique, developed by scientists at Hong Kong Polytechnic University, uses bacterial biofilms—a sticky substance created by micro-organisms—to trap microplastic particles. The biofilm is then processed and dispersed, releasing the microplastic particles for processing and recycling.

Microplastics are hugely problematic and pose a major risk to food chains and human health, according to Researcher Yang Liu: “They are not easily bio-degradable, where they retain in the ecosystems for prolonged durations. This results in the uptake of microplastics by organisms, leading to transfer and retention of microplastics down the food chain.

“Due to their huge surface area and adsorption capacity, microplastics can adsorb toxic pollutants, such as pesticides, heavy metals, and drug residues at high concentrations.

“This leads to biological and chemical toxicity to organisms in the ecosystems and humans after prolonged unintended consumption of such microplastics. Moreover, microplastics are also difficult to remove in wastewater plants, resulting in their undesired release into the environment.”

How the researchers’ technique works

In more detail, the researchers used the bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa to capture microplastics in a bioreactor. This species of bacteria is found in all environments and has previously been shown to colonize microplastics in the environment. P. aeruginosa biofilms cause the microplastics to aggregate together, eventually causing them to sink. In bioreactors, this makes the microplastics more convenient to collect.

Once the microplastics were captured by the biofilms and had sunk to the bottom of the reactor, the researchers used a biofilm-dispersal gene, which caused the biofilm to release the microplastics.

Liu explained that this “allows convenient release of microplastics from the biofilm matrix, which is otherwise difficult and expensive to degrade, so that the microplastics can be later recovered for recycling.”

MORE: Trading Old Cars for Electric Bikes: France Proposes Handsome Financial Incentives

Taking the method to water treatment plants

Microplastics are plastic particles less than 5mm in diameter. They can enter the environment through a number of sources including the breakdown of larger plastic pieces, washing of synthetic clothing, breakdown of car tires, and plastic waste directly from industry. The current methods for microplastic disposal, such as incineration or storage in landfill, are limited and have their own disadvantages.

CHECK OUT: Amid the Green Funeral Movement, Scattering Ashes Ensures These Forests Remain Pristine Forever

The next steps of the research, which was published in the Chemical Engineering Journal earlier this year, are moving the proof-of-concept from the lab to an environmental setting

Liu and colleagues hope the technique will eventually be used in wastewater treatment plants to help stop microplastics escaping into the oceans. They also have to find natural compounds to stimulate biofilm dispersal of the pro-biofilm forming bacterial isolates, saying “this provides a basis for future applications in wastewater treatment plants, where microplastics can be removed in a safe and environmentally friendly manner.”

MORE: Kenyan Woman’s Startup Recycles Plastic Waste into Bricks That Are 5x Stronger Than Concrete

Research like this, that could reduce the ‘plastification’ of our natural environments, is good news indeed.

Source: Hong Kong Polytechnic University

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Compassionate Cops Replace a Beloved Tractor For 4-Year-old After it’s Stolen—WATCH

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SWNS

This is the heartwarming moment a group of police officers surprises a boy with a little tractor after thieves stole his favorite toy.

4-year-old Gerald Philbrook was delighted when big-hearted cops gave him a brand new, replica John Deere.

Police swung into action after Patrol Sergeant Andrew Brooks read Gerald’s dad’s Facebook post explaining how his cherished old tractor had been stolen.

Peter Philbrook wrote in the post how he and Gerald had found the toy and bonded while repairing it, so the tractor held great sentimental value.

After an unsuccessful search effort, Sergeant Brooks, with some assistance from a local Wal-Mart and the Tempe Officers Association, purchased the toy for Gerald.

Brooks was so overcome with emotion when the time finally came to give Gerald the new tractor, he started tearing up.

MORE: Instead of Charging Women With Shoplifting Groceries, Police Officer Buys $250 Worth of Food For Family in Need

Once he collected himself, Brooks presented Gerald with a personalized licence plate for his tractor, as well as a peace-sign bumper sticker.

On receiving his special gift, Gerald replied, “This is actually cooler than the other one!”

(WATCH the video about this story below.)

