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As Couple Flies Home With Newly-Adopted Daughter, Strangers on Plane Throw Impromptu Baby Shower

When these anxious parents were flying home with their newly-adopted daughter, they received a flood of encouragement and support from dozens of their fellow passengers.

Back in November, Caren and Dustin Moore had been on their way home to California after becoming the proud parents to an 8-day-old baby girl they had adopted through an agency in Colorado.

“With clearance to return home to California, my wife carried our precious bundle, while I offered numerous apologies to passengers while maneuvering the aisle with 4 bags,” Dustin recalled in a recent Twitter thread. “About mid-flight, our daughter awoke and politely informed us she wanted a new diaper.

RELATED: VHS Tape of Baby Taking First Steps is Finally Returned to Family After Man Found It Inside a Used TV

“After inquiring about space for a table change, a thoughtful flight attendant named Jenny cleared a space in the back of the plane and gave us privacy.”

As the doting dad changed his daughter’s diaper, the flight attendant—along with a fellow passenger—politely asked why he was flying with such a young child.

“I gave them the shortened adoption story, to which they hastily offered congratulations, and shared a few more kind remarks,” Dustin wrote. “About 10 minutes later, another attendant (named Bobby) greeted us with a warm smile, and inquired about our daughter.”

LOOK: Elderly Woman Has Sweetest Reaction to Stranger Fulfilling Her Lifelong Dream of Flying First Class

“We repeated the story with a few details, and he congratulated us before walking away. My wife and I exchanged curious looks, but thought nothing more about it.”

To their shock, Bobby’s voice came on over the intercom a few minutes later announcing the Moores’ adoption—and the plane erupted in a rousing wave of cheers and applause.

Bobby then told the passengers that he would be passing out pens and napkins so everyone could write notes of encouragement for the new parents.

Bobby and Jenny ended up collecting more than 60 napkin messages for the Moores. When asked what prompted them to announce the spontaneous baby shower, they told Dustin and Caren that when they themselves had gotten married, another crew of flight attendants had done the same thing on their honeymoon flight. They were now paying the good deed forward to the Moores.

Dustin only ended up sharing the sweet story to Twitter earlier this month because he had become sick and tired of seeing so much negativity on social media.

The impromptu baby shower had been particularly moving for him and his wife because they had been feeling vulnerable and nervous following their daughter’s adoption.

“What all of those perfect strangers and attendants did not know was the emotionally tender state of two brand-new parents,” wrote Dustin. “Parents who—after 9 years of trying—had been blessed with their first child. Parents who felt scared, but determined in their new role

WATCH: Single Mom Who Grew Up in Foster Care Adopts Six Brothers So They Can All Stay Together

“The outpouring of love from that flight, brought on by the actions of two thoughtfully observant flight attendants… it exceeds my ability to describe what it meant to us. How much those wings and written notes uplifted two new parents determined to love their new daughter. ”

Caren and Dustin have since arranged the napkin notes in a scrapbook which they hope to one day pass on to their daughter.

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Scientists Create a ‘Living Concrete’ That Uses Bacteria to Heal Itself When Damaged

Photo by CU Boulder College of Engineering and Applied Science
Photo by CU Boulder College of Engineering and Applied Science

Researchers have developed a new approach to designing more sustainable buildings—and they’re doing it with the help of some very tiny contractors.

In a study that appeared last month in the journal Matter, engineer Wil Srubar and his colleagues at the University of Colorado Boulder describe their strategy for using bacteria to develop building materials that live, multiply, and deliver a lower carbon footprint to boot.

“We already use biological materials in our buildings, like wood, but those materials are no longer alive,” said Srubar, an assistant professor in the Department of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering. “We’re asking: Why can’t we keep them alive and have that biology do something beneficial, too?”

CHECK OUT: These Sustainable Fireproof, Weather-Proof Domes Provide Revolutionary Housing Solutions

You can’t buy these microorganisms turned bricks at your local Home Depot just yet, but the researchers say that their ability to keep their bacteria alive with a high success rate shows that living buildings might not be too far off in the future.

Such structures could one day heal their own cracks, suck up dangerous toxins from the air, or even glow on command.

“The sky’s the limit for our creativity,” Srubar said.

