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Car Accident Secretly Foretold a Better Life for Teen Victim and Driver

Accident-insert-TammieBairdJeffWilson-CC-drivebybiscuits1

Jeff Wilson wanted to die.

For, at least, several days after he hit a fellow student with his car in high school, the California teen was devastated to his core.

Tammie Baird, a freshman, wasn’t badly hurt, having only chipped an ankle bone. But in a surprising twist of fate, the shocking moment when Tammie flew over Wilson’s car, placed her on a unique career path no one could have foreseen.

20-something years later, out of the blue, she wrote an email to Jeff telling him her good news:

“You may have been the first person to hit me with your car, but you weren’t the last,” she began.

“I became a stunt woman, and now, what I’m known for in my industry is car hits.”Tyrel and Joana Wolfe-SamaritansPurse-shoeboxes

14 Yrs After Receiving Shoebox Gift, Filipino Girl Marries Boy Who Sent it

 

“I just really felt like I had to let you know that,” Baird told Wilson in a meeting they recorded for StoryCorps.

People often say to the stunt woman, “Wow, you do car hits? How did you get so good at it?”

She always replies, “Well this guy hit me my freshman year walking to school.”Team Casa Hogar

Orphans Win Fishing Tournament, Bring $250,000 Home to Share

 

The car accident may have changed Jeff’s life for the better too. He became a surgical technician, doing a lot of orthopedic surgery. Many of those patients are the result of car accidents, and he feels good helping to make them whole again.

(LISTEN to their interview or READ more at NPR) – Photo credit: drivebybiscuits1 (flickr, CC)

Monkeys Give WAY Too Many Hugs to Animal Rescuers in Peru

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While in Peru on a volunteer mission to improve an animal rescue reserve deep in the jungle, Trevor King found some unlikely friends in the mischievous monkey residents occupying the little piece of heaven.

King and his cohorts hiked many miles through the dense hills of Ayahuasca— crossing the same river 14 times— to help with construction at the monkey shelter known as Cerelias. The reserve has been eager to install sustainable items like a two-story dry toilet, shower, and rain catchers to make it completely self-sufficient. Construction was scheduled to start shortly after the volunteers’ arrival, but the travelers had no idea what monkey business awaited them.

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Trevor King getting some ‘monkey love’

The reserve is home to several different species of monkeys rescued from all over the Peruvian Amazon. Some had been housed as pets by owners who found them too much trouble, some were circus animals, while others sustained injuries in the wild and are being nursed back to health. While awaiting their integration back into the forests, the primates are given free run of the Cerelias compound. The volunteers were taken aback by the energetic, inquisitive animals that were eager to socialize with their new friends — especially while the humans were trying to work!

“Not one person was exempt from having monkeys randomly jump on their backs while working,” exclaimed King on his blog. “It wasn’t uncommon to shovel once, have a monkey jump on your head, move the monkey out of the pit, shovel twice, have a monkey jump on your back, and so on.”

“Tools that were put down were quickly scooped up by curious monkeys and then bartered back with bits of banana.”Lion-whisperer-Kevin-Richardson-Globovision-CC-flickr

Watch Amazing Video of the Lion Whisperer Hugging Big Cats

 

As Trevor continued work at the site, with volunteers from HUGS (Humans Unifying Global Solutions), he learned to ignore the frustrations of trying to work around the monkeys, and instead focus on how fun loving his new friends were.

“I had an insight that these monkeys were the physical manifestation of the ‘monkeys’ I carry around my own back from time to time,” he wrote. “I realized that instead of being annoyed by them (as I often am), I could choose to see them as playful and good-natured.”

He also told Good News Network that since leaving the animal rescue property, the monkeys have played havoc with the new shower and sink. “I will be back there again in two weeks to install netting around the structure to protect it from curious monkeys.”

Watch the video below, made by Trevor’s housemates, showing their monkey encounters.

Trevor King, of Burlington, Ontario, has been helping clients in the health and wellness field for over 10 years as the owner of Act Now Fitness, and as a practitioner of Neuro Linguistic Programming and Faster Emotionally Focused Transformations. He is currently in Peru for 3 months to gain further insight as to how to live harmoniously with his environment.

(Learn how you can help Cerelias on their blog, or website / Trevor’s Photos used with permission )

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Strangers Rally Behind Teen Bullied Over Prom Dress, She Pays it Forward

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A teenager who posted pictures of a dress online so she could sell it, had to defend herself against some faceless cyber-bullies calling her ugly and fat. But the Tennessee Facebook community came to her defense, not only by posting sweet compliments on her beauty, but donating thousands of dollars for a new spring dress for her senior prom.

In January, in the town of White House, Kristen Layne decided to try to sell last year’s prom dress online to help raise money for a new dress to wear this year at the school’s annual prom.

