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“Imagination is the eye of the soul.” – Joseph Joubert

Credit: Jr Korpa

Quote of the Day: “Imagination is the eye of the soul.” – Joseph Joubert

Photo by: Jr Korpa

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

Flabby Feline Has Taken to Swimming Lessons for Losing Weight–And it’s Working

Avonvale Veterinary Centres via SWNS
Avonvale Veterinary Centres via SWNS

A fat cat that weighs more than double his healthy size has been thrown into the deep end on a mission to lose weight by swimming.

Moses, who weighs as much as a French bulldog, started the unusual hydrotherapy sessions in a bid to slim down in much the same way that people with bad knees, a bad back, bad hips, or too great a body mass index use pools to start exercising.

The nine-year-old cat piled on the pounds after refusing to go outside or exercise despite his owner putting him on countless diets.

At Avonvale Veterinary Centre in Wellesbourne, Warwickshire, staff say that his weight loss mission is going ‘swimmingly.’

“When he first came to us, Moses was nearly 10kg in weight,” said Olivia Stokes, veterinary hydrotherapist, meaning 22 pounds. “His owner said he had been on diets and been encouraged to exercise before but had still not been able to lose weight.”

“So, we decided to try a different approach with hydrotherapy. I have been in the industry for five years and a qualified hydrotherapist for almost two years, and I have never experienced hydro with a cat before, so Moses was a first for me.”

Obviously this was because Moses didn’t like water, as is true for so many cats. Stokes tried a variety of toys and treats to get Moses started but eventually switched to tougher methods, including starting him on a moving treadmill before adding water.

Now she says that Moses sits and waits on the treadmill for the water level to come up before starting.

OTHER FAT LOSS STORIES FROM THE ANIMAL KINGDOM: Obese Dog Who Weighed Three Times More Than Healthy Pup Has Made a Radical Transformation

“Once he has been walking for 13 minutes, I then lift him up, raise the water level further, and swim him for a couple of minutes to give him a full body workout,” she added.

Moses is now starting to shape up, and as well as losing weight has become far more active and livelier at home. He is already down 2.2 pounds, and the vets see an increase in muscle tissue as well.

Avonvale Veterinary Centres via SWNS

“That’s a loss in body weight of almost four percent in about six weeks, which is perfect as we don’t want to lose the weight too quickly,” said Stokes. “The important thing is that his body shape is clearly changing as he loses the fat and builds back muscle.”

ALSO CHECK OUT: Minnesota Cat Sanctuary Unveils New Outdoor Playground for Feral Rescues: ‘People care about them’

“I am very proud of Moses’ progression; he’s even walking with the incline on the treadmill now.”

Moses’ owner Jenna Joshi is thrilled with her pet’s progress.

“I could see a difference almost straight away,” she remembers. “After his first hydro session, he came through the cat flap, which he hadn’t done in a long time.”

“We are still having regular weight checks, still doing hydrotherapy, and making good progress. It was difficult at first but now he doesn’t complain and knows exactly what he needs to do when he goes for his sessions.”

The best treatment for overweight animals is to monitor their food intake and don’t let them get fat in the first place. It can take far more time for a housepet to lose weight than even a semi-determined human being, but fortunately Moses has a strong will and a determined human.

If This Cat Can Lose Weight, Your Friends Can Too: SHARE This Story With Them…

Scientists Grow Micro-Diamonds ‘from Scratch’ in 15 Minutes Thanks to Groundbreaking New Process

Diamonds made with the new technique are mostly pure — but they're too tiny to fit on your finger. (Image credit Institute for Basic Science)
Diamonds made with the new technique are mostly pure — but they’re too tiny to fit on your finger. (Image credit Institute for Basic Science)

In South Korea, chemists have recently developed a way to grow artificial micro-diamonds in minutes, rather than days.

Furthermore, the technique doesn’t require high temperatures or intense pressure, and are made “from scratch” with the potential to revolutionize the diamond industry by providing unlimited micro-diamonds for polishing and cutting uses.

Gemstones are formed typically by intense heat, intense pressure, natural catalysts, or some combination of the three. Diamonds require an awful lot of the first two to manufacture artificially, but Rodney Ruoff, a physical chemist at the Institute for Basic Science in South Korea, has eliminated the need.

Instead of gigapascals of pressure and temperatures as high as 2,700 degrees Fahrenheit (1,500 degrees Celsius), Ruoff and his colleagues needed graphene, silicon, gallium, iron, and nickel—and that’s it.

“For over a decade I have been thinking about new ways to grow diamonds, as I thought it might be possible to achieve this in what might be unexpected (per ‘conventional’ thinking) ways,” Ruoff told Live Science by email.

Ruoff started with gallium, which had been shown in a previous, unrelated paper to catalyze the formation of graphene. Graphene is pure carbon, just like a diamond, but the chemical structure is straight and flat rather than the latter’s tetrahedral formation.

At that point, the experiment met its most expensive component—a home-built chamber designed by co-author Won Kyung Seong—that could house the gallium-nickel-iron mixture in a graphene crucible and withstand the introduction of hot methane gas. When all these elements came together—with a pinch of silicon—diamonds were formed in 15 minutes at sea level pressures inside the chamber.

MORE DIAMOND SCIENCE: Huge Black Diamond Sold for $4.3 Million–and No One Knows Where it Came From or How it Was Formed

The chemical minutiae of how the experiment succeeded is still murky, and it will be at least another few years before the scientists or others working with similar methods will know for sure whether Ruoff’s process can produce diamonds for jewelry, because the ones described in their study were thousands of times smaller than lab-grown diamonds used for jewelry.