Photo by CU Boulder College of Engineering and Applied Science

The same might not be true for today’s more corpse-like building materials, which he said can be costly and polluting to manufacture; making the cement and concrete alone needed for roads, bridges, skyscrapers and other structures generates nearly 6% of the world’s annual emissions of carbon dioxide.

Srubar’s solution is to hire some bacteria for the job.

In particular, he and his colleagues experimented with cyanobacteria belonging to the genus Synechococcus. Under the right conditions, these green microbes absorb carbon dioxide gas to help them grow and make calcium carbonate—the main ingredient in limestone and, as it turns out, cement.

WATCH: After Five Years of Drought, Kenyan Region Finally Gets Clean Water Thanks to Solar-Powered Saltwater Plant

To begin the manufacturing process, the researchers inoculate colonies of cyanobacteria into a solution of sand and gelatin. With the right tweaks, the calcium carbonate churned out by the microbes mineralize the gelatin which binds together the sand—and, presto, a brick.

“It’s a lot like making rice crispy treats where you toughen the marshmallow by adding little bits of hard particles,” Srubar said.

As an added bonus, such bricks would actually remove carbon dioxide from the air, not pump it back out.

They’re durable, too. In the new study, the team discovered that under a range of humidity conditions, they have about the same strength as the mortar used by contractors today.

“You can step on it and it won’t break,” he said.

The researchers also discovered that they could make their material reproduce. Chop one of these bricks in half, and each of half is capable of growing into a new brick.

Those new bricks are resilient: According to the group’s calculations, roughly 9-14% of the bacterial colonies in their materials were still alive after 30 days and three different generations in brick form. Bacteria added to concrete to develop self-healing materials, in contrast, tend to have survival rates of less than 1%.

LOOK: World’s First Community of 3D Printed Homes is Set to House Mexico’s Poorest Families

“We know that bacteria grow at an exponential rate,” Srubar said. “That’s different than how we, say, 3D-print a block or cast a brick. If we can grow our materials biologically, then we can manufacture at an exponential scale.”

He notes that there’s a lot of work to do before that happens. The team’s cyanobacteria, for example, need humid conditions to survive—something that’s not possible in more arid regions of the world. So he and his team are working to engineer microbes that are more resistant to drying out so they remain alive and functional.

MORE: Rather Than Polluting Icy Roadsides With Salt, Scientists Use Recycled Biowaste From Fruit

The possibilities, however, are big. Srubar imagines a future in which suppliers could mail out sacks filled with the desiccated ingredients for making living building materials. Just add water, and people on site could begin to grow and shape their own microbial homes.

“Nature has figured out how to do a lot of things in a clever and efficient way,” Srubar said. “We just need to pay more attention.”

Reprinted from University of Colorado – Boulder

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Taxi Driver Goes Out of His Way to Save Elderly Woman From Being Scammed Out of $25,000

A compassionate cab driver is being hailed for saving an elderly woman from getting scammed out of $25,000 two weeks ago.

Raj Singh, who is the owner of Roseville Cabs in California, was called to pick up a 92-year-old woman from her home in Sun City and take her to a nearby bank. As they were driving to the bank, however, the woman revealed some alarming details about her trip.

The woman told Singh that she had received a call from an IRS employee telling her that she owed the government $25,000. She was on her way to the bank so she could withdraw the funds and settle her debt as quickly as possible.

Singh knew that the phone call sounded fishy. He then asked the woman if he could call the “IRS employee” to ask him some questions. Upon calling the number, the man posing as the government agent claimed he didn’t know the woman. When Singh pressured him for more details, the man blocked Singh’s number.

RELATED: Uber Passenger Goes Out of His Way to Pay Off Driver’s College Debt So She Can Finally Get Her Degree

The woman was still hesitant about the scam, so Singh took a detour to the Roseville Police Department and asked for an officer to sit down with her.

Sure enough, an officer sat down with the woman and confirmed that it was a scam. After Singh took the woman home, the officers posted about his good deed to Facebook.

As a thank-you for Singh’s gesture, the officers also invited him back to the station and presented him with a $50 gift card.

LOOK: Elderly Woman Has Sweetest Reaction to Stranger Fulfilling Her Lifelong Dream of Flying First Class

“We love this story because several times throughout, Raj could have just taken his customer to her stop and not worried about her wellbeing,” they wrote. “He took time from his day and had the great forethought to bring the almost-victim to the police station for an official response.

