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An Avocado a Day May Keep Your Gut Microbes Happy, Study Shows

Everyone has different gut microbiomes, but eating avocado as part of a daily diet is a sure way to improve gut health—a new study from researchers at the University of Illinois shows.

Avocados are a healthy food that is high in dietary fiber and monounsaturated fat. However, it was not clear how avocados impact the microbes in the gastrointestinal system or “gut.”

The researchers found that people who ate avocado every day as part of a meal had a greater abundance of gut microbes that break down fiber and produce metabolites that support gut health. They also had greater microbial diversity compared to people who did not receive the avocado meals in the study.

“Microbial metabolites are compounds the microbes produce that influence health,” lead author Sharon Thompson says. “Avocado consumption reduced bile acids and increased short chain fatty acids. These changes correlate with beneficial health outcomes.”

The study included 163 adults between 25 and 45 years of age with overweight or obesity—defined as a BMI of at least 25 kg/m2—but otherwise healthy.

They received one meal per day to consume as a replacement for either breakfast, lunch, or dinner. One group consumed an avocado with each meal, while the control group consumed a similar meal but without the avocado. The participants provided blood, urine, and fecal samples throughout the 12-week study. They also reported how much of the provided meals they consumed, and every four weeks recorded everything they ate.

While other research on avocado consumption has focused on weight loss, participants in this study were not advised to restrict or change what they ate. Instead they consumed their normal diets with the exception of replacing one meal per day with the meal the researchers provided.

The purpose of this study—published in the Journal of Nutritionwas to explore the effects of avocado consumption on the gastrointestinal microbiota, says Hannah Holscher, assistant professor of nutrition in the Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition at U of I and senior author of the study.

“Our goal was to test the hypothesis that the fats and the fiber in avocados positively affect the gut microbiota. We also wanted to explore the relationships between gut microbes and health outcomes,” Holscher says.

Avocados are rich in fat; however, the researchers found that while the avocado group consumed slightly more calories than the control group, slightly more fat was excreted in their stool.

“Greater fat excretion means the research participants were absorbing less energy from the foods that they were eating. This was likely because of reductions in bile acids, which are molecules our digestion system secretes that allow us to absorb fat. We found that the amount of bile acids in stool was lower and the amount of fat in the stool was higher in the avocado group,” Holscher explains.

Different types of fats have differential effects on the microbiome. The fats in avocados are monounsaturated, which are heart-healthy fats.

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Soluble fiber content is also very important, Holscher notes. A medium avocado provides around 12 grams of fiber, which goes a long way toward meeting the recommended amount of 28 to 34 grams of fiber per day.

“Less than 5% of Americans eat enough fiber. Most people consume around 12 to 16 grams of fiber per day. Thus, incorporating avocados in your diet can help get you closer to meeting the fiber recommendation,” she notes.

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Eating fiber isn’t just good for us; it’s important for the microbiome, too, Holscher states. “We can’t break down dietary fibers, but certain gut microbes can. When we consume dietary fiber, it’s a win-win for gut microbes and for us.”

Holscher’s research lab specializes in dietary modulation of the microbiome and its connections to health. “Just like we think about heart-healthy meals, we need to also be thinking about gut healthy meals and how to feed the microbiota,” she explains.

Avocado is an energy-dense food, but it is also nutrient dense, and it contains important micronutrients that Americans don’t eat enough of, like potassium and fiber.

READ: The Ultimate Guide to Flu Prevention: 4 Micronutrients You Should Eat This Winter to Stay Healthy

“It’s just a really nicely packaged fruit that contains nutrients that are important for health. Our work shows we can add benefits to gut health to that list,” Holscher says.

Source: University of Illinois

Elon Musk’s Brother Starts ‘Million Garden Movement’ to Plant a Garden For Every Household Living in a Food Desert

What do ten dollars, a garden, Harrison Ford, and Elon Musk’s brother have in common? They’re all being used to combat food insecurity, malnutrition, and to build the world’s single biggest gardener community.

Launched on the equinox, the Million Gardens Movement (MGM) is a charitable and educational initiative that hopes to put a garden in every household—whether that’s on a fire escape, in a window box, or as part of a community garden initiative—and fresh fruit and veg on every plate.

The brain child of Frank Giustra and Kimbal Musk, the former the owner and publisher of Modern Farmer magazine, the latter the Executive Director of the non-profit Big Green, MGM puts Little Green Garden units in homes and classrooms for just a $10 donation.

The Little Green Gardens are at their core ready-to-use fruit and veg garden beds—and over 5,000 of them have already been distributed.

Kimbal Musk explains that each garden bed comes “with a customized growing plan and online lessons and activities to support the growing of culturally relevant at-home veggie gardens.”

The MGM platform as a whole is simple. If you’re a gardener, sign up to join the community. Donate $10 to give a garden to a family that can’t afford it, or that lives in a food desert, read and contribute to the blog, and then tell other gardeners about it.

“We’ve been so humbled by the overwhelmingly positive response and the passion surrounding our mission,” says Frank Giustra. “When Warwick Saint was photographing gardening activists for our launch, activists like Salma Hayek and Jonathan Scott were asking us “What more can I do for the Movement? What else can I do to help get more people involved? That’s a real sign of how dedicated people are to making a difference.”

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“Ten years ago I co-founded Big Green to focus on under-resourced communities to increase access to fresh food and improve food literacy,” says Musk. “Today it’s a national non-profit working with schools in several major cities with almost 640 outdoor Learning Garden classrooms.”

“Frank Giustra reached out with the idea of… Big Green and Modern Farmer [starting] the Million Gardens Movement to make it simple for anyone to give a family a garden. Planting a seed is an act of hope for a brighter tomorrow. We hope millions will join us to grow their own garden and give a garden to a family.”

Seed of hope

The seed of hope planted by Giustra and Kimbal certainly sprouted. With thousands of gardeners already joining up with the movement, celebrities are tagging along like Harrison Ford, Zooey Deschanel, Nicole Scherzinger, and Maye Musk, mother of Kimbal—and a certain billionaire named Elon, who happens to be Kimbal’s brother.