CAN YOU BELIEVE THIS: Rare Diamond Within a Diamond Is Unearthed in India and Dubbed ‘The Beating Heart’

However, the ‘film’ of micro-diamonds could very well serve to take the place of larger diamonds for the purpose of being crushed into powder. Because diamond is the hardest substance known, diamond dust is the tool by which diamonds are polished, and Ruoff’s 15-minute micro-diamonds (copyright available) may save jewelers thousands of dollars in the cost of diamond dust.

SHARE This Awesome Experimental Chemistry With Your Friends… 

Grandson Surprises Grandpa by Restoring 1954 Pickup Sitting Broken for 40 Years: ‘I never thought I’d live to see that’

Grandpa sees truck restored – Blake Kincheloe / YouTube
credit – Blake Kincheloe CC 3.0. ND-SA

A son recently surprised his grandfather by repairing his 70-year-old pickup truck to a fully functioning automobile, and the video will bring a tear to your eye.

“50 dollars and a hog” is what Richard Kincheloe’s mother paid for a red, 1954 International Harvester pickup truck, which Richard, now a grandfather, drove around for years until it broke down.

His grandson Blake Kincheloe, grew up thinking of the International as his own little truck, even giving it the nickname “Cannonball”, however it has served as a multi-ton paperweight and spider hotel, sitting broken and idle on Richard’s property.

Coming of age, Blake contemplated what a swell idea it would be to have the old truck up and running again.

Taking it into C&J’s Classic Cars, he first planned for nothing more than a set of modern brakes, but soon a full restoration was ongoing, adding parts all over the car from brake lights, which the original didn’t have, to a bathroom door latch because the door handle mechanism was unsalvageable.

MORE STORIES LIKE THIS: He Found His Dad’s 1930s Car at An Auction–and Got it Working Again (LOOK)

Then came the big day; when Blake and his father would drive Cannonball down Richard’s driveway for the first time in 45 years.

ALSO CHECK OUT: Teens Step in to Rebuild a Jeep After Sentimental Family Project Stalled With Dad’s Death

“What’s that pappa?” a female voice can be heard asking Richard in a video made by Blake and other family/friends as the truck approached. “Well, I’ll be danged!” he exclaimed.

As for his priceless response, it’s best to listen for yourself (NOTE: Some word choices may not be for children.)

WATCH the short USA Today video below (with ad), OR the longer original video at the bottom… 

SHARE This Charming Family Video With Your Friends Who Love The South… 

France Celebrates Baguette on Scratch-and-Sniff Stamp, Honoring the World Heritage-Declared Food

Baguette stamp - credit La Poste
Baguette stamp – credit La Poste

The French postal service has released a scratch-and-sniff stamp that will fill your letter room or office with the aroma of freshly baked bread as it honors the classic baguette.

The best thing since sliced bread, the baguette was recently honored by UNESCO with the status of ‘Intangible Cultural Heritage,’ or in other words, a standout element in the story of humanity that can’t be pinned down to the words on a page, the outcome of a battle, or the bricks making up a monument.

The stamp was unveiled last Thursday by La Poste on the occasion of Sant-Honore’s feast day—the patron saint of bakers.

“The baguette, the bread of our daily lives, the symbol of our gastronomy, the jewel of our culture”, La Poste says on its website.

It will cost €1.96 and run for a limited time with just under 600,000 copies set for printing. It depicts a baguette wrapped in blue and white ribbons.

The stamp’s ink is coated in microcapsules that burst when the customer scratches it, releasing the scent. La Poste purchases the special ink pre-made, and the smell is derived from a collection of bakeries.

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“And the difficulty for us is to apply this ink without breaking the capsules, so that the smell can then be released by the customer rubbing on the stamp,” Damien Lavaud, printer at Philaposte, was quoted as saying by France Bleu, according to France24.

MORE SIMILAR HONORS: Iron Maiden Wins Royal Mail Seal of Approval With 12 New Stamps

UNESCO attempts to summarize the value and uniqueness of baguettes over other breads with the following description.

Baguettes require specific knowledge and techniques: they are baked throughout the day in small batches and the outcomes vary according to the temperature and humidity.

They also generate modes of consumption and social practices that differentiate them from other types of bread, such as daily visits to bakeries to purchase the loaves and specific display racks to match their long shape.

SHARE This Charming Celebration Of The Greatest Of France’s Modest Achievements… 

“Love begins by taking care of the closest ones, the ones at home.” – Mother Teresa

Quote of the Day: “Love begins by taking care of the closest ones, the ones at home.” – Mother Teresa

Photo by: Kelly Sikkema (cropped)

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

Scientists Buzzing After Unique Native Bee Colonies Discovered Right on Their College Campus

Colletes mining bee on Washington College campus – Credit Pamela Cowart-Rickman
Colletes mining bee on Washington College campus – Credit Pamela Cowart-Rickman

In a charming coincidence, a pair of bee and insect specialists from Washington College are buzzing with excitement about a unique and newly documented population of native bees right on their very own campus.

Although the large group of ground-nesting bees has been noticeable on one corner of the campus for years, recent identification of at least five different species all using the same area has sparked interest from researchers.

The section of the college green located in front of East and Middle Halls is a hotspot for these vital pollinators, with ground-nesting ‘mining’ bees from the Andrena and Colletes genera thriving on the hill at the base of the halls.

Recently, thanks to her keen eye and love of insects, photographer Pamela Cowart-Rickman realized that the area has multiple species of native mining bees all nesting together, something that has not been well documented.

Cowart-Rickman, who studied biology at WC as an undergrad and developed a love of insects has tentatively identified five different species that are all sharing the same nesting grounds. They include four different Andrena (mining bees), one Colletes (cellophane bees), and likely three cuckoo bees in the genus Nomada.