After posting the pictures on “For Sale in Sumner County, TN”, two men started making ugly comments about her weight and looks.

She bravely replied, “Can you please stop with the comments? Sorry I don’t have the best body. Sorry that I’m not pleasing to your eye.”Prom King Scotty Shavers w Katie Buell-familyphoto

In Age of Bullying, Special Needs Student Elected Prom King at Inclusive School

 

Soon, others began defending her, writing positive comments, and donating money to her online dress fund.

When the story began spreading online, about how the town raised $400 to buy the new formal wear, her dress fund took off, with donations from huncdreds of strangers who were touched by her spirit.prom-dress-KristenLayne-FB

As of today, $6,375 has been donated and the size 26 purple dress was donated, too. Kristen paid it forward to a friend in need of a prom attire.

She also bought a new gown for another girlfriend, saying, “She didn’t have the money to buy the one of her dreams so, I went and bought it for her… Thank you guys. I helped 2 young ladies have a wonderful prom. ”

(READ the story from KSL) – Story tip from Darryl

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WWII Vet Leaves $3.3 Million to Skid Row Charities

Delmer Kallberg-familyphoto

During the next several weeks, more than $3 million will be given to skid row charities that care for the poorest residents in downtown Los Angeles.

The cash comes courtesy of a reclusive World War II vet with a frugal personality born of the depression and a heart full of compassion for the downtrodden.

Delmer Kallberg died about a year and a half ago at 98, and after willing a share of the money to his son and $500,000 to a local veterans hospital, he left the rest to be “distributed to the various charitable organizations on the so called skidrow.”

When some of the 30 charity leaders, which will each receive $100,000, asked to know more about the generous donor they never met, Jeffrey Kallberg wrote a brief biography about his father. It ended with this:

“My father was not a man who made friends easily. But he felt strongly that one of the purposes of his life was to fight for the ‘little guy’ (as he termed the most indigent of his clients), and it was in this realm that he most easily allowed his humanity to show through.”

(READ the story in the LA Times)

60 Years Later, Student Makes Amends for Stealing From School

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An anonymous letter arrived at Helper Middle School in Utah last week that contained a confession.

“One warm spring day, as school was concluding, Mr. Iverson set down a box of sandpaper outside the shop door. He went back inside the building an dI absconded with the box.”

“Over the years, I knew (my) actions were immature and dishonest,” read the letter.

Inside the envelope, which had a St. Louis postmark and no return address, there was also a cashier’s check for $100 meant “as a replacement for the sandpaper.”

Principal Mika Salas told KSL news, “I just thought it was so neat.”

(WATCH the video below or READ the story from KSL) – Photo by KSL

Story submitted by Darryl

Late UNC Coach Dean Smith Left Surprise in His Will For Each Player

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Legendary North Carolina Coach Dean Smith, who took his college basketball team to two NCAA championships, always coaxed the best out of his players. Now, a month after his death, he has issued one final ‘thank you’ to every full-time player who ever hit the court for him.

Trustees of Smith’s estate mailed out $200 checks to 180 players with an accompanying letter that read, “enjoy a dinner out compliments of Coach Dean Smith.”

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Michael Jordan with Dean Smith (Zeke Smith, 2007, CC)

Player Brad Daugherty said on ESPN that he would ignore the coach’s orders to spend the money on dinner out: “Nope, I’m going to get it matted and framed, and stick it on my wall so I can look at it every day.”

Buzz Peterson, a teammate of Michael Jordan’s when they played for Smith, was in awe of the gesture, according to ESPN. “I saw the check, and was like, ‘You’ve got to be kidding me. This is unbelievable that he would do this for us.'”

Smith was known for teaching his players to show respect for others during his 36 years coaching at UNC. And Coach Smith respected his players, pushing them to succeed in their studies just as they succeeded on the court. While the average graduation rate for NCAA Division I basketball players was 70% in 2013, student athletes who played for Smith had a 96.6% graduation rate over the course of his career.

And the lessons of respect he taught still resonate with his former players.

Serge Zwikker, who played for Smith from 1993-1997 said the $200 check is unlike any other money he has received.

“I don’t think I can cash this,” he told ESPN. “If anything, I will donate it to a good cause.”track teen helps competitor

Teen Track Star Carries Fallen Opponent Across Finish Line

 

Smith, who died February 7 at the age of 83, was a giant in basketball circles. In addition to one of the most impressive records in NCAA history, the four-time National Coach of the Year led the U.S. basketball team to a Gold Medal in the 1976 Olympics, earned a place in the Basketball Hall of Fame and was remembered for contributions to the Civil Rights movement. He was buried at Old Chapel Hill Cemetery on the UNC campus.