RELATED: Over 1 Million Gardeners Have United to Create Global Network of Greenery That Nourishes Bees and Butterflies

The hashtag #milliongardensmovement has over 300 posts on Instagram. 7,300 gardens in total have been started, including some done out-of-pocket, while 632 have gone into schools to teach kids about gardening and grow a new generation of gardening-savvy adults.

“The most successful aspect of the Million Gardens Movement has been the continual growth of an online gardening community,” says Giustra in an interview. “Our Movement, just like gardening, is about developing our best aspects slowly and steadily as we grow in numbers towards one million gardeners. Seeing people donate is wonderful because they are helping others garden, and those who donate might also take up gardening.”

“We’ve been able to deliver garden kits to Denver, Detroit, Memphis, and Indianapolis so far,” he adds. “We’re working to deliver 5,000 kits in Denver alone in April for Earth Month, and we’re working on delivery plans for cities after that drop.”

Turning the tide

The reality is that food insecurity was a problem in America long before the pandemic began. One study from 2017 found that 5.6% of Americans don’t have adequate access to fresh food. And just in Atlanta, Georgia, as GNN reported, 125,000 people live outside of a convenient distance from the supermarket.

The benefits of a home garden can significantly reduce these impacts—even something the size of the Little Green Gardens given out by MGM can help.

For example, according to the Journal of Extension, the average home vegetable garden produces $677 worth of fruits and vegetables every year.

CHECK OUT: How and Why to Start a Compost Pile at Home – The Benefits of ‘Black Gold’

“Our hope is to quickly expand to Canada this year with sights on Vancouver and Toronto,” says Musk. “We hope to expand to Mexico and beyond to make this a worldwide movement to encourage millions of people to grow their own food.

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50 Years Ago NASA Sent a Map Into Space to Help Aliens Find Earth—Now They’ve Got An Awesome Update

The Voyager Golden Record/NASA

Half a century ago, NASA scientists shot a map into space that contains the position of Earth for aliens to find—but it won’t always be accurate.

However, the daughter of the man who made that map is ensuring the next one will remain accurate not just for a few million years, but for a billion years.

How it began

In December 1971, NASA was excitedly preparing to launch the Pioneer 10 capsule that would not only study Jupiter for the first time, but set a path to drift out of our solar system.

As Pioneer 10 would likely be the first earth-made object to ever be discovered by aliens, the American astrophysicist Carl Sagan thought we should leave a message on board. His colleague Frank Drake thought we should send a map onboard as well.

So Sagan and Drake came up with a famous image—a line drawing etched into a gold-anodized aluminum plate that depicted the male and female frame, with the male waving in what would hopefully be construed as a gesture of good will. It also depicted a simple diagram of our solar system, and galactic coordinates for Earth.

Detailed view of the visual message on a Pioneer plaque/NASA Ames

A special moment

The launch was one of those moments in history that for many turned the volume down on everyday things like the stock market, election season, the school year, or problems at work—the kind of moment that caused people from all walks of life to gather around and say “wow, that was special.”

However the galactic coordinates method, albeit brilliant at the time, which Drake used to formulate the position of Earth, has a limited number of years to work. The method uses pulsars: the leftover body from a supernova explosion. Pulsars are very bright and spin at incredibly fast speeds. They’ve also been theorized to be the most effective points by which to navigate space, as the timing of their rotations, and the radio frequency their spinning creates, are constant and reliable for periods of millions of years.

Only a handful of these pulsars were known in Drake and Sagan’s time, and so their options were limited. But as Nadia Drake, Frank’s daughter, explains in her story for National Geographic, pulsars do slow down over time, removing their eventual usefulness as waypoints.

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Each line etched onto the gold-aluminum plate detailed the pulsars’ placement with respect to Earth, while the lines themselves were drawn in a binary code which would allow any space-fairing intelligent race to calculate the rotational speed of each one.

The Voyager Golden Record/NASA

This would also allow aliens to figure out how long ago the message was sent, because they could measure the rotational decay of the pulsar in years based on the speed during 1971 and at the time the message was found.

However this was also the map’s downfall, because the slowing down would effectively inhibit aliens from figuring out which pulsars Drake and Sagan were using.

A family business

One of the world’s “most prolific pulsar astronomers” is also Nadia Drake’s husband, and he was able to use the same method, but with more consistent “binary pulsars,” to draw a new map that could be reliably decoded for billions of years.

The pulsar map on Scott’s shirt, with Dr. Nadia Drake – Twitter

The binary pulsars, also known as millisecond pulsars, sit in dead orbits that won’t change even after billions of years. They spin much faster and last much longer. Scott Ransom, Nadia’s husband, also used pulsars that orbit Milky Way in what are called globular clusters.

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Orbiting beyond the reaches of our galaxy, globular clusters are like millisecond pulsar factories, and shine beautifully through space telescopes. They’re fascinating places, and act as much better signposts for would-be aliens searching for our planet—even as the positions of the stars within the Milky Way alter and shift.

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Finally, our concept of time and distance would be foreign to any aliens, so like Frank Drake, Ransom included the detailed chemical structure of hydrogen—the most plentiful element in the universe.

When hydrogen electrons change the direction of their spin, they release a radio wave. By comparing the speed of the radio wave to the speed of light, the map offers a new way to calculate both time and space that any race clever enough to pick out a silent spacecraft like Pioneer 10 would be able to decode.

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The result is a map that is readable by any space-fairing race.

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“Health is a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease.” – World Health Organization’s Constitution

Quote of the Day: “Health is a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.” – World Health Organization’s 1946 Constitution

Photo by: Sofia

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?

Southwest Air Employee Goes to ‘Infinity and Beyond’ to Reunite Buzz Lightyear With Excited Toddler

SWNS

When duty calls, Buzz Lightyear is honor-bound to answer. At least that’s what one mom told her distraught toddler when he accidentally left his Buzz action figure behind on an airplane in the flurry of an unexpected, last-minute trip.

While the senior members of the Davis family didn’t expect to see Buzz again, the plucky astronaut made the return trip home in style—thanks to outstanding efforts by the Southwest airlines ground crew at Clinton National Airport Little Rock, Arkansas.

SWNS

Taking a cue from the Toy Story film, the Davises had inscribed their 2-year-old son Hagen’s name on the sole of Buzz’s space boot.