“The Washington College site provides rare nesting habitat for multiple native bee species, several of which are uncommon and unidentified,” said Sam Droege from the US Geological Survey’s Bee Lab.

“We always talk about providing plants to support native bees and other pollinators, but we rarely think about providing adequate nesting habitat for their survival. These native bees provide beneficial pollination to fruiting trees and plants, not only on the College campus, but also the Chestertown community.”

“They have been nesting amongst and on top of each other for several years in this same location,” said Cowart-Rickman of the bees she has spotted. “The various Andrena have the largest nesting area and emerge first in late February. The Colletes have a smaller area and emerge later in late April.”

Several of the species present on Washington College campus – credit Pamela Cowart-Rickman

Cowart-Rickman devotes her free time to photographing insects and has been helping researchers identify and track populations. She has found and documented several species for MD Biodiversity, BugGuide, iNat, and researchers at the Canadian National Collection of Insects.

When she realized what she had stumbled upon right outside her own office building on campus, she reached out to Dr. Beth Choate, deputy director of the Washington College Center for Environment and Society. Choate, who has published research on the abundance of wild bee populations in urban and rural gradients, was also intrigued by the nesting sites Cowart-Rickman had found. The two decided to investigate further.

“On a nice day in the spring, you can see the male bees hovering right at grass level. There were hundreds of these males searching for a female to mate when we were out there,” said Choate.

MORE INSECT INSPIRATION: Spiders Use Their Webs as Giant Microphones to Hear What’s Going on Around Them, Says New Research

Females create a small burrow in the ground for rearing young and a ball of pollen and nectar is placed in each to feed the larval bee when it emerges from the egg, Choate explained. Once the males and females mate, the female returns to her nest and lays the egg in the carefully constructed burrow to develop.

The area of the campus where the bees have been found nesting together – credit Matt Lester

“Ground-nesting bees need bare, minimally covered ground in order to dig into the soil. They also prefer sunny and well-drained soil, but it will be interesting to learn what is unique about the soil in this space and why the aggregation has become so large,” said Choate.

“Since ground-nesting bees are solitary and do not form colonies, they generally aren’t as noticeable as this aggregation. Females often create nests near one another; however, an aggregation this large is unique.”

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE: Australian Scientists Manage to Identify 1,100 Species in their Backyards, Highlighting Value of Urban Biodiversity.

After seeing one of Cowart-Rickman’s nesting bee photos on iNat, and realizing the rarity of the site, Dr. Jordan Kueneman, a researcher with Project GNBee who is working on tracking ground-nesting bees at the Danforth Lab at Cornell University, reached out to Cowart-Rickman about possibly providing further research samples and information.

“We were very excited to learn about the ground-nesting bee aggregations at Washington College, for a myriad of reasons,” said Kueneman. “First, the size of the aggregation is substantial, and multiple species are utilizing areas of the overall site to nest. This scenario is ideal for understanding nesting requirements for bees and how those vary by species.

“Second,” Kueneman continued, “intermixed aggregations of nesting bees are particularly interesting to study from an ecological perspective, as the cost/benefits of varying nesting strategies and behavior can be more easily studied, particularly in the context of phenology, nest architecture, and risk of parasitism.”

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He noted that due to its location, the Washington College aggregation can easily provide the opportunity for students and the public to learn about the biology of ground-nesting bees and the value they provide to the environment. He is also hopeful that knowledge of the history of the area and the site’s management can help inform how ground management practices on campus have impacted the population in the past and provide opportunities to explore how current management will impact this population in the future.

Research and monitoring of the aggregation will continue as teams from both schools work together to study what makes this site so appealing to multiple species of bees.

SHARE This Fascinating Bee Behavior With Your Friends On Social Media… 

Mushroom Hunters Stumble Upon Mysterious Stone Sculpture in Thai Forest

Officials investigating the stone carving – Thailand’s Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation
Officials investigating the stone carving – Thailand’s Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation

Three Thai villagers were out looking for mushrooms when they came across this boulder depicting a woman in breathtaking detail.

“Went mushroom hunting and found this,” Pramul Kongkratok, one of the locals, wrote on social media according to the Nation Thailand. “I’ve lived here for so long, but just learned we have this around here. It’s a blessing.”

Showing admirable responsibility, Mr. Kongkratok called the Department of National Parks, Wildlife, and Plant Conservation to investigate, who in turn we’re told contacted art and antiquities authorities to ascertain how old the carving might be.

Some theories, however, have quickly emerged: notably that it could have been made in the 6th century during the flourishing of a kingdom called Dvaravati, which was located in modern-day Thailand near the border with Cambodia, exactly the place where the carving was found.

However, the carving style is not really comparable to other examples of Dvaravati reliefs like this one of musicians seated in a row.

Another theory is that it depicts the mother of Lord Buddha, Maya Devi. In part this is because the woman figure is holding a branch of the Bodhi tree, or pipal in Hindi, the tree under which Prince Siddharta Gautama meditated for 7 days and attained Enlightenment.

Rarely depicted alone, and if so, typically lying down in order to illustrate the story of Buddha’s birth—when his mother dreamt the spirit of a white elephant entered her womb, many are as skeptical of the Maya Devi claim as the claim of Dvaravati origin.

DELIGHTFUL MYSTERIES: Dozens of Strange 12-Sided Objects from Roman Times Have Been Found—No One Knows What They’re For

In general, the artists living during the golden age of Buddhist kingdoms in South Asia kept significantly conformist carving styles, while this discovery doesn’t.

MORE ARTISTIC DISCOVERIES: Danish Artist Hides Enormous Trolls in Forests Around the World Using Recycled Wood—LOOK

Smithsonian reports that a Wat, or Thai Buddhist monastery, inhabited by a group of artistically inclined monks, is located less than a mile from where the carving was found in Dong Yai Wildlife Sanctuary.