(WATCH the video below from WNCN) – Story tip from Mike McGinley

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Milestone in Race to Save Finless Porpoise, 10 Years From Extinction

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Four Yangtze finless porpoises were released into their new home today, marking the start of an ambitious project to help save the critically endangered species from extinction.

The freshwater porpoises – part of an estimated population of just 1000 – were captured in Poyang Lake in eastern China before being safely moved 400 km to the He-wang-miao/Ji-cheng-yuan oxbow reserve, where they will start a new population.

Four other finless porpoises from Poyang Lake are also being translocated to a second location, the Tian-e-Zhou Oxbow Nature Reserve, to boost the genetic diversity of its small population.

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“Based on current numbers and rate of decline for this subspecies, the Yangtze finless porpoise will likely be extinct in the next 5-10 years,” said Dr Wang Ding, Researcher at the Institution of Hydrobiology of the Chinese Academy of Science, which is leading the translocation project. “To prevent the finless porpoise from suffering the same fate as the Baiji Dolphin, which is now extinct in the Yangtze River, we must focus on translocation, while also working to conserve the porpoise’s natural habitat.”

finless porpoise-WWF-KentTruog-verticleWWF China CEO Lu Sze Ping called it a historic moment. “By conserving the finless porpoise, we are also helping to conserve the ecosystem of the Yangtze River.”

WWF has been working with the Chinese government and partners for years to protect and enlarge finless porpoise habitats, studying and preparing the new site, as well as training the staff.

A thriving new population is critical to the species’ survival because its numbers are falling by up to 13.7% per year due to the environmental impact of human activities along the Yangtze including shipping, sand mining, dredging, pollution, and illegal fishing.

The omens for success are good following the success of a previous translocation in the 1990s, under the leadership of the Ministry of Agriculture.

In the following 20 years, while finless porpoise numbers plummeted in the main river, the population in the Tian-e-zhou oxbow slowly increased to 45, with up to six babies now born each year. But the oxbow is approaching its carrying capacity, another reason why the new porpoise expansion site is so vital and timely.galapagos-baby-tortoise-James Gibbs

Baby Tortoises Born on Galapagos Island for First Time in 100 Years

 

The He-wang-miao/Ji-cheng-yuan oxbow is home to 34 fish species and boasts good quality water and the right environmental conditions for the porpoises.

This week’s translocation is the first step in a long process with hopes that the He-wang-miao/Ji-cheng-yuan oxbow could eventually be home to 100 Yangtze finless porpoises. Together with Tian-e-zhou oxbow, the new site will form part of a network of finless porpoise reserves that will not only protect viable populations but also allow individuals to be exchanged between them to maintain the species’ overall genetic diversity.

“Conserving this beautiful species is not an overnight task but we hope that today’s milestone will mark the start of a bright new chapter for the finless porpoise and a healthier Yangtze,” said Malini Thadani, Head of Corporate Sustainability, Asia Pacific at HSBC, which has supported WWF’s work along the Yangtze for over a decade.

All Photo credits: WWF (top) KentTruog

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Hero Librarian to Receive Lemony Snicket Prize For Work During Riots

The most effective superheroes, like Super Man’s alter ego Clark Kent or Spiderman’s Peter Parker, often are the most unassuming.

As the director of Ferguson, Missouri’s tiny library, Scott Bonner is this year’s recipient of the Lemony Snicket Prize for Noble Librarians Faced with Adversity.

When the city erupted in riots on August 9, 2014 following the shooting of an African-American teenager by a police officer, the district schools closed amid the civil unrest.

Only a few blocks from the combustible protests, Bonner, as the city’s only librarian, demonstrated commitment to families by not closing his doors. He hung a simple sign out front saying, “Stay Strong Ferguson. We are Family.”

He collaborated with teachers, churches and volunteers to offer educational programming and provide a safe place for up to 200 kids a day. The library urged children to check out “Healing Kits” that included books dealing with trauma, and included a stuffed animal gift.

After tweets about Bonner’s dedication went viral, the Ferguson Public Library received more than $175,000 in donations.

The humble librarian, who was hired the month before, insists he was just doing his job.

“We feel that he has been the ultimate example of humility, integrity, and dignity in the face of adversity,” said Dora Ho of the Los Angeles Public Library and chair of the jury that selected Bonner.

The award was established by noted author Daniel Handler of the best-selling Lemony Snicket series of children’s novels. It has a cash prize of $10,000 and includes an “odd, symbolic object from Mr. Snicket’s private stash.”

Plus, Bonner will get a certificate, to which Handler joked to The Guardian, “…which may or may not be suitable for framing.”

On June 28th, Handler, along with award-winning author Jaqueline Woodson, will honor Bonner at the American Library Association’s annual conference in San Francisco.