After finding the misplaced space adventurer during a routine post-flight check, operations agent Beth Buchanan was able to match the name with an Elk Grove, California boy on the passenger list.

While Buchanan was sleuthing, co-worker Jason William Hamm saw Buzz sitting on her desk. With the owner’s identity confirmed, the steadfast ramp agent made it his mission to get Buzz back where he belonged.

Hamm reached out to the Davises via email to let them know Commander Lightyear would soon be California bound, but not content to send Buzz home in a boring box, he decided to take things to the next level.

Jason William Hamm/Facebook

Rather than let the astronaut take off incognito, Hamm launched his charge aboard a specially designed shuttlecraft that would ensure Buzz received a true hero’s welcome when he landed.

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Along with a brightly decorated box highlighted with a string of memorable Toy Story quotes, Hamm tucked a series of adventure photos he’d taken of Buzz at different airport locales inside, along with a handwritten note that read:

“To Commander Hagen. I am very excited to return to you upon completing my mission. I was able to explore the airport and spaceport in Little Rock, Arkansas while I was away, and I have included photos of my adventure. My journey has taught me a lot but I am so thankful to return to my buddy.”

SWNS

As the parent of an autistic child, Hamm truly understood how much the loss of a treasured toy could mean.“I wanted it to be a beautiful experience when he opened it up,” he told The Washington Post. “I just thought he would love it. I had no idea who he was, but I knew somebody was missing Buzz and was probably really sad.”

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When Buzz arrived, Hagen’s mom Ashley was so touched by Hamm’s care and creativity she was overcome with emotion.

SWNS

“I cried when I opened it. You could see all the love he put into it,” Davis told The Washington Post, but in addition to her tears, she couldn’t help but be tickled as well. “I wonder how many people chuckled when they saw the box with Buzz on it, as it made its way ‘to infinity and beyond,’ from Arkansas all the way to California.”

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To let Hamm know Buzz had touched down safely, the Davises sent him a video with footage of the beaming face on their son during their “out of the box” reunion. While he’d made it his mission to go above and beyond, according to Hamm, the smile on the face of that happy toddler was all the thanks he needed.

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

Step Inside the Magical World of An Ancient Tradition: Growing Rhubarb by Candlelight

SWNS

A centuries-old tradition of harvesting rhubarb by candlelight has been captured in this series of otherworldly photographs.

SWNS

Farmer Jonathan Westwood’s great-great-uncle started the tradition of harvesting winter-forced rhubarb in the north of England in 1870.

Now 59-year-old Jonathan is the latest in his family to grow rhubarb in a nine-mile-squared area dubbed Yorkshire’s ‘Rhubarb Triangle’.

He took over the reigns of the business from his father 15 years ago and painstakingly picks the vegetables by hand, in candlelight, after a unique growing process.

The rhubarb is left in fields for two years without being harvested—with all sugars kept within the root.

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The farmer then moves the crop into pitch-black sheds. In such conditions, all of the energy of the plant is aimed into the stalk—creating a much sweeter taste than usual.

SWNS

To ensure they’re unable to photosynthesize, the rhubarb gets picked using the very lowest lighting conditions—by candlelight, with the doors closed.

SWNS

Few farms continue to grow rhubarb is this time-honored way, but the method is much-esteemed by foodies, with over 300 tonnes of the rhubarb being sent to high-end grocery stores each season—and even to Buckingham Palace, and potentially, the Queen’s plate.

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It’s believed that West Yorkshire once produced 90% of the world’s winter-forced rhubarb from the forcing sheds within the Rhubarb Triangle.

SWNS

What’s produced at those farms today is protected under the European Commission’s Protected Designation of Origin (PDO), just as other regional delicacies—such as French Champagne and Italian Parma ham—is.

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After Illegally Bulldozing Historic London Pub, Developers Were Ordered to Rebuild it ‘Brick by Brick’

Carlton Tavern/Oxyman, CC license

Six years of legal trench warfare has given every reason for West London residents to raise a pint in victory.

Carlton Tavern/Oxyman, CC license

A favorite neighborhood pub, which seemed set by to be turned into a block of apartments by developers, has been saved by a council ruling that designated the old watering hole as a historic building.

Built in Maida Vale in the 1920s, the Carlton Tavern, with its distinctive tiled sign, had one of its walls sheared clean off by bulldozers. Reporting on the story, James Tapper at the Guardian explains this is a classic trick played by real estate developers—to intentionally damage buildings in order to have them condemned.

This time however, the culprits have been ordered to rebuild the Carlton’s wall “brick by brick” to its original state, something which has left the campaigners who fought for the rights of their tavern “flabbergasted.”

The pub last served up a drink in April 2015. After developers CTLX received a big fat ‘no’ to turn the building into apartments, they ordered the demolition of the building just two days before Historic England was to recommend the Carlton be given Grade-II listed status for its historic nature.

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Chief campaigner Polly Robertson was the piston behind a community movement that included persuading 5,300 local people to go and petition the Westminster council, who would eventually set “an extraordinary precedent” by ordering the wall’s reconstruction with the same bricks—and even the same small tiles used in the pub sign.

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“We had a suspicion before the demolition that they would do something, so we asked Historic England to think about listing it,” Robertson told the Guardian. “They took a plaster cast of every tile, they took pictures and documented everything.”

Brick by brick

“We want it to be a great little boozer where you can come and have some pints of cask any day of the week, but we’ll also have a nice dining area out the back,” said Tom Rees, one of the Carlton’s new owners. “We hope we can be everything to everyone.”

Much of the fittings and original structure was reclaimed from the rubble, and nearly all of it that’s useable has been employed in fixing the wall, which Rees and his business partner see as lending a little more uniqueness to the place. This includes parts of the bar, the banister, and the fireplace.

“And to be fair to [CTLX], they have done amazing work,” Robertson added. “It looks fantastic.”

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The much-loved tavern—and the only building in the area to survive the Blitz bombings of World War II—is set to open again to the public on April 12, when the current COVID-19 lockdown measures in England are set to ease.

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In World First, Key African Species Will be Relocated to Another Continent After it Became Extinct in India

Charl Durand

A team of experts from South Africa and Namibia are helping to relocate a population of cheetahs to India in an ambitious restoration program that just got the go-ahead.