“His quick thinking saved a senior citizen $25,000 and for that, we greatly appreciate his efforts,” added the department.

Drive Your Friends To Positivity By Sharing This Sweet Story To Social Media…

“It is nearly impossible to be here now when you think there is somewhere else to be.” – Guru Gobind Singh

Quote of the Day: “It is nearly impossible to be here now when you think there is somewhere else to be.” – Guru Gobind Singh

Photo: by Edu Lauton – public domain

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Forget the ‘Best By’ Date; This Compostable Bioplastic Packaging Changes Color When the Food Goes Bad

Photo by Primitives

Anyone who’s worked in the food service industry understands that the ‘best-by’ dates often come and go long before the product has begun to spoil inside in any way. Contrastingly, anyone who’s worked in the food service industry also knows that food can go bad in ways which we can neither notice nor anticipate.

But what if the packaging containing a fresh food product could detect and warn you when spoilage occurs?

An intrepid nonprofit based out of San Francisco is currently developing such packaging that incorporates sensing material that will change its color, or give a sign in some way, to the handler or buyer when it detects the presence of harmful or unwanted bacteria or other chemicals.

“We’re incorporating sensing mechanisms into our materials that allow it to detect things like spoilage or even cold chain monitoring,” Viirj Kan, CEO of the startup, told Fast Company. In fact, they intend to harness “nature’s embedded intelligence.”

Kan and Noa Machover—the cofounder of Primitives—began developing the idea as students at MIT and they’re now working to commercialize their technology—and they’ve chosen to start with an area of food packaging that doesn’t always make headlines, but is in desperate need of help.

RELATED: German Supermarket Saves Over 2,000 Tons of Food By Reselling Items Other Stores Won’t

Of all the plastic polluting the earth, plastic bottles and ‘single-use’ bags and straws might inspire the greatest revolt and action, but Primitives has determined it’s the ultra-thin, sometimes vacuum-sealed, packaging around meat, produce, and bakery products that today is one of the most difficult items to recycle.

Photo of spoilage detection by Primitives

Along with their spoiling-sensing technology, Primitive is developing a compostable version of this sort of plastic as its flagship effort—a plastic that can be composted in your own garden by simply burying it.

Because today’s standard film contains multiple layers of different kinds of plastics, thin plastic sleeves are difficult to recycle. Primitive initially developed theirs with CO2-guzzling algae, but is exploring the potential of other compostable material like cannabis and other agriculture waste.

MORE: 30,000 Pounds of Leftover Super Bowl Food Saved From Landfill and Donated to Charity

Believe it or not, these sorts of bio-materials block oxygen from reaching the food inside even more effectively than plastic—while simultaneously working better to block the sun’s harmful UV radiation, another common cause of spoilage.

No word yet on when their product will be ready for market, or if they have distribution partnerships in place, but we’ll be watching to see what these innovative partners come up with.

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Apple and Pear Cores Turned Into Chemical-Free Sweetener as an Alternative to Artificial Sweeteners and Sugar

Photo by Martin Bargl

A Dutch company aptly-called Fooditive, is turning pear and apple cores, as well as bruised and discarded fruit from producers and suppliers into a chemical-free, calorie-free, sugar substitute.

Artificial sweeteners like sucralose and aspartame, though legal for use in food and beverages for decades in the United States and elsewhere, are now not only emerging as a potential genotoxin (a poisonous substance which damages DNA), but also as an environmental pollutant since it is not entirely absorbed by our bodies and can travel all the way through our water treatment systems and back into groundwater sources.

Refined cane sugar has its own problems, playing a role in the global skyrocketing rates of diabetes and obesity since the 1950s. Sweeteners and syrups made from corn have much the same effect on our bodies, while also contributing massively to keeping afloat the problematic, uncompetitive American system of agriculture, farm subsidies, and lobbying.

Dutch food scientist Moayad Abushokhedim uses a natural fermentation process to extract fructose from third-rate fruits collected from suppliers and turns it into a calorie-free sweetener that contributes to Rotterdam’s goal of a circular economy by 2030.

RELATED: 30,000 Pounds of Leftover Super Bowl Food Saved From Landfill and Donated to Charity

According to the company’s website where you can see a detailed ingredients list, he plans to make Fooditive Sweetners available in powder, liquid, and syrup forms. There is no information yet on how to purchase.