Bonner is taking all of the notoriety in stride. In response to winning, he wrote on his Twitter account, “Ha! Thanks. But, if I’m a superhero, then so is any local librarian, so go to the library and let them teach you to fly.”

(WATCH an ALA interview with Scott Bonner below) – Photo Credit: ALA

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Homeless People Show Heart-touching Generosity in Undercover Op

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Practical jokes aren’t always done in the name of mischief, they can also be part of meaningful endeavors. In a video published last weekend, Florida homeless people displayed heart-touching generosity in an undercover experiment to test their humanity.

Omar Gosh, of the YouTube channel “OmarGoshTV,” is known to be a prankster. If the Tampa, Florida hair stylist isn’t making people laugh at drive-thrus, he’s tricking clients into believing their hair is falling out.

However, with his beloved hometown receiving the dubious distinction of having the “nation’s highest homelessness rate” a few years ago, it’s no wonder that Gosh was inspired to use his skills for something different.

RELATED: Homeless People Show Heart-touching Generosity in Undercover Op

Posing as homeless, himself, Gosh asked several people living on the streets if they could give him food or money. In the resulting video, you can see each of the kind-hearted souls either sharing their meal or offering whatever coins they had, right from their pocket.

Eventually, Gosh told the strangers that he didn’t need anything, and then he rewarded each person with $20 for their selfless acts. (Watch below)

“…You can give no matter what you have. If these people can give, than you can give, too,” Gosh says in his video before admitting that he wasn’t wealthy.

INSPIRING: Retired Nurse Uses Her Pension to Feed Thousands in Hometown

Even more touching, he gifted one of the men with, literally, the sneakers off his feet. In a real example of paying it forward, that person, in turn, offered his old shoes to someone else.

This isn’t the first time homeless people have been lauded for their generosity on YouTube.

Last fall, GNN shared this YouTube video from OckTV showing people outside of a pizza place being asked to share a slice. In a show of kindness, the homeless man was the only one who willing to do so.

Examples like these that show ‘the least among us’ sometimes give the most, prove that altruism and philanthropy come in all forms –and we all have the opportunity to share. (For instance, you can donate to Omar’s campaign to help the homeless)

(WATCH the video from OmarGoshTV)

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Keurig Coffeemakers Unveil Recyclable K-cups (Finally)

Keurig_coffee-pot-pods-Companyphoto

Keurig coffee fans might love the convenience of the single-cup system, but the amount of plastic being thrown into landfills was worrying the rest of us.

Recently the coffee-selling giant has started selling a recyclable coffee pod that may ease customers’ guilt and take some of the pressure off the company, which has been under fire from environmentalists for years.

The new K-mug pods are made from polypropylene (#5) plastic and can be separated from the lid and saved for recycling.

With the K-Mug pod introduction, three of the four pod formats available for the Company’s Keurig 2.0 system are now recyclable.

The company said in a press release, it’s goal is to have “100% of its K-Cup pods be recyclable by 2020, with incremental portions of its K-Cup pods transitioning to a recyclable format each year between now and 2020.”

Now, if only they were reusable.

Cheers For Good Deeds By Airlines to Rescue Stranded Travelers

cheerleaders-thank-JetBlue-WTRVvideo

When airport problems stranded a business traveler on the West Coast and a cheerleading team on the East Coast, good Samaritans at rival airlines, JetBlue and Alaskan Airlines, stepped up with good deeds to get them home.

Cheers of “Thank you, JetBlue,” went up at Richmond International Airport from a team of championship cheerleaders rescued by the airline Tuesday after they faced a three-day wait in South Carolina.

The team from Winthrop High School near Boston had won a national title in Myrtle Beach over the weekend. When the cheerleaders arrived at the airport to fly home Monday, they found out that Spirit Airlines had cancelled the spirit squad’s flight. There were problems with lights at the airport and there wouldn’t be another flight to Boston until Thursday.

That’s when JetBlue stepped in with a bit of corporate kindness.veteran-gets-prosthetic-fixed-at-airport-TaylorMorrisCommunitySupport

Airport Mechanic Rescues Vet Whose Prosthetic Leg Breaks Down

 

The rival airline, having heard about the girls’ troubles, sent a van to take the team to Richmond in time to catch a Tuesday morning flight home.

“It’s been a long weekend of no sleep,” one of the cheerleader’s told WTVR in Richmond. “You can either be happy and giggly or upset. But we’re national champions, so we’re very happy, very giggly.”

Meanwhile on the West Coast, Miriam Thomas ran into a chain reaction of travel problems on her Delta flight from Vancouver, British Columbia, to a business meeting in California. Thomas faced delays and a diverted flight that landed in Portland, Oregon, before returning to Seattle for an unplanned overnight stay there.