Charl Durand

It would be the first time ever that a major predator was moved inter-continentally to reestablish a population where it had once been, and India is working hard to make sure it goes well.

The majestic cheetah, iconic of the African bush, once roamed an area from the steppes of Turkey all the way to the dry forests and grasslands of India’s western and central regions.

Now critically endangered, perhaps fewer than 50 Asiatic cheetahs are alive today, and are found only in Iran, with Indian monarchs hunting the animal to extinction in the subcontinent by the 1950s. 20 years later, a significant reintroduction effort was made with the Asiatic cheetah from Iran, but successes never materialized.

“Indira Gandhi was very keen on bringing back the cheetah,” said Dr. M. K. Ranjitsinh, to the Indian Express. “The negotiations went well and Iran promised us the cheetah, but our potential release sites needed to be upgraded with an increase in prey base and greater protection. Moreover, during the process, the Emergency was declared in the country and soon after the Shah of Iran fell.”

“As a flagship species, the conservation of the cheetah will revive grasslands and its biomes and habitat, much like Project Tiger has done for forests and all the species that have seen their numbers go up,” he added.

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Chair of the Wildlife Trust of India, and former Director for Wildlife of the Indian Government—essentially the Indian version of David Attenborough—Ranjitsinh is working with a national private-public-non-profit team that’s assessing and building a comprehensive plan for the arrival of the spotted sprinter.

Hope for grasslands

Ranjitsinh explains how the forests of India receive an enormous amount of conservation support, while the grasslands, subject to clearance for decades because of a strong focus on agriculture, get very little.

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In fact, many of the animals that make their home among India’s forests and grasslands, such as the Chital deer, evolved to escape cheetahs. Furthermore, often the species that are under the strictest national protection are actually animals of the plains, that merely wander into the forests occasionally, or who have had their grassland homes replaced with forests to make room for tigers and leopards.

Ideally, the reintroduction program will involve the transfer about 35-40 animals from the two African nations to between four and five sites to ensure natural disasters or poaching can’t ruin the project all at once.

MORE: Top 10 Species Discovered in 2020 Include a Harry Potter Snake and Desert-Dwelling Broccoli

Six sites are being considered for the reintroduction program. The first four, Kuno and Madhav National Parks, and Gandhi Sagar and Nauradehi Wildlife Sanctuaries, are in the state of Madhya Pradesh. Mukundara Hills Tiger Reserve and Shergarh Wildlife Sanctuary are also being considered—both of which are located in the state of Rajasthan, in which the Taj Mahal can also be found.

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Senior Takes Hundreds of Thank-you Cards to Truck Stops During Pandemic to Show Drivers Her Gratitude

CBC

A little kindness can go along way, and that’s certainly true for one Canadian senior who’s getting a lot of mileage by handing out personalized thank-you cards to long-haul truckers.

CBC

When the pandemic hit in 2020, supply shortages quickly followed. Caught in the middle were the men and women responsible for transporting the goods in their big rigs.

After viewing several news stories in which drivers detailed some of the harsh realities of trucking in the age of COVID-19—like not being allowed to use restrooms or being forced to stay in their cabs for hours at a time after crossing the border—Beverly Perrin decided these unsung essential workers deserved some kudos.

Last April, Perrin and her husband, Dick, began delivering batches of between 75 to 100 personalized thank-you cards every three to four weeks to a truck-stop near their Chatham home in Ontario. To date, they’re up to a grand total of about 1,000 cards.

“When I first started doing it, they just kind of looked at me like, ‘Really?’” Perrin told CBC news. “One trucker asked me, ‘How much do I pay you?’ [I told him] it’s just from me to you, as a senior—that we so appreciate you.”

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Each one of Perrin’s notes contains the same message: “Thank you so much for bringing supplies to our stores. Even though it is sometimes under harsh circumstances. Take care. Stay safe. God’s blessing on you always. Love Beverly Perrin, a very grateful senior.”

Friends acquainted with the Perrins say even though Bev’s massive missive gesture is somewhat unusual, it’s totally in keeping with her outgoing character. “My husband and I do service for other people,” she told CBC. “I get more out of it than they get from me.”

MORE: Town Surprises UPS Driver With $1,000 to Thank Him For Being Essential During Pandemic

We guess you could say that when it comes to acts of pure, unadulterated kindness, for this inveterate thank-you note writer, “the truck stops here.”

(WATCH the CBC video with Beverly below.)

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“The largest part of what we call ‘personality’ is determined by how we’ve opted to defend ourselves against anxiety and sadness.” – Alain de Botton

Quote of the Day: “The largest part of what we call ‘personality’ is determined by how we’ve opted to defend ourselves against anxiety and sadness.” – Alain de Botton

Photo by: Max Bender

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?

Bike Tires That Need No Air Are Made From NASA Rover Tech –But Soon Will Be Available to Any Cyclist

SMART Tire Company

Originally invented by NASA for use on lunar and Mars rover missions, there’s a new kind of bicycle tire that’s elastic like rubber yet strong like titanium. It exhibits perfect shape memory without ever going flat. Essentially, it’s the tire of dreams.

SMART Tire Company

Made in gold, silver, and metallic blue, METL tires are made from advanced, lightweight materials known as NiTinol+.

They’re the first-ever consumer application of the alloy tire technology NASA will use to get future rover missions out on rough terrain without a hiccup (or puncture). And they’re being developed as a partnership with the startup SMART Tire Company.

“Cyclists will not be able to wait to get their hands on these cool-looking, space-age tires that don’t go flat,” says Earl Cole, former Survivor: Fiji champion and CEO of SMART, in a statement.

“The unique combination of these advanced materials, coupled with a next generation, eco-friendly design make for a revolutionary product.”

SMART was founded in 2020 by Cole and blockchain engineer Brian Yennie. Together with former NASA engineering intern Calvin Young, the SMART team has consulted with inventors at NASA Glenn Research Center to bring the power of shape memory alloy tire technology to the general public.

NASA

Thanks to their ability to undergo phase transitions at the molecular level under strain, these alloys are unlike any other material, exhibiting thirty times the recoverable strain of ordinary steel.