Apart from their sweetener, Fooditive also has a solution for artificial preservatives, creating natural ones from carrot waste, and he counters harmful emulsifiers with potato extracts.

Right now, the company is in the process of expanding their operations to try and get Fooditive products like their sweeteners and preservatives into commercial Dutch foodstuffs.

CHECK OUT: German Supermarket Saves Over 2,000 Tons of Food By Reselling Items Other Stores Won’t

“Our products really provide the food and beverage producers with the ability to have a clean label, a green label, and show people what’s in their food,” said Gijs Gieles, Fooditive spokesperson to Fast Company.

These kinds of recycling applications are becoming more and more common in Europe, especially since France passed a law in 2016 forcing supermarkets to recycle, compost, or donate as much of their outgoing or expired stock as possible. Other countries like Germany began to create similar legislation, and a German supermarket SirPlus Rescue Market specializes in discarded, expired, or unwanted packaged foods and produce.

Share This Sweet Alternative With Your Healthy Friends On Social Media… (File photo by Martin Bargl)

Brazilians Get Juicy Tax Breaks When They Adopt Animals, Plant Trees, or Hail Historic Roots

A slew of Brazilian cities are passing laws that offer tax deductions or exemptions for citizens who want to pitch in to restore the health and beauty of their communities.

Whether by increasing tourism, restoring historic city centers, or boosting beautification by planting trees and maintaining their lawns, there are several ways residents of Goiânia, Belo Horizonte, Quinta do Sol, or Saraba can reduce their Brazilian property tax (IPTU), by anywhere between 30–100%.

Shopkeepers in Goiânia can receive a 2-year exemption from the IPTU if they help restore the original Art Deco-style of the city’s historic center by remaking their facades and storefronts to conform to the original 1950’s Parisian-inspired character.

For anyone who’s traveled to South or Central America, the site of a stray dog is nothing unusual. In the city of Quinta de Sol, the Rescue Program for Abandoned Dogs is a measure to encourage citizens to adopt stray dogs in exchange for a tax break.

Dog lovers can get 50% off their tax bill for big dogs, 40% for medium-sized dogs, and 30% for miniatures.

LOOK: Stray Cat With No Ears Finally Adopted After Shelter Worker Crochets Her a Pair of Purple Ones

Known for its jabuticaba trees, Sabara is offering anyone looking to save some money on their IPTU a 5% deduction for every jabuticaba tree they plant in their front or back gardens.

Photo of jabuticaba fruit trees by Vania Wolf, CC license

In the cities of Belo Horizonte and Minas Gerais, a homeowner can get an IPTU exemption if they maintain a wild garden on their property. Described in the law as ‘private ecological reserves’ the specifics of the legislation reads that the reserve of anyone seeking an exemption must contain “primitive or semi-primitive natural conditions” that aid in the “preservation of the biological cycle of species of fauna or flora native to Brazil”.

MORE: Hotel Helps Dogs Get Adopted By Allowing Long-Term Guests to Foster Shelter Pups During Their Stay

As a way to ease the burden for those who have served, Fortaleza is offering exemptions for WWII veterans. The city of Acros is following suit for citizens with debilitating or chronic diseases like certain cancers, Alzheimer’s, and MS. Acros has issued 20 tax exemptions since 2017 for people with catalogued chronic diseases.

With a score from the World Bank of 1.68 out of 7 ranking the “burden of government regulation,” with 1 being the most burdensome, any break from the taxman will likely be a welcome relief for the citizens of Brazil.

And with more trees, primitive reserves, happy doggos, and art deco restaurants to show for it, visitors to the South American country will likely be just as happy.

Share The Innovative Ideas With Your Friends On Social Media – File photo by Andrey, CC

Orchestra Allows Deaf People to ‘Hear’ Beethoven Through Touch – Much Like the Maestro Did

Zsuzsanna Foldi of Hungary was declared deaf at eight-months-old due to a meningitis infection. Now at age 67, with her hands placed gently on a musician’s double bass while sitting among the performers of the Danubia Symphony Orchestra in Budapest, she’s been able to enjoy Beethoven’s famous 5th Symphony in a way quite similar to the very man who composed it.

“When I sat next to the musician who played the bass today, I started crying,” she told Reuters.

“My father also had a double bass… and I did not have a hearing aid. I always put my ear on the bass and he played to me,” she added.