Whatever the origin, it’s a beautiful carving and a delightful reminder that the world is full of surprises.

SHARE This Delightful Mystery With Your Friends Who Love Asia… 

A Canadian Farmer Had Millions of Surplus Potatoes and Worked Overtime to Give Them All Away

EastWest Food Rescue group / Facebook
EastWest Food Rescue group / Facebook

From Canada’s province of Manitoba comes the story of how dozens of volunteers succeeded when presented with a mammoth logistical challenge: giving away 12 million pounds of potatoes.

There are bumper crops, and then there’s whatever happened on Isaiah Hofer’s Manitoba farm last year.

Potatoes were coming out of the ground in such numbers that after fulfilling all his normal deliveries and quotas, Hofer still had 10 million pounds of potatoes left.

“[P]eople that have been in this industry for the last 40 years, they’ve never seen something like this,” said Hofer. “We had at least almost 100,000 bags of surplus potatoes. In potato language, a bag is 100 pounds [45 kilograms].”

He had a few options, including leaving them to rot as fertilizer, turning them into animal feed, or selling at a tiny profit or even a loss in such a flush market. In the end, Hofer followed his heart and resolved to give all of them away to the needy.

In his email inbox, he saw a letter from the industry group Keystone Potato Producers Association which happened to be spotlighting the work of a US food charity outfit Farmlink Project.

Farmlink arose from the government-enforced business closures and supply chain disruptions during the pandemic, and was responsible for connecting farms with surplus food with food banks cut off from usual deliveries.

Since 2020, they have rescued around 100 million pounds of food from going to waste on farms and distributing it to food banks across North America. Contacting some other farmers he knew, Hofer was soon able to offer Farmlink 12 million pounds (5.4 million kg) of potatoes for donation.

Teaming up, Hofer and Kate Nelson, chief marketing officer and a co-founder of Farmlink, began to strategize about how to get rid of the spare spuds, and Foodsharing Ottawa was their first target.

CBC news, reporting on the story, said that there has been a dramatic spike in food insecure households in Canada since last year, and Foodsharing Ottawa’s volunteer executive director Wendy Leung knew that just one of Hofner’s 40,000-pound potato donation parcels could make a huge difference.

CHECK OUT THIS AMAZING WORK: UK Restaurant is Letting People Pay-as-They-Can While Rescuing Tons of Food

Suddenly though, Leung had to swap her typical logistical tools of cardboard boxes, hatchbacks, and shopping carts for a forklift, climate-controlled facility, semi trucks, and a large volunteer workforce if it meant getting hold of the potatoes.

Hofer and Nelson, who were looking at a CAD$30,000 cost for their donation, were able to rely on some contacts who provided packaging and transportation.

Their efforts paid off, and Hofner’s farm saw the departure of 115 trucks carrying the spuds to food banks and charities as far afield as San Diego, California. Many were sent to the populace province of Ottawa.

MORE FOOD BANK STORIES: Iowa Teen Has Donated 7,000 Pounds of Produce from Her Own Garden to Food Banks: ‘A really good feeling’

“Together, I think we actually gave back to over 50 local organizations across the city with countless numbers of individuals and households,” Leung told CBC. “And all these potatoes were claimed actually within eight to nine days.”

In 2020, GNN reported on a similar volunteer effort to rescue 200 tons of potatoes and onions from rot during the pandemic, when EastWest Food Rescue was formed to coordinate the volunteer hauling of the produce from farms in Washington State out to the coastal cities for use in food banks.

SHARE These Heroic Donation Efforts To Feed Millions In Canada… 

Rare Deep Sea Squid with ‘Headlights’ Captured on Video–Mistaking the Camera for Food–WATCH

Taningia danae squid with bioluminescent headlights – Credit: University of Western Australia / Inkfish
Taningia danae squid with bioluminescent headlights – Credit: University of Western Australia / Inkfish

Australian marine biologists recently captured video of a large, deep-water squid attacking one of their cameras over 3,000 feet below the surface of the ocean.

The deep-sea hooked squid is one of the largest deep-dwelling squid species, but rather than the animal’s size, it was the glowing lights on the end of its tentacles that most interested scientists.

A team from the Minderoo campus of the University of Western Australia’s Deep Sea Research Center was deploying baited, free-falling cameras to record video footage of deep-sea life.

Chief scientist Heather Stewart, from the collaborating Kelpie Geosciences, UK, and an adjunct at UWA, was working in an area known as the Samoan Passage where she let the camera fall to 5 kilometers down before recovering it.

“As we were reviewing the footage, we realized we had captured something very rare,” Stewart said.

They had found a Taningia danae, or deep-sea hooked squid, renowned for having the largest photophores of any animal known. Photophores are bioluminescent organs that form a part of the squid’s hunting strategy—flashing fish with bright light to disorient them in the lead-up to an attack.

MARVEL AT MARINE LIFE: Amazing Video of Giant Phantom Jellyfish from Deep in the Dark Fathoms at 3,200 Feet – WATCH

“The squid, which was about [30 inches] 75cm long, descended on our camera assuming it was prey, and tried to startle it with its huge bioluminescent headlights,” Stewart added.

Professor Alan Jamieson, director of the Minderoo-UWA Deep Sea Research Center, said observing deep-sea squid in their natural habitat, especially in the mid-water, was notoriously challenging.

MORE DEEP SEA STORIES: Man Who Found World’s Deepest-Dwelling Octopus and Jellyfish Scores 3-of-a-Kind, With Deepest-Dwelling Squid

“Many records of this species are from strandings, accidental bycatch or from the stomach contents of whales,” Professor Jamieson said.