In other words, according to Darrell Etherington at TechCrunch, NASA’s key development has been in “creating an alloy that can return to their shape at the molecular level, meaning they can deform to adapt to uneven terrain, including obstacles like gravel and potholes, and return to their shape without losing structural integrity over time.”

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What’s more, SMART’s METL tires are good for the planet, utilizing long-lasting materials that reduce rubber waste. The ultimate plan? For these tires to become established as the premier high-tech component for the modern cyclist across road, gravel, mountain, and e-bike applications.

“Shape memory alloys look extremely promising in revolutionizing the entire terrestrial tire industry,” says Santo Padula, Materials Science Engineer at NASA, “and that’s just the tip of the iceberg.”

METL tires will be available for the cycling community in early 2022 before hopefully reaching the car industry and beyond. And SMART has also partnered with the leading micro-mobility provider, Spin, to develop SMA tires for e-scooters.

RELATED: Insert This On Your Bike Wheel to Filter the Air Pollution While You Cycle

Bicycle tires that are immune to punctures even on the most pot-holed roads? Hands up if you can’t wait to take this new tech out for a spin.

(WATCH the Mashable video about this innovation below.)

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Watch the Lifesaving Moment a Man Topples Backwards Off a Balcony—But a Bystander Catches His Foot

SWNS

This is the incredible moment a man escaped almost certain death when he toppled backwards off a balcony—but gets saved when a bystander catches his foot.

SWNS

CCTV footage shows a group of men lining up to collect their labor pensions on the second-floor balcony of a bank in Kerala, South India.

In the video, one of the men can be seen slowly swaying back and forth before leaning backwards and tumbling off the concrete balcony ledge.

A quick-thinking bystander springs into action—grabbing his foot as he goes over.

Others can be seen rushing over to the aid of the unconscious man, eventually pulling him back to safety.

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The man, known locally as Binu, was later taken to the nearest hospital. It’s reported that he did not sustain any injuries and is now safe—with his black-out having been caused by an unexplained medical episode.

Here at GNN, we’re wishing him the best of health.

(WATCH the SWNS video of Binu being saved below.)

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Chimps From Two Czech Zoos are Zooming Each Other Every Day

Sheku Koroma
Sheku Koroma

If there was anyone in our society who didn’t know how to use Zoom, they do now. The demand for the superior video call platform has obliterated all others over the course of the pandemic, and its popularity is even crossing the species boundary.

Chimpanzees at two Czech zoos are, like the rest of us, staying in contact via Zoom, as the zoo staff seek to give them some company and stimulation during the long hours of isolation.

Chimp gang Dingo, Babeta, Bonnie, Suzi, Chispi and Mat at Safari Park Dvur Kralove have had their lives Zoom-displayed on giant screens in front of the simians at a Brno Zoo enclosure 90 miles away, and vice versa.

There are no confusions over whether the default speaker is selected, or if the mute button is on, as the sound off entirely, but that hasn’t stopped the two groups from enjoying the company of their cousins.

MORE: Nat Geo Series Follows Rescued Chimpanzees in Sanctuary Where High Jinx is Job One

Reuters reports that it didn’t always seem like a family reunion. “At the beginning they approached the screen with defensive or threatening gestures,” said Gabriela Linhartova, one of the ape keepers at Dvur Kralove Zoo east of Prague.

“It has since moved into the mode of ‘I am in the movies’ or ‘I am watching TV’. When they see some tense situations, it gets them up off the couch, like us when we watch a live sport event,” she said.

CHECK OUT: Jane Goodall Gets Tender Hug From Chimp Before its Release

While observing the others’ day-to-day lives, the chimps have taken to other human behaviors, such as shoveling things like peanuts into their mouths while they watch— reminding this author of the “junk food movie nights” of his childhood.

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

There is a live stream on the zoo’s website where the calls—streamed daily from 8AM to 4PM CET—will continue until the end of this month at least.

(WATCH the Arirang News segment about the chimp friends below.)

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Just One Day After Completing CPR Training, a Teen Saves Her Friend’s Life Using Procedure She’d Just Learned

A'zarria Simmons left; Torri'ell Norwood right/Torri'ell Norwood

Even though CPR is one of the most important lessons we can learn, it’s also something we hope we’ll never have to use. Can you imagine just completing a life-saving training course and then having to test out your skills the very next day—on your best friend?

A’zarria Simmons left; Torri’ell Norwood right/Torri’ell Norwood

St. Petersburg teen Torri’ell Norwood was behind the wheel of her car when it was T-boned by a speeding driver. The crash hurled the car containing 16-year-old Norwood and her three passengers across someone’s front lawn, where the car barreled into a tree.

After the force of the impact crushed Norwood’s door, she was forced to climb through her window to get out. Two of her passengers, both unhurt, were also able to extricate themselves from the vehicle.

The crashed car/Torri’ell Norwood

But as they started to make their way clear of the wreckage, Norwood realized that her friend A’zarria Simmons was still in the car.

“When I turned around, I didn’t see A’zarria running with us,” Norwood told CNN. “So, I had to run back to the car as fast as I can. She was just sitting there unresponsive.”

Simmons had hit her head on a rear passenger window. The blunt-force trauma resulted in life-threatening injuries.

After pulling Simmons from the car, Norwood checked her vital signs. Unable to detect a pulse, she immediately began employing the CPR techniques she’d so recently learned on Simmons.

MORE: Teen Collects 30,000 Pairs of Shoes to Donate ‘Dignity’ to LA Homeless

Norris had administered 30 compressions and two rescue breaths when Simmons regained consciousness. Paramedics arrived shortly thereafter and transported Simmons to the nearest Florida hospital.

Norwood learned her lifesaving skills at Lakewood High School’s Athletic Lifestyle Management Academy. Her instructor, Erika Miller, was both awed and astonished by her student’s stellar performance.

Miller noted that most of her former students never have cause to use their CPR training until they’re studying to become nurses or EMTs. “But not while they were still a student of mine or definitely not within 24 hours,” she told CNN, adding proudly: “This is what every teacher dreams of, you know, that somebody listens, pays attention, learns something.”

CHECK OUT: Teen from Wildfire-Hit Town Wins $250k Scholarship for Awesome Explanation of Quantum Tunneling

When Simmons woke up in the hospital, she didn’t remember the accident, but there’s little doubt she’ll ever forget the BFF who’d paid attention in class—and saved her life.