The next morning, she got bumped from her rescheduled flight. Delta ticket agents couldn’t get her on another flight until the following day — too late to make her meeting. If that wasn’t complicated enough, a ticket glitch charged Thomas a second time for her rescheduled flight. It left her with no money and no ticket to get home.Bernese mountain dog in ocean-KTLAvideo

Bernese Mountain Dog Rescues Two Swimmers Caught in Riptide (Video)

 

That’s when Judy, working at the Alaskan Airlines counter, decided to help. She pulled out her own credit card and paid for a ticket to get Thomas back to Vancouver.

“She didn’t know me at all,” Thomas told News1130 in Vancouver.

But the goodwill didn’t stop at the ticket counter. Thomas says, “I was sitting up at the gate waiting for the flight and she came by asking me how I was and offered me money for coffee.”

A quieter cheer rang out for Judy when Thomas thanked her on Twitter and paid forward the kindness:

(WATCH report on JetBlue’s rescue of cheerleaders below)

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4-Year-old Who Lost His Dad Receives Support From Thousands Worldwide

A concerned mother’s Facebook plea is helping ease the grief of a young boy who lost his father.

When four-year-old Wyatt Revels’ daddy died in January, Alysha Starling posted a message to other mothers in her Fayetteville, North Carolina Gymboree group asking for notes of support. She opened a post office box to collect their cards and words of encouragement that might arrive.

When a local reporter from WTVD heard about the family, she posted online asking her audience to mail cards to Wyatt. The post was shared by thousands and folks across the world have been sending him letters, stickers, and stuffed animals ever since.

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Each time the boy receive a package from a different U.S. state or country, they mark the location on a map of the world.Wyatt_Revels_Boy__Packages_Help_Cope_With_Father_Death_LettersForWyatt-FB

Starling says that Wyatt doesn’t understand the magnitude of what’s happening, but he looks forward to the trip to the post office every day, where there is now a special area set aside for his mail due to the huge volume of gifts.

Celebrities have also participated. TV’s ‘Dog the Bounty Hunter’ shared the story to numerous followers on social media, and Sugarland singer Kristian Bush sent Wyatt a guitar pick.

Starling says this process has been therapeutic for her as well, having lost her own father at age 11. The mother of two, who also has five-month-old daughter, is amazed by the generosity of strangers.

But Wyatt calls everyone who sends him a card his “best friend.”

(WATCH the video below or READ the story from WTVD)

Photo Credits: Letters For Wyatt – Facebook

Vet Who Lost Limbs in War Buys Celebrity Spa as a Retreat for Veterans

Elizabeth Arden Estate-Maine-TravisMillsFoundation

Less than three years after losing his arms and legs in war, former Army Staff Sgt. Travis Mills is charging ahead on a mission to renovate a sprawling estate in the Maine countryside to provide a retreat for the healing of other veterans recovering from their wounds.

The property, owned by cosmetics tycoon Elizabeth Arden, was the first spa in the United States and served to pamper celebrities like Judy Garland, Ava Gardner and former First Lady Mamie Eisenhower.

The former soldier’s Travis Mills Foundation, has already raised $1.5 million for its goal of rehabilitating the wooded property into the nation’s first fully accessible, “smart home” retreat, dedicated to serving the recreational and reintegration needs of combat-wounded veterans and their families. (Watch video below)

Originally built as a country home in 1929, today, it is rundown and needs lots of repairs. It’s a Herculean effort for anyone, but the former staff sergeant has the qualifications. He’s used to challenges — and beating the odds.

Mills is one of only five quadruple amputees to survive the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. But, his life is “not a sob story,” he told the CBS affiliate in Chicago last year. His buoyant personality shines through the work his work— whenever he gives speeches or leads tours on the 17-acre estate to support the mission.

More Than A Face Lift

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Photo: Travis Mills via Facebook

Mills, a Maine native, believes his state’s natural beauty will give recovering vets a break from the stress of everyday life.

Christine Toriello, executive director of his foundation, told WCSH-TV, “The best therapy happens when you’re roasting marshmallows and making s’mores.”

His foundation purchased the lakeside property for $460,000 and is raising $1.7 million through GoFundMe to pay off loans and bring it into compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act.

In a documentary about his experiences, Travis Mills: A Soldier’s Story, the former staff sergeant said, “They call me a hero, but I am not sure what part of it makes me a hero.”

If his foundation succeed, he may have to get used to being called a hero all over again.

(WATCH the video from WGME)

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9-Year-Old Boy Uses Birthday Money to Save Racehorse On Death Row

Horse_Saved_By_Boy_FamilyPhotoMJAllen 

Most kids spend their birthday money on toys and games, but 9-year-old Brandon Heyman of Ontario, Canada decided to use it to save a life.