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“Spiritual work focuses more on what is intrinsically right: how we have infinite resources at the core of our nature that we can cultivate in order to live more expansively. If psychological work thins the clouds, spiritual work invokes the sun.” – John Welwood

Quote of the Day: “Spiritual work focuses more on what is intrinsically right: how we have infinite resources at the core of our nature that we can cultivate in order to live more expansively. If psychological work thins the clouds, spiritual work invokes the sun.” – John Welwood

Photo: Niklas Hamann

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quote of the Day page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

 

Win Trip to 5-Star Spa in This Flower Arranging Contest With Charity Giving Bouquets to Terminal Patients

Dream Foundation
Dream Foundation

A company that sends flowers, cards, freshly baked cookies, and fine chocolates to end-of-life patients is hosting a competition to design the perfect floral arrangement.

The competition is a means to raise funds for the “Flower Empower” program from the Dream Foundation, which delivered an unprecedented 25,000 bouquets and orchids to patients and front-line workers in 2020 alone.

The art of flower arranging, while often confined to niche magazines or Zen koans, is on full display at “Flower Empower Blooms,” the program’s first floral arts competition, in which contestants will compete in a people’s vote for seven categories: tablespace, headpiece, hand-tied bouquet, orchid display, contemporary, garden photography, and master garden still-life painting.

Dream Foundation

Including categories for youth, amateur, and professional submissions, no-one is excluded from sending in their entries online until May 3rd. From the 4th to the 8th, any contestant or member of Flower Empower can cast their vote.

The contest “is an opportunity to introduce Flower Empower’s seemingly simple yet profound work to the entire nation,” says Kisa Heyer, CEO of the Dream Foundation. “Anyone can submit floral art and with that submission, know that they are making an impact on someone’s life.”

Dream Foundation is inviting all contestants to submit a donation alongside their entry, as they are an all-volunteer organization—as well as the only dream-granting non-profit that delivers for terminally ill adults.

MORE: Girl Surprised With Pet Dragon After Surviving Cancer and Making-a-Wish – ‘It’s a Marvel of Engineering’

The contest will be judged by niche legends in flower arranging from various publications and businesses, and the grand prize winner receives an all-expenses paid vacation to the iconic, 5-star El Encanto Hotel in California—including some lush spa treatments. So what are you waiting for?

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Europe Will Open its Doors to Vaccinated American Tourists This Summer

The Louvre by Pedro Szekely, CC license

Americans haven’t been able to visit Europe on nonessential trips for over a year, but that now looks set to change.

Fully vaccinated tourists from the States will be able to come to the European Union over the summer, Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, has recently told the New York Times.

Advance talks between the States and the E.U. about enabling vaccine passports have been taking place for weeks, with von der Leyen stating that such certificates would “enable free movement and the travel to the European Union.”

MORE: This Guy Missed Traveling and Has Recreated Airplane Meals to Get Through Lockdown

Precise details and an exact timeline of when borders may open have not yet been released, but these talks are a hopeful sign of a breezier future.

And if you can’t wait for your European trip? Greece has already announced that Americans who can show proof of vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test can now visit the holiday hotspot.

Featured image: The Louvre by Pedro Szekely, CC license

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Gardening Just Twice a Week Improves Wellbeing and Prunes Your Stress, Says New Study

– NeONBRAND

A new study reveals a significant association between gardening more frequently and improvements in wellbeing, perceived stress and physical activity.

– NeONBRAND

The study from Britain’s Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) surveyed more than 6,000 people, and results indicate that those who garden every day have wellbeing scores 6.6% higher and stress levels 4.2% lower than people who don’t garden at all.

RHS Wellbeing Fellow and lead author, Dr Lauriane Chalmin-Pui says; “This is the first time the ‘dose response’ to gardening has been tested and the evidence overwhelmingly suggests that the more frequently you garden—the greater the health benefits.

“In fact gardening every day has the same positive impact on wellbeing than undertaking regular, vigorous exercise like cycling or running.

“When gardening, our brains are pleasantly distracted by nature around us. This shifts our focus away from ourselves and our stresses, thereby restoring our minds and reducing negative feelings.”

Respondents who gardened 2-3 times a week had a 4.1% higher wellbeing score and 2.4% lower stress levels compared to people who don’t garden at all. However, gardening fewer than 3 times a month has less of a positive impact.

The study, conducted by the RHS in collaboration with the University of Sheffield and the University of Virginia, and published in Cities journal, found that more frequent gardening was also linked with greater physical activity supporting the notion that gardening is good for both body and mind.