“The rarity of live observations of these amazing animals makes every encounter valuable in gathering information on geographic locations, depth, and behavior, plus it is such a unique animal that we hardly ever get to see, so we had to share it.”

WATCH the video with narration below… 

SHARE This Amazing Encounter Of The Deeps With Your Friends… 

“We all have our darkness, and the trick is making something noble of it.” – Andrew Solomon  

Quote of the Day: “We all have our darkness, and the trick is making something noble of it.” – Andrew Solomon

Photo by: Warren Wong

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

‘My Baby is Still in the House!’ Hero Stranger Dives into Burning Home Twice to Save Ohio Baby

Credit: USAF
Credit: USAF

A Cleveland man is being hailed as a hero for his determination to rescue an infant trapped in a burning house.

John Stickovich was on his way to work when the 62-year-old saw a house consumed in fire and smoke, but no fire engines had yet arrived.

In front of the house, Stickovich saw who he assumed was the occupant looking on despondently.

“The mother was sitting on the… lawn with her one baby and I asked her if she was all right and she said, ‘My baby is still in the house,’ and I was thinking to myself, ‘Oh my God, I have to save the baby.’ That’s how it was going to be,” Stickovich told Nexstar’s WJW.

Circling the house, he tried to go in through the side door, but kicking it in, he found the smoke and fire was too much. At the back of the house, another door was already open, and Stickovich crawled in to search for the baby before being driven back out empty-handed.

He asked the mother where she last saw her child, to which she replied that it was next to the baby gate. So plunging once more into the inferno, Stickovich sought in vain with time and oxygen running short. Contemplating what to do, the thought of saving himself emerged, but the hero-to-be squashed it after hearing the infant making a sound.

Throwing himself in the sound’s direction, his arm caught hold of the baby’s leg before the man retreated with all the strength he had left.

MORE GOOD SAMARITANS: Former UFC Heavyweight Champ Mark Coleman Saves Parents from House Fire, Fans Raise $121k for Hospital Bills

The fire had been so severe that two firefighters arriving after Stickovich completed the rescue mission were injured trying to control the blaze. The department said Stickovich’s actions were without doubt the reason that the baby survived.

Treated for smoke inhalation at the MetroHealth Medical Center, Stickovich was able to go home the same day, and WJW Cleveland says that it is believed the city is poised to honor the man for his bravery.

“I feel wonderful that I could save the baby. That mother doesn’t have to mourn her baby. That baby gets to live today,” he said. “Everybody is just calling and saying how great of a job it was, but I mean, I would do it for anybody, it doesn’t matter. And I would hope that somebody would do it for me.”

WATCH the story below from WKYC… 

SHARE This Hero’s Incredible Actions With Your Friends On Social Media… 

The First of 2,000 Privately Owned White Rhinos Get New Home – Rewilded by South African Conservancy

3 of the 2,000 southern white rhino up for auction. credit Platinum Rhino
3 of the 2,000 southern white rhinos auctioned – Credit: Platinum Rhino

An ambitious plan to rewild 2,000 southern white rhino into secure protected areas in Africa over the next 10 years has officially begun, with 40 of these majestic beasts on their way to a new home at the Munywana Conservancy in Zululand, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.

It’s the first relocation of a continent-wide effort organized by African Parks called ‘Rhino Rewild, and follows the recent acquisition of 2,000 southern white rhino that had been privately owned by a multi-millionaire who dreamed of keeping them in a preserve for the purpose of harvesting their horns to flood the illegal rhino horn trade and crash the price to disincentivize poaching.

Their new home, Munywana Conservancy has a historic foundation: in 2007, over 20,000 acres of land were returned to its ancestral owners, the Makhasa and Mnqobokazi communities as part of South Africa’s land restitution process.

Both communities requested that the land continue to be kept under conservation. Through this legacy, the Munywana Conservancy, now a 79,000-acre (29,866-hectare) reserve, is upheld through a collaboration of community and private landowners.

“We are extremely pleased to receive these 40 rhino from African Parks, to supplement the current population of white rhino at our community conservancy,” said Thokozani Mlambo, Chairperson of the Makhasa Trust, one of the three primary shareholders of the Munywana Conservancy.

“We see this as recognition of the important role that community-owned land plays in conservation, and we are proud to be collaborating in such a significant partnership to rewild rhino across our continent.”

Millionaire breeder John Hume of South Africa was unable to continue financing his venture, when, after years of litigation, the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) remained adamant that they would not grant him an exception for the sale of rhino horn—banned as it has been since 1974, and so facing bankruptcy, Hume put all the animals up for auction in April.

Hume’s 2,000 rhino were approximately 15% of the remaining wild population of southern white rhino.

The white rhino as a species is under extreme pressure due to poaching and habitat loss, and hence the need for well-protected areas for them to thrive. While southern white rhino reached an all-time low of between 30 to 40 animals in the 1930s, effective conservation measures increased the population to approximately 20,000 individuals by 2012.

These mega-herbivores are important in shaping savannahs, which store approximately 30% of the world’s terrestrial carbon. Where rhino are present, there is an increase in both flora and fauna; and thriving wild rhino populations are indicators of ecosystem renewal.

MORE RHINO NEWS: 21 Black Rhinos Successfully Moved to New Kenya Home With Space to Breed–Hailing Return of Species After 50 yrs

The Munywana Conservancy offers a secure environment to support the rewilding of these animals. With this move, Munywana’s current rhino population will be bolstered, enhancing genetic diversity, aiding future rhino translocations to other locations, and supporting tourism—a key driver of the local economy.