Karazan, an aging racehorse, had just been purchased by a meat buyer when his mother came across the 17-year-old chestnut mare on the website Need You Now Equine.

“Nobody seemed interested in her,” Brandon’s mother, MJ Allen, told The Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation, the world’s largest and oldest equine sanctuary. “My son asked what was I doing, and when I explained it to him, he said, ‘Mummy, my birthday’s coming up. Just give my birthday money to them. I don’t want the horse to die.’”

Allen and her partner live on a farm with seven horses, a donkey, dogs and cats, and their blended family of six kids, so bringing home another mouth to feed was, understandably, the last thing on her mind. Still, she was so touched by her son’s display of compassion that she raised the remaining $650 needed to buy the thoroughbred.

Soon after, she surprised Brandon with his new best friend.

Boy_Saves_Horse_With_BdayMoney_FamilyPhotoMJAllen 

“It’s my first horse,” Brandon told TheWhig.com, “I clean her, wash her, but my sister feeds her.”

Allen calls Karazan “queen of the field” and “a real diva.” She is, after all, a direct descendent of Canada’s greatest racehorse, Northern Dance, and with that kind of pedigree, it’s no wonder she already has the respect of her new stable mates.

However, the highlight of her new life is her relationship with Brandon, who will help fill her final days with love and affection.

We think that’s the best retirement plan a horse could ask for

(READ the story from Off Track Thoroughbreds or learn more at The Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation)

Photo Credit: MJ Allen, with permission

Dame Saves Orphaned Elephants for 50 Years With Own Milk Recipe

Dr_Dame_Daphne_Sheldrick-elephant-hug-CopyrightTheDavidSheldrickWildlifeTrust

Nobody gives hugs like grandma — especially when the hugs are bringing life to orphan elephants that would otherwise die without their mama in the wake of poaching tragedies.

This explains why the elephants at Kenya’s Nairobi National Park line up for love from 80-year-old Dr. Dame Daphne Sheldrick. A pioneer of elephant care, Dr. Sheldrick presides over one of the world’s most successful wildlife organizations.

With her in-depth knowledge of animal physiology and behavior, the Kenyan-born savior of both elephants and rhinos has rescued and rehabilitated orphan strays — and other wildlife — for more than 50 years.

Because an elephant is milk-dependent until the age of three and without it will perish on its own, Dame Daphne persisted through many trials in order to perfect her own milk formula.

baby elephant-Daphne Sheldrick wildlife trust

She learned her skills not in a university, but working alongside her husband David, Founding Warden of Tsavo East National Park. After his death in 1977, she founded The David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust as a tribute, and today the Trust has more than 90 orphaned elephants reliant on its care until they ultimately will be returned to the wild. Many of these are babies and have been without their families since they were days old.

Farrar, Straus and GirouxSheldrick has authored a book, Love, Life, and Elephants: An African Love Story, where she shares her belief that elephants are just like us, because of their caring nature, loyalty to family, and fierce rage that will exert itself whenever a family member is threatened.

This Dame is fierce too, especially when it comes to poaching. “A world without elephants is hard to comprehend,” Sheldrick told a British newspaper. “But it is a real possibility.”

Many people share a devotion to the species’ survival including Kristin Davis (Sex and the City) whose documentary film, “Gardeners of Eden,” highlights the poaching crisis from a front-line perspective, including the dangerous risks for those working to save them.

dame-sheldrick-awardElephants’ roots on this planet go back some 50 million years and Dame Daphne, with the help of her daughter Angela, who now operates the Trust, are ensuring the majestic animals might last a little longer.

Experience the recent rescue of an orphan elephant from January 25, 2015, in the moving video below, posted on the organization’s YouTube channel.

“Spotted alone and extremely thin, it is a mystery why Siangiki was abandoned and what happened to her herd on the plains of South West Kenya. Without milk, this young elephant would not have survived.”

For $50 a year, you can foster an orphan: Learn more at their website.

Photo (top) posted with permission – Copyright The David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust

16 Million More Americans Insured

nurse photo by Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

More than 16 million Americans now have health insurance since Obamacare (the ACA) was enacted in 2010 and hospitals saved $7.4 billion in uninsured costs in 2014, alone, according to the HHS.

Go On… Let Dogs Lick You, It’s Good For Your Health

puppy-dog-kisses-CC-wishymom

Could it be Lucy had it all wrong when Snoopy kissed her? She panicked over his “dog germs,” running around and shouting, “Get hot water! Get some disinfectant!

Looks like, now, scientists think dog germs may not be a cause for panic, but a cure for what ails you.

The University of Arizona is launching a study to see if the bacteria in your dog’s mouth could boost your immune system and alleviate the effects of severe allergies and asthma. Ultimately, these scientists hope to find out if “dog germs” can boost the growth of microorganisms in people.