Dr Chalmin-Pui adds; “Gardening is like effortless exercise because it doesn’t feel as strenuous as going to the gym, for example, but we can expend similar amounts of energy.

RELATED: Female Entrepreneurs Tend Community Gardens While Growing Their Small Businesses, Too

“Most people say they garden for pleasure and enjoyment so the likelihood of getting hooked to gardening is also high and the good news is that from a mental health perspective—you can’t ‘over-dose’ on gardening!

‘Pleasure and enjoyment’ is the reason why 6 in 10 people garden. Nearly a third say they garden for the ‘health benefits’; 1 in 5 say ‘wellbeing’ is the reason they garden, and 15% say it makes them feel calm and relaxed.

Co-author, Dr Ross Cameron of the University of Sheffield, commented: “This research provides further empirical data to support the value of gardening and gardens for mental restoration and ‘promoting a calmness of mind’.

“We also found a greater proportion of plants in the garden was linked with greater wellbeing, suggesting even just viewing ‘green’ gardens may help.”

It was not just able gardeners who benefited. Those with health problems stated gardening eased episodes of depression (13%), boosted energy levels (12%), and reduced stress (16%).

MORE: How to Germinate Your Seeds Using an Instant Pot—WATCH

The report adds to a mountain of evidence showing the positive health benefits of gardening. One study from Harvard University found that calories burnt from 30 minutes of gardening is comparable to playing a social game badminton, volleyball, or practicing yoga.

Last year, an RHS science paper found that adding a few plants to a bare front garden can make you feel happier, more relaxed and has the same impact as eight mindfulness sessions every week.

So if you can? It certainly sounds like it’s time to get your Vitamin ‘G’ on.

Source: RHS

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Phenomenal 6-yo Skateboarder Performs in Pink Party Dress and Leopard Print Helmet

@PaigeTobin/Instagram

What’s 6 years old, zips through the air with gravity-defying ease, and wears a pink princess dress with her crash helmet? Australian skateboarding phenomenon Paige Tobin.

For this mighty girl, dizzying 12-foot drops are a piece of cake. The pint-sized powerhouse recently beat out the competition in the 9-and-under category to win the King of Concrete skateboard contest in Melbourne.

After finding her mom’s old skateboard in the family garage at age 2, Paige was fast on her way to becoming “the wheel deal.”

“Paige is definitely skating exceptionally well, not just for the age but for skateboarding in general,” Neftalie Williams, an adjunct professor of sociology at the University of Southern California’s Annenberg School of Communication and Journalism told CNN.

Williams, who studies race and gender diversity through the lens of skateboarding, says Paige’s achievements are noteworthy not only as a measure of athletic prowess but also for their impact on cultural boundaries.

“One of the most important things about seeing Paige skating is how it’s a reminder that there has been an explosion in women, girls, and gender non-conforming skaters,” he told CNN. “That has really shaped and changed the way people perceive skateboarding culture.”

Paige cites British skateboarder Sky Brown—who at age 12 has bounced back from major injuries sustained in a fall and is slated to become the youngest female skateboarder in Olympic history—as inspiring her “never give up” attitude.

MORE: 6-Year-Old Boy’s Dream Comes True After FedEx Driver Helps Him to Exchange Gifts With Tony Hawk

While she’s yet to master a “Blunt Fakie” herself (stalling at the top of the ramp, maintaining balance on the ledge, and then popping off the ramp for the downhill ride), Paige has landed several endorsement deals and along with her mom, plans a U.S. tour this summer where she hopes at some point to eventually hook up with skateboard legend Tony Hawk.

In the long term, Paige’s legacy of dismantling stereotypes may be what defines her career in sports history books, but one look at her and it’s clear she loves what she’s doing.

RELATED: Girls in War Zone Find Their Power On Skateboards; Documentary About Them Takes Home the Oscar (Watch)

At 6, the driving momentum that keeps this little girl in flight is simple: “It makes me happy,” Paige says.

(WATCH Paige go in the viral video below.)

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North Carolina-based writer Judy Cole has a new rom-com murder mystery debuting at Amazon: And Jilly Came Tumbling After (from Red Sky Presents).