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“When everything seems to be going against you, remember that the airplane takes off against the wind, not with it.” – Henry Ford

Quote of the Day: “When everything seems to be going against you, remember that the airplane takes off against the wind, not with it.” – Henry Ford

Photo by: David Vilches

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?

How to Turn Plastic Waste From Your Recycle Bin Into Profit

Nathan Shaiyen/Michigan Tech, CC license

This article, by Joshua M. Pearce of Michigan Technological University, has been republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.

Nathan Shaiyen/Michigan Tech, CC license

People will recycle if they can make money doing so. In places where cash is offered for cans and bottles, metal and glass recycling has been a great success. Sadly, the incentives have been weaker for recycling plastic.

But now, several technologies have matured that allow people to recycle waste plastic directly by 3D-printing it into valuable products, at a fraction of their normal cost. People are using their own recycled plastic to make decorations and gifts, home and garden products, accessories and shoes, toys and games, sporting goods and gadgets from millions of free designs.

This approach is called distributed recycling and additive manufacturing, or DRAM for short.

As a professor of materials engineering at the forefront of this technology, I can explain—and offer some ideas for what you can do to take advantage of this trend.

How DRAM works

The DRAM method starts with plastic waste—everything from used packaging to broken products.

From trash to treasure – the DRAM flowchart. Joshua M. Pearce, CC license

The first step is to sort and wash the plastic with soap and water or even run it through the dishwasher. Next, the plastic needs to be ground into particles. For small amounts, a cross-cut paper/CD shredder works fine. For larger amounts, open-source plans for an industrial waste plastic granulator are available online.

Next you have a few choices. You can convert the particles into 3D printer filament using a recyclebot, a device that turns ground plastic into the spaghetti-like filaments used by most low-cost 3D printers.

Filament made with a 3D-printable recyclebot is incredibly cheap, costing less than a nickel per pound as compared to commercial filament, which costs about US$10 per pound or more. With the pandemic interrupting global supply chains, making products at home from waste is even more appealing.

CHECK OUT: We Use 6 Billion Face Masks a Day—But Scientists Have a Genius Way to Turn Them Into Roads

The second approach is newer: You can skip the step of making filament and use fused particle fabrication to directly 3D-print granulated waste plastic into products. This approach is most amenable to large products on larger printers, like the commercial open source GigabotX printer, but can also be used on desktop printers.

Granulated plastic waste can also be directly printed with a syringe printer, although this is less popular because print volume is limited by the need to reloading the syringe.

My research group, along with dozens of labs and companies throughout the world, has developed a wide array of open source products that enable DRAM, including shredders, recyclebots and both fused filament and fused particle 3D printers.

RELATED: Scientists Turn Plastic Waste Into Valuable Commodities, to Create a Bigger Market for Waste Materials

These devices have been shown to work not only with the two most popular 3D printing plastics, ABS and PLA, but also a long list of plastics you likely use every day, including PET water bottles. It is now possible to convert any plastic waste with a recycling symbol on it into valuable products.

Furthermore, an “ecoprinting” initiative in Australia has demonstrated DRAM can work in isolated communities with no recycling and no power by using solar-powered systems. This makes DRAM applicable anywhere humans live, waste plastic is abundant and the Sun shines – which is just about everywhere.

Toward a circular economy

Research has shown this approach to recycling and manufacturing is not only better for the environment, but it is also highly profitable for individual users making their own products, as well as for small- and medium-sized businesses. Making your own products from open source designs simply saves you money.

From waste to filament to a camera tripod. Joshua M. Pearce, CC license

DRAM allows custom products to be made for less than the sales tax on conventional consumer products. Millions of free 3D-printable designs already exist—everything from learning aids for kids to household products to adaptive aids for arthritis sufferers. Prosumers are already 3D-printing these products, saving themselves collectively millions of dollars.

One study found MyMiniFactory users saved over $4 million in one month alone in 2017 just by making toys themselves, instead of purchasing them. Consumers can invest in a desktop 3D printer for around US$250 and earn a return on investment of over 100% by making their own products. The return on investment goes higher if they use recycled plastic. For example, using a recyclebot on waste computer plastic makes it possible to print 300 camera lens hoods for the same price as a single one on Amazon.

Individuals can also profit by 3D-printing for others. Thousands are offering their services in markets like Makexyz, 3D Hubs, Ponoko, or Print a Thing.

The Gigabot X 3D printer makes larger items. Samantha Snabes/re:3D, CC license

Small companies or fab labs can purchase industrial printers like the GigabotX and make returns by printing large sporting goods equipment like snowshoes, skateboard decks and kayak paddles from local waste.

Scaling up

Large companies that make plastic products already recycle their own waste. Now, with DRAM, households can too. If many people start recycling their own plastic, it will help prevent the negative impact that plastic is having on the environment. In this way DRAM may provide a path to a circular economy, but it will not be able to solve the plastic problem until it scales up with more users. Luckily we are already on our way.

3D printer filament is now listed in Amazon Basics along with other “everyday items,” which indicates plastic-based 3D printers are becoming mainstream. Most families still do not have an in-home 3D printer, let alone a reyclebot or GigabotX.

MORE: The Ever-Growing Pile of Electronic Waste is Now On the Decline, Study Finds

For DRAM to become a viable path to the circular economy, larger tools could be housed at neighborhood-level enterprises such as small local businesses, makerspaces, fabrication labs or even schools. France is already studying the creation of small businesses that would pick up plastic waste at schools to make 3D filament.

I remember saving box tops to help fund my grade school. Future students may bring leftover plastic from home (after making their own products) to help fund their schools using DRAM.

The ConversationWritten by Joshua M. Pearce, Wite Professor of Materials Science & Engineering, and Electrical & Computer Engineering, Michigan Technological University. Read the original article here.

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This Teen Makes Tiny Bow Ties for Shelter Dogs to Help Them Look Spiffy and Get Adopted

For rescue pups to get adopted, they need to stand out from the pack. One teenage boy has made it his mission to make sure they do—and he does it by providing his canine pals with slews of adorable bowties that he sews himself.