An initial study done in 2013, published in the Journal PLOS ONE, proved that households with dogs tend to have greater bacterial diversity — between both dogs and humans. That’s a good thing, since the more microbes you’re exposed to, the stronger your immune system becomes. The scientists behind this new study are now out to uncover why allergies and asthma have increased in the Western World. One theory is that human microbiomes — the collection of microbes in your body — may be depleted because people aren’t exposed to as much beneficial bacteria as we once were.

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Kim Kelly, an anthropology doctoral student is one of the scientists behind the Arizona study. She points out humans and dogs have evolved in a complex relationship over thousands of years. She thinks there may be some scientific reason people and dogs get along so well.

”Is it just that they’re fuzzy and we like to pet them, or is there something else going on under the skin?” Kelly said in a written statement. “Has the relationship between dogs and humans gotten under the skin? And we believe it has.”

The University of Arizona study will pair people between 50 and 60 years old with dogs for 12 weeks. Then they’ll test the people to see if the exposure to dogs — and their big, slobbery tongues covered in dog germs — has boosted their immune systems.

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Dr. Donna Hummell is a Pediatric Allergist and Immunologist at Vanderbilt University. She’s not involved with the Arizona study but suggests dogs may be a factor in spreading beneficial bacteria to people. She points to another study that found infants born into households with dogs tend to have lower allergy and asthma rates.

”Dogs spread their bacteria around more than cats do, particularly because dogs like to lick things and lick people and lick themselves in the process,” Dr. Hummell told ABC News.

If the study confirms that dog germs are a boost to the immune system, Lucy could forget the hot water and disinfectant and start appreciating Snoopy as a warm and fuzzy probiotic.

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Tiny Heroes Race to Save The World Before Snack Time

Super-Hero-Dash-HighPointUniversity-submitted

Straight from a Marvel mini-universe, three foot tall versions of Thor, Wonder Woman, and other caped crusaders are still soaring from their heroic contributions in Monday’s superhero race against child abuse.

While competing in High Point University’s second annual SuperHero Dash, the kids took to the streets to save other children suffering from abuse and neglect.

The High Point, North Carolina race included ‘big kids’ too, as more than 350 costumed students, faculty, staff, and community members participated in the fundraiser, co-hosted by the school’s Kappa Delta sorority and the Guild of Family Service of High Point.

The event raised over $20,000 for Family Services of Piedmont, a nonprofit organization that empowers individuals and families through a variety of support services. The agency programs serve child victims of abuse with shelters, advocacy centers, and counseling.

”Everyone involved is a true superhero,” said Stephanie Allred of Family Services. “These groups helped put together an amazing race, which united HPU students and community members in a fight against child abuse in High Point.”

According to Kappa Delta’s Facebook page, they raised more than double the amount of last year’s donations.

“This event could not have been successful without all the hard work and volunteers from Family Services and sisters of Kappa Delta,” said Kappa Delta’s philanthropy chair Leila Greah.

The dash demonstrated the true power of ordinary superheroes of all sizes, coming together to battle for justice in the community.

Source: High Point University / Photo of Molly Holbrook courtesy of HPU

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Diet May Cut Risk of Alzheimer’s by 50% (Long-term Study of 900 Seniors)

Mediterranean diet-veggies-dips-mealmakeovermoms
A hybrid version of the Mediterranean diet, nicknamed appropriately with the acronym MIND, could significantly lower a person’s risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease, according to a paper published online in the journal Alzheimer’s & Dementia.

The study, conducted by Rush University in Chicago, shows that the diet lowered the risk of Alzheimer’s by as much as 53 percent in participants who adhered to the diet rigorously, and by about 35 percent in those who followed it moderately well.

“One of the more exciting things about this is that people who adhered even moderately to the MIND diet had a reduction in their risk for AD,” said Martha Clare Morris, PhD, a Rush professor and director of Nutrition and Nutritional Epidemiology. “I think that will motivate people.”

Morris and her colleagues developed the MIND diet (Mediterranean-DASH Intervention for Neurodegenerative Delay) based on information that has accrued from years’ worth of past research about what foods and nutrients have good, and bad, effects on the functioning of the brain over time.

The MIND diet is a hybrid of the Mediterranean and DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) diets, both of which have been found to reduce the risk of hypertension, heart attack and stroke. Some researchers have found that the two older diets provide protection against dementia as well.

In the latest study, the MIND diet was compared with the two other diets. People with high adherence to the DASH and Mediterranean diets also had reductions in AD — 39 percent with the DASH diet and 54 percent with the Mediterranean diet — but got negligible benefits from moderate adherence to either of the two other diets. The MIND diet is also easier to follow than the Mediterranean diet, which calls for daily consumption of fish and three to four daily servings of each of fruits and vegetables, Morris said.

farmers-market-produceThe MIND diet has 15 dietary components, including 10 “brain-healthy food groups” — green leafy vegetables, other vegetables, nuts, berries, beans, whole grains, fish, poultry, olive oil and wine. It categorizes five groups of foods as unhealthy — red meats, butter and stick margarine, cheese, pastries and sweets, and fried or fast food.