Giant Storms on Jupiter Captured By Incredible NASA Images Sent From Juno Spacecraft

NASA/JPL-Caltech/SWRI/MSSS/Brian Swift, CC license
NASA/JPL-Caltech/SWRI/MSSS/Brian Swift, CC license 
NASA’s Juno space probe has taken some incredible photos of the Red Planet’s super-storms on a recent flyby of the gas giant.

With its host of science instruments, the mission of the Juno spacecraft—launched in 2011—is to “investigate the existence of a solid planetary core, map Jupiter’s intense magnetic field, measure the amount of water and ammonia in the deep atmosphere, and observe the planet’s auroras,” says the U.S. space agency.

This data will provide a huge leap forward into helping scientists understand how giant planets are formed.

It will also help them find out just what role giant planets played in putting the rest of our solar system together.

CHECK OUT: NASA’s Rover Makes Oxygen on Mars for the First Time

That’s exciting stuff, and the images that have been released are mesmerizing.

Take a look at Jupiter’s swirling storms in the photos below.

These images were taken as raw data by ‘JunoCam’.

NASA/JPL-Caltech/SWRI/MSSS/Brian Swift, CC license

Citizen scientist Brian Swift enhanced their colors and contrast to highlight storms.

NASA/JPL-Caltech/SWRI/MSSS/Brian Swift, CC license

The images were captured 5,333 miles above Jupiter’s surface.

NASA/JPL-Caltech/SWRI/MSSS/Brian Swift, CC license

Juno will complete its mission in September 2025, when it deorbits into the atmosphere of the Red Planet.

NASA/JPL-Caltech/SWRI/MSSS/Brian Swift, CC license

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Affordable Reef-Safe Sunscreen on Horizon as Scientists Create More Sustainable Way to Make Zinc Oxide

A new, more sustainable way to make zinc oxide—a key ingredient in many high end health and beauty products such as sunscreens—has been developed by British researchers. The new technique has the potential to revolutionize the raw materials industry.

Many high end personal care products, such as moisturizers, shampoos, soaps, and sunscreens, are made with zinc oxide as they appeal to consumers who are keen to avoid chemical-based products.

However, the cost of these products puts them out of reach for most; and as such, globally most people opt for cheaper products, many of which contain chemicals that are hugely damaging to the environment.

In the case of sunscreens, the cheaper products often contain chemicals that have a devastating impact on marine life, such as the bleaching of corals. The high end products, even though they don’t contain chemicals that are damaging to marine life, are still bad for the environment as the current method to produce zinc oxide requires a huge amount of energy.

Leader researcher Dr Kyra Sedransk Campbell, at the University of Sheffield, said: “The reality is that existing chemical-based sunscreens are damaging our fragile marine ecosystems, effectively killing coral reefs.

“Bans are already being put in place—but not fast enough. Whilst zinc oxide is a known alternative, in fact it was the original UV-blocker, it currently is a high-end option you might struggle to find in your local chemist.

RELATED: Airline is Protecting Hawaiian Coral Reefs By Giving Free Non-Toxic Sunscreen to Tourists

“The challenge is cost without sacrificing consumer expectations. The new process we have developed has the potential to hit those points, and more. Our process is a sustainable, green, low energy method that can make zinc oxide. What’s more is that we are cost competitive. Taken all together it is about using our know-how in the lab to protect our planet.”

A new way of making zinc oxide

Zinc oxide is produced in two ways. Firstly, in mass, using extremely energy intensive processes creating generic materials. Secondly, using specialty smaller scale manufacturing that creates specific materials at a high cost and a large environmental footprint. There is a £4 billion ($5.6 billion) zinc oxide market which continues to grow because of its ubiquity in products ranging from personal care products, to batteries, tyres, and sensors.

The research team, from the University of Sheffield and Imperial College London, has discovered a new way to make the zinc oxide particles using far less energy and a flexible manufacturing method that can enable production of a wide range of particle types. This is very unusual for a wet-chemistry method in which analyzing is done in the liquid phase.

MORE: Scientists Discover How to Make Eco-Friendly Sunscreen From a Source of Food Waste: Cashew Shells

The team has now launched a spin out company to commercialize the technique; the company’s first target is developing the active ingredient to make reef-safe and affordable sunscreen. The spinout, Nanomox, is looking for an industrial partner to help bring the product to market. That’s hopeful news for coral reefs, and the planet, indeed.