Joy Brown

Darius Brown’s sister, Dazhai, taught him to sew when he was 8. The youngster’s first project, a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle-themed bowtie, proved so popular with his peers, Darius knew he’d found his niche.

Darius with his sister in 2015/Joy Brown

According to his mom, Joy, her son’s new passion was something of a godsend. Diagnosed at an early age with speech and fine-motor skills disorders, she noticed Darius’s abilities steadily improve as he painstakingly pursued his new craft.

“He was so determined. He sat and watched Dazhai for months and took it all in,” Joy told The Washington Post. “He started out cutting fabric and pretty soon, he was running the sewing machine by himself.”

When Darius learned about all the family pets left homeless by 2017’s Hurricane Irma, he was inspired to invest his emerging talent in helping them get adopted.

He soon delivered his first batch of 25 rescue bowties to New York City’s ASPCA animal shelter, which had become a refuge for a large influx of dogs and cats displaced by Irma.

“I saw how happy the people at the shelter were to get the bowties and how much the dogs liked them, and I decided to make more,” he told the Post. “I came up with a goal to give bowties to an animal shelter in every state.”

The young haberdasher to the furry set estimates he’s sewn in the neighborhood of 600 bowties for rescue animals since he started out. Pets in Washington D.C.-area shelters and eight U.S. states—so far—have been the beneficiaries of Darius’s paw-inspiring handiwork.

MORE: Labradoodle Has Incredible Bond With 7-Year-old Who Was Adopted Into the Family at the Same Time – LOOK

Darius especially likes to focus his attentions on older animals and pets with disabilities, since he knows they’re often the hardest to find homes for. Shelter directors acknowledge that Darius’s bowties have made a huge difference in getting more of their low-profile pets adopted.

With a little help from his mom, Darius brought his Beaux and Paws brand to life on Facebook and Instagram. The Browns also set up a GoFundMe campaign to help defray the cost of Darius’s sewing supplies.

RELATED: Teen Collects 30,000 Pairs of Shoes to Donate ‘Dignity’ to LA Homeless

As demand for his “collar-ful” wares grew, Darius broadened his operations by starting up his own entrepreneurial website, Sir Darius Brown. He earmarks a portion of all profits to the ASPCA.

As much of a dog lover as Darius is, the apartment complex in which the Brown family currently lives doesn’t allow them. So, for now, his dreams of having a canine companion of his own to keep him company will have to remain on hold.

CHECK OUT: Boys Make $250,000 From Genius nvention—And Donate Thousands to Animal Shelters

One day, however, Darius hopes to captain his own foster facility and surround himself with tail-wagging love. He also plans to expand the Beaux and Paws inventory to include brightly colored and boldly patterned doggie sweaters and vests for the well-heeled hound, taking his bowties for bow-wows to the big-time, all while showing off adoptable pets to their best advantage.

Featured image: Dazhai Brown Shearz

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Trying to Stop the Epidemic of Veteran Suicides, Plant Medicine Company Builds Mental Wellness Value Chain

As GNN and others have reported, the effectiveness of plant medicines like cannabis and psilocybin to treat chronic anxiety, treatment-resistant depression, and PTSD is no longer deniable.

Now a Canadian former-hospital administrator has pounced on that evidence, founding a company that specializes in utilizing plant medicines to give veterans, police, paramedics, ambulance staff, and firefighters the treatment they need to get back on the path to mental health and wellness.

Allied Corporation is utilizing the legalized state of cannabis in Canada, and in 14 U.S. states, to get quality-tested cannabis and CBD products for mental health and wellness into the hands of these heroes who are, tragically, some of the most commonly afflicted cohorts in society.

According to reports from the American Psychiatric Association, depression causes a $200 billion loss in workplace productivity every year, while the CDC finds 200 million work days are lost to mental health-related sick days. The statistic that Callum Hughes, CEO of Allied, is interested in, however, is 17 suicides a day according to the Canadian Department of Veterans Affairs.

Hughes calls it 22—which may include Canadian veteran suicides in addition to those from south of the border. Call it 17 or call it 22, it’s between 17 and 22 too many in Hughes’ opinion.

Hughes had 10 years within the administrative and QA centers of hospital infrastructure when he came to learn about cannabis for treating things like PTSD in the run-up to the country’s eventual legalization of the drug.

“Myself and the Chief Operating Officer, he’s a Canadian veteran, we really started to realize along with some of the peer positions that I was in contact with that cannabis was very effective for chronic pain and getting off medication like morphine, oxycodone—drugs like this—but also for trauma survivors in the veteran cohort,” Hughes told GNN. 

In founding Allied Corp, Hughes looked to create a total supply-chain, from wide-scale production and quality testing, to bringing different products to market through vendors selling direct to veterans or first responders, to cutting-edge research in Israel and Austria looking to expand the field of applied plant medicine even further.

“We’re right in the corner for commercial scale-up, so it’s a real exciting time for the company’s journey,” Hughes explained.

Colombia’s green hills

Allied Corp

Allied’s primary production occurs in a country one would never associate with wide-scale legalized production of cannabis due to its traumatic history with other drugs: Colombia.

Why there? “The special nature of the temperate climate in Colombia, the strains that we have registered… and the cannabinoid profile tested as higher in the Colombian climate as opposed to in North America,” said Hughes.

Allied’s production in Colombia is vast and cost-effective—producing 10 psychoactive strains and 10 non-psychoactive at around ten cents per gram.

“We traveled to Colombia in 2019 and acquired a large-scale farm down there. We entered out genetics to the Ministry of Agriculture and proceeded in what they called ‘seed evaluation,'” he continued. “[It was] the first time ever, as it was communicated to us, that a company presented to the Ministry… passed all 20 out of 20 strains that were submitted.”

This has allowed the company to launch a line of several CBD-infused products in addition to their pharmaceuticals.

“Tactical Relief is a CBD-infused tincture targeted at the veteran cohort,” explains Hughes, adding that the CBD content in the Colombian-grown cannabis is much higher than equivalent strains in the U.S. “Equilibrium Bio is an athlete-focused brand, we have an electrolyte rehydration drink as well as a tincture and athletic rub… all infused with CBD.”