“On behalf of the government of South Africa, we were very supportive of African Parks’ plan to purchase and rewild these rhino and remain a key partner in providing technical and scientific advice and the support needed to carry out this conservation solution in South Africa and on the African continent,” said Ms. Barbara Creecy, the South African Minister of Forestry, Fisheries and Environment.

ALSO CHECK OUT: Little Boy Lost for 6 Days in Harsh Kenyan Wilderness is Rescued: ‘An Amazing Moment’

To achieve a successful outcome of this translocation, the animals’ body condition and parasite adaptation will be closely monitored as they adjust to their new environment. In addition, the conservancy will implement intensive security measures to ensure the safety of the 40 dehorned rhino.

“We believe that both African Parks and the Munywana have the same ethos and guiding principles when it comes to conservation, and in that spirit the Munywana has gladly accepted this donation, enabling these rhino to commence the process of becoming fully wild and free-roaming,” said Dale Wepener, Munywana Warden & Conservation Manager.

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The funding for the translocation was provided by the ever-stalwart Aspinall Foundation, with additional help from The Wildlife Emergency Fund.

“We recognize the magnitude and logistical feat of moving 2,000 rhino. This is just the beginning of a long-term partnership with African Parks where we can play our part in making a tangible contribution to the future of the southern white rhino in Africa,” said Damian Aspinall, chairman of WeWild Africa.

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Helicopter Herder Follows a Dog’s Tracks from the Air to a Miracle Rescue

Jamie Rooney is re-united with his dog Rocky in Jack Poplawski's helicopter - Supplied Jamie Rooney
Jamie Rooney is reunited with his dog Rocky in Jack Poplawski’s helicopter – Supplied Jamie Rooney

A helicopter pilot in Australia recently found a man’s missing dog in the Outback in what the owner called a “needle in a haystack rescue.”

For those who’ve never been to cattle country Down Under, it might come as a surprise to know that because the ranches are so vast, farmers will often hire helicopter pilots to round the cattle up for them.

But in late April, pilot Jack Poplawski got a different sort of phone call—a man had lost his dog and was desperate for some help.

Jamie Rooney was driving along in a remote part of West Australia’s Pilbara region near the town of Newman, and, coming across a large creek, he thought he’d let his dog Rocky go for a swim to cool off.

The American Staffordshire terrier was all too happy for the opportunity. It couldn’t have been more than a minute that Rocky was out of sight—as Rooney had gone up to his truck to get something. But returning to the water, Rocky was nowhere to be seen.

After frantically looking around the water, Rooney drove up and down the trails in the area, standing on the roof periodically and calling his dog’s name, but Rocky never turned up.

MORE DOG RESCUES: A Lost Dog Treks 150 Miles Across Alaskan Sea Ice Before He’s Reunited with His Family

“Earlier that day, as I was driving past the airport I could see all the helicopters going up … [so] I just went online for rescue helicopters and I just called the number,” Rooney told ABC News Down Under.

On the other end of the line was pilot Jack Poplawski.

“At the start they said, ‘Look, it’s a needle in the haystack’, and I was very worried,” Rooney said. “Once you leave maybe 5-10 minutes out of town [Newman], it’s just nothing. It’s just vast outback land.”

But as a devoted dog owner himself, Poplawski was determined to help, despite the odds.

MORE AUSTRALIAN OUTBACK TALES: Mechanic Saved a Family’s Dream With Quick Fix for Wheelchair Malfunction in Aussie Outback

Flying low over the terrain, Poplawski’s 20-12 vision spotted a set of tracks, which even from his helicopter appeared to the pilot as too large to be a dingo’s. It was minutes later that Poplawski spotted Rocky trotting along a small track.

The reunion in the back of Poplawski’s chopper was emotional, with Rooney left grateful and in tears. The owner says the experience has led him to invest in a GPS tag for Rocky’s collar, as well as a new appreciation for the cattle-mustering pilots of Australia’s Outback.

SHARE This Pilot’s Incredible Eyes And A Happy Ending For A Dog And His Dad…

Extremely Elaborate 2,200-Year-old Tomb Discovered That May Have Belonged to a King–‘Most Complex Structure of its Kind’

Tomb from ancient China dates back 2,200 years ago – National Cultural Heritage Administration handout
Tomb from ancient China dates back 2,200 years ago – National Cultural Heritage Administration handout

In mid-April, Chinese archaeologists announced they had completed the first stage of excavations on a kingly tomb believed to date back 2,200 years to the state of Chu.

An integral part of fledgling Chinese history, Chu was a powerful kingdom that once conquered and annexed the state where Confucius was born, and the archaeologists believe they know exactly who it is that’s buried inside.

Located in the eastern province of Anhui, work at the tomb began in 2019 because reports had found it was a common target of looters. Excavations have shown it to be the most complex funerary structure from its time ever discovered in China.

Over 3,000 relics, including lacquered wood products, bronze vessels, figurines, chariot and horse pits, and sacrificial remains were all found in addition to a woven bamboo mat that allowed scientists to get a radiocarbon analysis that showed the tomb’s age.

“At present, the on-site work has entered the second stage within the coffin chamber, that is, the excavation and cleaning of the interior of the coffin chamber,” Gong Xicheng, deputy director of the Anhui Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology, told Xinhua.

“Perhaps by then, the identity of the tomb owner will be revealed and the mystery can be solved.”

IN ARCHAEOLOGICAL NEWS: Archaeologists May Have Found the Villa Where the Roman Emperor Augustus Died

The history of even ancient China is astonishingly well recorded and researched, and this historical canon suggests that the owner may be King Kaolie who reigned from 262 to 238 BCE in the state of Chu, which lasted from 770 to 228 BCE.