Source: University of Sheffield

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“We are often sad and suffer a lot when things change, but change and impermanence have a positive side. Thanks to impermanence, everything is possible.” – Thich Nhat Hanh

Quote of the Day: “We are often sad and suffer a lot when things change, but change and impermanence have a positive side. Thanks to impermanence, everything is possible.” – Thich Nhat Hanh

Photo: Madison, Wisconsin by Dave Hoefler

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quote of the Day page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

 

She’s Starting College at Age 12, With Plans to Be a NASA Engineer

Over the course of the pandemic, the landscape of education has drastically changed, but that hasn’t kept one brilliant girl whose dreams have never been earthbound from reaching for the stars.

While most pre-teens are navigating the challenges of middle school, at age 12, Alena Analeigh has already earned her high school diploma and is set to attend Arizona State University via remote learning in May.

With a planned double major in astronomical/planetary science and chemistry, Alena’s goal is to become a NASA engineer by the time she’s 16, where she hopes to employ her extraordinary skills to build rovers like the ones sent to Mars on missions.

“I’ll be driving one of those future space mobiles by the time I graduate college,” she told ABC News.

A heady goal, perhaps, but according to Alena’s mom Daphne McQuarter, her daughter had already set her sights on a career with the space agency when she was a little girl.

“She would always say, ‘Mommy, I’m going to work for NASA,’” McQuarter told Good Morning America. “Then she would start saying, ‘I’m going to be the youngest Black girl to ever work for NASA—watch!’”

Alena’s space odyssey began with her early passion for Lego building toys, from which she’s built intricate models of everything from the Taj Mahal, the Disney castle, and the Millennium Falcon, to the Apollo 11 rover and a NASA rocket.

Designing things and bringing her visions to fruition is the core of what makes this genius tick, but her astute scientific mind has led Alena to be a keen observer in other facets of life as well.

MORE: She Came to the US to Study With Only $300 in Her Pocket — Now She’s a NASA Director For the Mars Rover

Seeing the disparity in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) opportunities for women and people of color, Alena wanted to become an engine for social change as well.

With her mom’s help and encouragement, Alena launched the Brown Stem Girl website to encourage other girls with similar interests to focus on fields from which they’d been historically excluded.

Along with her college curriculum, Alena has several projects in the works: One, a children’s book she plans to title Brainiac World (putting a positive spin on the nickname kids used to tease her with), and a STEM-centric podcast—for which she hopes to land an interview with space pioneer, Dr. Mae Jemison.

It’s an impressive list of accomplishments but more than anything else, Alena hopes to serve as an example to other girls not to let the preconceived notions of others keep them from defining their own destinies.

“It doesn’t matter what your age or what you’re planning to do,” she told ABC. “Go for it, dream, then accomplish it.”

RELATED: The Inspiring and Playful Hidden Message in the Mars Perseverance Rover’s Parachute

While no specific announcements have been made, NASA has already reached out to the 12-year-old Texas prodigy. Our guess is Alena’s future is going to be out of this world.

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North Carolina-based writer Judy Cole has a new rom-com murder mystery debuting at Amazon: And Jilly Came Tumbling After (from Red Sky Presents).

Artist Takes Twigs and Turns Them Into Dancing Figures—Creating New Images Every Day

Twigs are good for starting fires, roasting marshmallows—and it turns out—making art. Using found twigs , London-born Chris Kenny makes dancing figures, famous and not-so-famous saints, even a baby.

The Great Morning, copyright Chris Kenny

Kenny is invested in his art. For the past 5 years, he’s been making playful twig portraits daily and posting them on Instagram @twigsaints.

In Chris’s words, “These frail little figures writhe in agony or ecstasy and come together as a portrait of humanity with all our energy and sensuality, our hubris and delusion.”

You’ll definitely want to check more of his work out—especially as it’s not just twigs Kenny works with, but various humble materials: “fragments excised from books or maps, discarded photographs or books.”

CHECK OUT: Art Historians Discover Place Where Van Gogh Painted His Last Masterpiece

For now though, let’s take a look at some of those singular twig figures he’s been creating.