Changing times

Allied Corp

Allied also does a variety of charity events to help veterans, police, and first responders get on the path back to mental health and wellness, including regular healing retreats that offer traditional therapy, and also supplementary activities like meditation and yoga.

Oms, colorful cushions, and breathing exercises maybe aren’t what people associate with veterans, but Allied’s website is smattered with hyperlinks to studies proving the effectiveness of things like meditation for helping recovery from trauma.

“One of our brand ambassadors was a 17-year Green Beret and United States veteran who has really overcome his story with PTSD, so it’s an authentic message brought to market by authentic people,” explains Hughes.

MORE: Cannabis Compound Inhibits COVID-19 Replication in Human Lung Cells, Study Says

Now a publicly traded company on various stock exchanges, Allied’s waves of success crests during a period where the mental health and wellness of many in the United States has perhaps never been poorer.

As government-mandated travel restrictions and business closures continues to spike mental health problems across the country, like gold in a recession, demand in plant medicine is trending the opposite direction.

“We’ve seen an increase in demand on the people level. And if you look around the whole COVID thing, people’s mental health was generally affected by that,” said Hughes. “The increase in cannabis and CBD sales has been reported to us from our distributor partners from the U.S.”

RELATED: Georgia Lab Experiments Shows CBD Reduces Plaque And Improves Cognition in Early Onset Alzheimer’s

Recently, GNN reported the success of another cannabis and psilocybin-based corporation. It’s a growing field, and the advantage of having access to public funding is that companies like Allied Corp allow the average person’s interest and belief in plant medicines to be channeled into investments.

Featured image: Kat Geb, CC license

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11-Year-Old Boy Stumbles Upon 2,500-Year-Old Fertility Amulet In Israel

Facebook/Israel Antiquities Authority

That kids love rock collecting is a given. Finding an unusual stone is every junior geologist’s dream. But turning up an ancient relic? Now, that’s pretty amazing.

Facebook/Israel Antiquities Authority

Zvi Ben-David was on a family hike near Israel’s Besor River when something out of the ordinary caught his eye. When the 11-year-old snapped the artifact up, he likely had no idea he was in for an Indiana Jones moment.

The small object he’d unearthed was in fact a 2,500-year-old fertility amulet. “The figurine that Zvi discovered is so rare that only one such example exists in the National Treasures collection,” the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) posted on their Facebook page.

Worn smooth over centuries, the diminutive statuette depicting a bare-breasted woman is just 2.75 inches tall and 2.36 inches wide (7 centimeters by 6 centimeters).

MORE: Ancient Biblical Scrolls and Rare Coins of ‘Immeasurable Worth for Mankind’ Discovered in Desert Cave

Considered a good-luck icon during the late First Temple Period (the era between the time King Solomon’s Temple was built circa 957 BCE and destroyed circa 587 BCE), such amulets were thought to bring prosperity and protection.

Facebook/Israel Antiquities Authority

Though a small country in area, Israel is home to 37 registered archaeological sites. Thanks to its being the location of the Bronze Age settlement of Tel Gamma, as well as its mention in The Book of Samuel, Nahal Besor is steeped in both historic and biblical meaning. For decades, archeologists have steadily striven to uncover the region’s hidden secrets.

Ben-David’s mom, Miriam, is a professional tour guide. Immediately realizing the item’s historic significance, she alerted the IAA to her son’s discovery. The organization was delighted by the find and the finder as well.

RELATED: When 8-Year-old ‘Queen’ Finds Authentic Ancient Sword in a Lake, Her Fans Rally to Forge Her a Replica

“The exemplary citizenship of young Zvi Ben-David will enable us to improve our understanding of cultic practices in biblical times, and man’s inherent need for material human personifications,” the IAA stated on Facebook. “The whole Ben-David family deserves a huge shoutout. Don’t you agree?”

Facebook/Israel Antiquities Authority

Indeed, we do. “Mazel tov!”

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Growing Mushrooms at Home is Everyone’s New Pandemic Hobby

Oyster muhsrooms grown in coffee grounds, phạm Lộc

Home-grown mushroom kits are seeing an explosion in demand, giving people something to do, watch, and cheer on while they’re stuck at home.

Oyster muhsrooms grown in coffee grounds, phạm Lộc

Lockdown and travel restrictions has led to a resurgence in the popularity of crafts, gardening, baking, and other at-home hobbies. Remarkably, half of Canadians grew their own food to some degree last year—17% of whom did so for the first time.

For many of these beginner horticulturalists, mushrooms represented a super-easy way to start things off with, especially if they didn’t have any soil to utilize. The Guardian reports that some companies are seeing 300%-400% increases in sales of starter kits for genera like oyster mushrooms, a beautiful gilled fungi that grows horizontally on logs, trees, and hills in nature.

People like Willoughby Arevalo, a mycologist from Vancouver, have noted the stratospheric rise in mushroom kits sales. Author of DIY Mushroom Cultivation, he credits their fast daily growth, compared to the slow plodding of windowsill herbs, as one of their strongest appeals.

MORE: Stanford Designer is Making Bricks Out of Fast-Growing Mushrooms That Are Stronger than Concrete

“It’s relatively low-barrier. They’re more expensive than making your own once you have the system set up to do so, but they’re not that expensive,” said Arevalo to the National Post (starter kits typically range from $25-$35). “And it can really bring a sense of amazement to be able to share space with these mushrooms as they fruit.”

Some have taken it farther than simply something to marvel at. The Guardian reports on one Australian man and his wife using the pandemic time to transform their laundry room into an environment for growing almost $500 worth of blue, tan, white, and Queensland oyster mushrooms every few months.

“Sharing them is such a nice thing, and we’ve been swapping them with people for backyard eggs or sourdough bread,” George Clipp from Melbourne told the Guardian. “They’re like an alternative currency, which is pretty cool.”

RELATED: Dutch Man Invents Coffin That Turns Bodies Into Mushrooms: ‘We are nutrients, not waste’

Fears of food shortages, as found in Canadian home growers, drove on the cultivation of produce for some during the pandemic, so Clipp’s remark about currency isn’t far off the mark. If the pandemic were worse, and supply chains were impossible to maintain, having so many pieces of food, rich in various minerals and B vitamins, becomes far more than just a home-hobby.

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