What’s In the MIND?

The MIND diet includes at least three servings of whole grains, a salad and one other vegetable every day — along with a glass of wine. It also involves snacking most days on nuts and eating beans every other day or so, poultry and berries at least twice a week and fish at least once a week. Dieters must limit eating the designated unhealthy foods, especially butter (less than 1 tablespoon a day), cheese, and fried or fast food (less than a serving a week for any of the three), to have a real shot at avoiding the devastating effects of Alzheimer’s, according to the study.

Berries are the only fruit specifically to make the MIND diet. “Blueberries are one of the more potent foods in terms of protecting the brain,” Morris said, and strawberries have also performed well in past studies of the effect of food on cognitive function.

The Study

The MIND diet was not an intervention in this study. Researchers looked at what people were already eating. Participants earned points if they ate brain-healthy foods frequently and avoided unhealthy foods. The one exception was that participants got one point if they said olive oil was the primary oil used in their homes.

The study enlisted volunteers already participating in the ongoing Rush Memory and Aging Project (MAP), which began in 1997 among residents of Chicago-area retirement communities and senior public housing complexes. An optional “food frequency questionnaire” was added from 2004 to February 2013, and the MIND diet study looked at results for 923 volunteers. A total of 144 cases of AD developed in this cohort.

AD, which takes a devastating toll on cognitive function, is not unlike heart disease in that there appear to be “many factors that play into who gets the disease,” including behavioral, environmental and genetic components, Dr. Morris said.

“With late-onset AD, with that older group of people, genetic risk factors are a small piece of the picture,” she said. Past studies have yielded evidence that suggests that what we eat may play a significant role in determining who gets AD and who doesn’t, Morris said.

elderly-banana-smilesWhen the researchers in the new study left out of the analyses those participants who changed their diets somewhere along the line — say, on a doctor’s orders after a stroke — they found that “the association became stronger between the MIND diet and [favorable] outcomes” in terms of AD, Morris said. “That probably means that people who eat this diet consistently over the years get the best protection.”

In other words, it looks like the longer a person eats the MIND diet, the less risk that person will have of developing AD, Morris said. As is the case with many health-related habits, including physical exercise, she said, “You’ll be healthier if you’ve been doing the right thing for a long time.”

Morris said, “We devised a diet and it worked in this Chicago study.  The results need to be confirmed by other investigators in different populations and also through randomized trials.” That is the best way to establish a cause-and-effect relationship between the MIND diet and reductions in the incidence of Alzheimer’s disease, she said.

The study was funded by the National Institute on Aging. All the researchers on this study were from Rush except for Frank M. Sacks MD, professor of Cardiovascular Disease Prevention, Department of Nutrition, at the Harvard School of Public Health. Dr. Sacks chaired the committee that developed the DASH diet.

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China Airline Hails First Flight Powered by Discarded Cooking Oil

Hainan Airlines first biofuel passenger jet-FB

In a milestone Saturday for sustainable aviation, China became the latest nation to transport passengers on a commercial airline flight powered by used cooking oil.

Hainan Airlines and its partners, including Boeing, achieved the milestone using a mixture of 50% conventional jet fuel and 50% biofuel derived from oil used by restaurants.

Airlines in the Netherlands, Brazil, and Scandinavia have also flown commercial flights powered by bio-fuel made from used cooking oil.

The regularly scheduled Hainan Airlines flight – which carried more than 100 passengers from Shanghai to Beijing in a Next-Generation Boeing 737-800 – used biofuel made by Sinopec in both of the airplane’s CFM56-7B engines.

Hainan Airlines vice president Pu Ming even piloted the plane.

“We are honored to see our airplane fly on sustainable aviation biofuel from Shanghai to our nation’s capital,” said Ming. “Hainan Airlines is demonstrating our environmental commitment by showing that aviation biofuel can play a safe and effective role in China’s air transport system.”

Sustainably produced biofuel, which reduces carbon emissions by 50 to 80 percent compared to petroleum through its lifecycle, is expected to play a key role in supporting aviation’s growth while meeting environmental goals.

In 2011, Boeing collaborated with Air China to conduct China’s first aviation biofuel test flight in a Boeing 747-400 using biofuel made from locally-grown jatropha.

Boeing also works with airlines, research institutions, and governments to develop sustainable aviation biofuel in the United States, Africa, Australia, Brazil, Europe, Japan and the Middle East.