Copyright Chris Kenny

All images copyright Chris Kenny

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Lost and Desperate Hiker Saved by Man’s ‘Very Weird’ GPS Hobby

Benjamin Kuo enjoys looking at photos and figuring out precisely where they’ve been taken. He happily admits that being a satellite mapping enthusiast is a “very weird hobby. But recently, his quirky interest may just have saved a California man’s life.

Rene Compean was hiking alone in Angeles National Forest when he realized he no longer knew where he was.

According to the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, the 45-year-old texted a photo of his legs dangling over the edge of a canyon to a pal. In the message, he said he was lost and his phone battery was dying.

The police department released the image to the public, hoping someone might recognize the scenery and know where Compean was.

Luckily, Kuo saw the report. And he had a hunch—notifying the police with what he thought were the correct GPS coordinates for Kuo’s location.

MORE: Hero Trucker Ignores Own Safety to Save Utility Worker Stuck in a Bucket With Fire Blazing Below

“I was hoping I didn’t send them on a wild goose chase, and then they’d get mad at me,” Kuo said to KCBS-TV in LA.

Kuo didn’t have to worry about leading anyone on wild goose chases for long. A rescue helicopter was sent out to the canyon, and Compean was found on a ridge less than a mile away from the coordinates Kuo had given.

Compean was found safe and in no need of medical care. And he couldn’t have been more grateful for Kuo’s unique hobby, saying to him, “I crazy appreciate what you did… I really don’t know if I could make it there another day. It was just so cold.”

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How to Germinate Your Seeds Using an Instant Pot—WATCH

From rice to ragu, maybe you thought you’d cooked up every possible must-try recipe in your Instant Pot. But how about cooking up seeds? Or more accurately, how about germinating everything from tomatoes to peppers and eggplants?

In the short video below, watch government scientist and keen Canadian gardener Lyanne Betit show you how to get your seeds going in an Instant Pot on the yogurt setting. It’s a pretty neat hack—and we’d love to know if you try this one at home.

(WATCH the CBC video below to learn this gardening hack.)

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Couple Spends Nearly $100k Turning School Bus Into Dream Home — Now They’re Raffling It Off

SWNS
SWNS

A British couple who spent nearly $100,000 converting a massive American yellow school bus into a luxury home are now offering the unique dwelling for sale through a raffle.

Lucy Stevens and Glen Carloss bonded over their love of American cars on their first date, and even spoke about a shared dream of converting a big bus.

Just a few months later, they shipped a 36ft x 8ft yellow bus from New York to Southampton in the south of England.

SWNS

It still contained kids’ toys, discarded school jumpers, and sick notes, and they spent nearly a year converting it into a luxe mobile home.

Out came the seats and in went heating, a ‘cinema room’, a bathroom, a fireplace, and a king size bed, but crucially the iconic yellow exterior remains untouched.

Videos on Instagram show their entire process, and the work that went into the transformation.

Lucy said: “We both shared the same dream of owning a big vehicle to do a road trip for a year or longer.

“We worked so hard on it, it’s been blood, sweat and tears just because we’d never taken on anything like that before.. and how we achieved the look we wanted to achieve, I’m really proud of it.”

Lucy, who’s a nanny, went on her first date to a rooftop bar in London with tattoo artist Glen in July 2019.

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When their bus arrived from the States? “It was huge,” Lucy says. “It’s so much more daunting in real life but I absolutely loved it, I couldn’t actually believe I owned it.”

RELATED: Man Mailed Himself Home in a Box From Australia—Now He’s Looking for the Pals Who Helped Him

The couple got to work with a full renovation, tearing out the seats and flooring before installing electrics, plumbing, and heating, and partitioning off the bathroom and bedroom.

Then they added things like a sofa bed, dining area, compostable toilet, indoor shower, fridge, hob, oven, work desk, shower, and even a garage space for outdoor equipment.

SWNS

The bus enthusiasts have now nearly completed another second school bus renovation, which they plan to take on a road trip around American and Canada before leasing it out as an Airbnb.

MORE: Two Dogs Rescued From the Streets Now Live Their Best Life on the Road—Seeing the Sights of Europe

As for that first bus that you can see in the photos above? Lucy and Glenn have decided to sell their first American bus in a raffle, with tickets costing £20 ($28).

They’re offering the motorhome, along with £1,000 ($1,390) towards the category-C license required to drive it, as well as six months of free storage. If you’d like to enter the raffle for the big school bus, just head here.

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