It’s currently the working hypothesis because Kaolie moved the Chu capital to Shouxian County in Anhui province, where the tomb was found. Aside from Kaolie, there were three other kings who ruled Chu from Shouxian, but Kaolie’s reign lines up nicely with the carbon dating from the mats, and the other three kings all had misadventures that meant they probably didn’t have the luxury of a tomb as grand as this one.

MORE CHINESE TOMBS: Ming Dynasty Tomb of an Imperial Official Discovered in Exquisite State of Preservation

The state of Chu emerged from the breaking up of the Zhou Dynasty, one of the four official Chinese dynasties to exist before the common era, and one which saw the establishment of several of Chinese civilization’s foundational texts and beliefs, such as the I Ching, or Book of Change, and early Confucianism.

Excitingly, only one-third of the tomb has been fully excavated, and potentially many more secrets and treasures are waiting to be discovered.

SHARE This Great Archaeological Discovery With Your Friends… 

“In all things of nature there is something of the marvelous.” – Aristotle

Quote of the Day: “In all things of nature there is something of the marvelous.” – Aristotle

Photo by: Hasan Almasi

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

Here’s a Summer Dream Job: Get Paid $100K to Swim in Pools in All 50 States in the U.S.

The ‘Airbnb of Pools’ is offering a dream summer job for one lucky and talented content creator: make video reviews of pools in all fifty states and earn up to $100k.

Swimply is a company that specializes in neighborhood-driven rental markets of pools, hot tubs and saunas, tennis courts, patios, and other spaces for events and R&R.

With an already enormous list of locations across the country, they need one expert ‘Chief Pools Officer’ to review them.

Applicants should be over 18, and book one pool through the Swimply platform to create a social media-style video review about. Any videos must be submitted by June 15th, and any applications must include tagging and following the company through @swimply and using the hashtag #SwimplyDreamJob.

“With a diverse array of pools across the country, we have something for everyone, and the chief pools officer will be our primary expert and voice on how to find the best aquatic escapes nestled in America’s backyards,” Swimply wrote on its website.

A GREAT STORY ABOUT A DREAM JOB: Man Lands Dream Job After Skydiving with Sign Asking for Work–New Employer Offers a Job the Same Way

The Chief Pools Officer’s base salary is a little below national standards for executives: $50,000 per annum, but it comes with $50,000 in potential performance bonuses depending on content engagement and feedback.

There is no limit to the number of applications, and all potential candidates will receive a follow-up with Swimply’s CEO Derek Callow, and a “swimming screen test.”

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Solution Found for Lack of Natural Vanilla: A Way to Create it from Plant Waste in One Step

credit - Professor Toshiki Furuya, Department of Applied Biological Science, Faculty of Science and Technology, Tokyo University of Science
credit – Professor Toshiki Furuya, Department of Applied Biological Science, Faculty of Science and Technology, Tokyo University of Science

Vanilla, the most widely used flavoring compound in confectionaries and cosmetics, gets its sweet flavor and aroma from the aptly-named chemical compound—’vanillin.’ However, the large-scale production of natural vanillin is essentially non-existent.

Now, researchers from Tokyo University of Science have genetically engineered a novel enzyme that can convert ferulic acid from plant waste into vanillin in a one-step sustainable process that should cause vanilla prices to plummet and free up land for use in cultivating other cash crops.

The product known as vanilla extract is mainly produced from the seed pods of this member of the orchid family, while the plant itself creates vanillin through the conversion of ferulic acid by a naturally produced enzyme with the chemical abbreviation VpVAN.

However, laboratory biosynthesis of vanillin from plant-derived VpVAN yields only very small quantities of vanillin, and is currently commercially impractical. Furthermore, although chemically derived vanilla essences are available cheaply, they do not match the flavor of natural vanilla extract, and the demand for the latter continues to remain high.

The challenges do not stop here as climatic restrictions for the cultivation of vanilla plants, and the relatively small yield obtained per plant, have led to a dwindling supply and a surge in the price of natural vanilla extract.

Addressing these challenges, Professor Toshiki Furuya from the Department of Applied Biological Science at Tokyo University of Science and his graduate students Shizuka Fujimaki and Satsuki Sakamoto have successfully developed an enzyme that generates vanillin from plant-derived ferulic acid.

“Ferulic acid, the raw material, is a compound that can be obtained in abundance from agricultural waste such as rice bran and wheat bran,” explains Professor Furuya. “Vanillin is generated simply by mixing ferulic acid with the developed enzyme at room temperature. So, the established technology can provide a simple and environmentally friendly method for producing flavor compounds.”

A study presenting their new production method was published on May 10 in Applied and Environmental Microbiology.

MORE STORIES LIKE THIS: Indian Man Grows Precious Saffron In a Shipping Container–Wants to Share His Hydroponic Technique With Others
The researchers made their discovery by using genetic engineering approaches to modify the molecular structure of an enzyme called Ado. In its native state, Ado doesn’t have the ability to convert ferulic acid into vanillin.

Analyzing Ado to figure out why, the researchers were able to predict amino acid changes in Ado which would enable its interaction with ferulic acid. On these lines, they conducted a series of experiments by replacing the amino acids phenylalanine and valine with tyrosine and arginine.

The results were immediate and dramatic. The engineered enzyme did not require any cofactors for conversion, unlike other oxidases, and produced vanillin on a gram scale per liter of reaction solution, with a higher catalytic efficiency and affinity than that of the wild-type enzyme.

MORE COST-CUTTING RESEARCH: Simple Scanner the Size of a Coffee Grinder Will Tell You Exactly How Long Fruit and Veggies Will Last

The reaction only required mixing the enzyme, ferulic acid, and air at room temperature, making it a simple, sustainable, and economically scalable process. Furthermore, it was also found to convert p-coumaric acid and sinapic acid, which are compounds obtained from the degradation of lignin—the cell that makes wood.

So far, no microbial or plant-derived enzymes have exhibited the ability to convert ferulic acid to vanillin at an industrial scale. Therefore, the enzyme developed in the current study shows considerable potential for enabling the commercial and economically viable production of natural vanillin.

“Harnessing the potential of microorganisms and enzymes to derive valuable compounds under mild conditions from renewable plant-based resources offers a sustainable approach to minimizing environmental footprint,” said Professor Fukuya.

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He Saved One of the Largest Forests in India from Coal Mining–and Was Honored With 2024 Goldman Prize

Alok Shukla - credit Goldman Environment Prize
Alok Shukla – credit Goldman Environment Prize

Winning what’s been called the ‘Green Nobel’ an Indian environmental activist has been recognized for saving a 657 square-mile forest from 21 coal mines.

From the New Delhi train station to high-end hotels to the poorest communities, virtually no one in India is free from periodic blackouts. As part of the Modi regime’s push for a developed and economically dominant India, power generation of every sort is being installed in huge quantities.

GNN has reported this drive has included some of the world’s largest solar energy projects, but it also involves coal. India is one of the largest consumers of coal for electricity generation, and Hasdeo Aranya forests, known as the “Lungs of Chhattisgarh,” are known to harbor large deposits.

The state government had been investigating 21 proposed coal mining blocks across 445,000 acres of biodiverse forests that provide crucial natural resources to the area’s 15,000 indigenous Adivasi people.

Along with the Adivasi, tigers, elephants, sloth bears, leopards, and wolves, along with dozens of endemic bird and reptile species call this forest home. It’s one of India’s largest intact arboreal habitats, but 5.6 billion metric tons of mineable coal threatened to destroy it all.

Enter Alok Shukla, founder of the Save Hasdeo Aranya Resistance Committee, which began a decade ago advocating for the protection of Hasdeo through a variety of media and protest campaigns, including sit-ins, tree-hugging campaigns, advocating for couples to write #savehasdeo on their wedding invitations, and publishing a variety of other social media content.

MORE INDIAN ENVIRONMENTAL NEWS: Indian Man Quits Tech Job and Becomes Environmentalist–And Turns Infamous Dump into Green Oasis

Shukla also took his message directly to the legislature, reminding them through news media coverage of their obligations to India’s constitution which enshrines protection for tribal people and the environments they require to continue their traditional livelihoods.

Hasdeo Aranya Forest is one of the most biodiverse in the country – credit Goldman Environmental Prize
Shukla worked closely with some 15,000 members of tribal groups in Hasdeo forests – credit Goldman Environmental Prize

Beginning with a proposal to create a single protected area called Lemru elephant reserve within Hasdeo that would protect elephant migration corridors and cancel three of the 21 mining proposals, Shukla and the Adivasi began a 160-mile protest march down a national highway towards the Chhattisgarh state capital of Raipur.

READ A PICK ME UP STORY: A Coal Billionaire Is Building the World’s Biggest Clean Energy Plant to Power 16 Million Homes in India

They hadn’t even crossed the halfway mark when news reached them that not only was the elephant reserve idea unanimously agreed upon, but every existing coal mining proposal had been rejected by the state legislature, and all existing licenses would be canceled.

“We had no expectations, but the legislative assembly voted unanimously that all of the coal mines of Hasdeo should be canceled, and the forest should be saved,” Shukla says in recollection to the Goldman Prize media channel.

“That was a very important moment and happy moment for all of us.”

Shukla shares the 2024 Goldman Environmental Prize with 5 other winners, from Brazil, the US, South Africa, Australia, and Spain.

WATCH 4-minute story of Shukla’s fight for Hasdeo…

CELEBRATE This Man’s Success With Your Friends On Social Media… 

91-Year-old Surprises Tiny Fire Department with $500,000 For Updating Their Archaic Equipment

Members of the Calhoun Volunteer Fire Department with their old vehicles - credit Calhoun Volunteer Fire Department
Members of the Calhoun Volunteer Fire Department with their old vehicles – credit Calhoun Volunteer Fire Department

A volunteer fire department that had been surviving on equipment from the 1980s just received a half-million dollar gift from a local resident.

First reported by KMBC, the 28 volunteers that staff the Calhoun Fire Department have learned that the job requires a lot more than rescue and first aid skills, it requires a knowledge of how to make running repairs.

With a single engine manufactured in 1980, many of its components have had to be replaced or patched up.

The department takes pride in their work, but a small budget has always held them back from getting the equipment a job like theirs reasonably requires.

“[The department] needed a lot of work,” said recently-appointed Fire Chief Mark Hardin. “Not many of the trucks were in operation. Not many of them ran. Only one ran at the time.”

Seeing this, a 91-year-old resident named Sam Sloan who is awfully good at making money, but admits he knows nothing about fixing fire engines, wanted to help. He had invested in the structure of Henry County before, but this is the largest philanthropic gesture he’s ever undertaken.

The gift has been transformational, Hardin said.

MORE DONATIONS LIKE THIS: New York Medical School Surprises Students with Free Tuition in Perpetuity After $1Billion Gift–WATCH

“Never in a million years would I ever expect anything like that for a rural fire department. In March of this year, at the end of our first quarter, we had $169 left in our bank account.”

Hardin says the money should allow them to buy three new fire engines or trucks, and new equipment for all of their volunteers. The existing gear such as coats, hard hats, and other tools are almost all from the 1980s and 90s.

WATCH the story below from KMBC… 

SHARE This Inspiring Act Of Local Philanthropy On Social Media…