This was the first in a series of spring performances being planned by the orchestra’s conductor for people with hearing impairments, bringing music to those who might not otherwise have no access to it.

RELATED: Smart Caption Glasses Allow Deaf Audience Members to Watch Live Theater Performers Directly

The performers are positioned in a way that allows the audience members with the most severe hearing impairments sit among them, either placing their hands on the instruments to feel the vibrations, or holding a red balloon, which gathers vibrations from multiple instruments conveying them through the fingertips.

Conductor Mate Hamori said the idea was to connect the maestro’s music with those who were most capable of sympathizing with Beethoven—who famously composed his iconic 9th symphony when he was totally deaf in later years.

Beethoven’s hearing became gradually more and more impaired over his life, and from 1804 to 1808 when he wrote the fifth symphony, it was already very difficult for him to hear. As it became worse and worse, he started composing music on his piano so he could feel the vibrations through the keys.

One of the audience members with their own hearing problems remarked about the stringed instruments producing a very tactile vibration, so it was “not a coincidence that he wrote this kind of music.”

(WATCH the video below)

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“I travel not to go anywhere, but to go. I travel for travel’s sake. The great affair is to move.” – Robert Louis Stevenson

Quote of the Day: “I travel not to go anywhere, but to go. I travel for travel’s sake. The great affair is to move.” – Robert Louis Stevenson

Photo: by Dino Reichmuth – public domain

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Monks in Thailand Create Iconic Orange Robes from Recycled Plastic – 40 Tons Already Collected On Their Own

Helping to relieve suffering in the world is one of the goals of Buddhist teachings that guide followers on their journey from birth to death.

And for one Buddhist temple in Thailand, it’s not only food, money, and clothing that pilgrims donate to the cause. They bring plastic waste.

Despite being a fraction of the size of China, India, and the U.S., Thailand is one of the five biggest contributors to plastic pollution on the Earth.

RELATED: Man Sick of Trash and Crime, Buys Buddha Statue for Street—and Transforms Neighborhood

Thailand is also predominantly Buddhist, and according to Phra Maha Pranom Dhammalangkaro, his temple is doing its part to combat the global environmental crisis, in line with the teachings of the Buddha.

Plastic Prayers

He has turned the Wat Chak Daeng temple in Samut Prakan Province, just south of Bangkok, into a recycling mecca. A large recycling machine pulverizes donated plastic bags and bottles into large bales which the monks organize to be shipped off to recycling plants.

Once broken down, the plastic is turned into polyester fibers which are then dyed by the monks and turned into their iconic saffron orange robes.

“Donating one kilogram (2.2 lb) of plastic bottles can help make a full set of monk robes, which has a high return value, both in terms of money and merits,” the temple’s abbot, Maha Pranom, told Reuters.

WATCH: 170 Foxes Are Rescued From Fur Farm and Given New Home at a Buddhist Monastery

When the Abbot Pranom ventures out into surrounding communities, citizens offer up their plastic waste rather than food, to receive his blessings.

In two years, the temple has produced more than 800 sets of the raiment, which sell for between 2,000 baht ($65.79) and 5,000 baht ($164.47). The income keeps the recycling operation up and running, along with a revolving staff of volunteer housewives, retirees, and disabled persons.

“If you don’t collect these plastics, where do they end up? In the stomachs of dugongs, dolphins, whales, and many other sea animals,” the Abbot tells them.

LOOK: Burned as a Boy, 11-Year-old Monk Wants to be ‘Greatest Lama’

According to the Ocean Conservancy, the 40 tons of plastic that the monks have recycled is a great first step in helping stem the tide of plastic pollution from Thailand that places the Southeast Asian country in 5th place for plastic polluting nations.

“Not only are the monks making a concrete contribution to recycling, but they are raising awareness in their communities,” Chever Voltmer, Director for Plastics Initiatives at Ocean Conservancy told Reuters.

(WATCH the video below)

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Master Violinist Performing for Inmates Receives Unexpectedly Enthusiastic Ovation (Watch)

When master Latvian violinist Gidon Kremer drew his bow across the strings of his 379-year-old Amati violin on the final note in his recent performance of Preludes to a Lost Time by Weinberg, and Chaconne by Bach, the audience leapt into the air in a rousing standing ovation.

But, rather than the ornamental halls of the Kennedy Center, the applause echoed around the gymnasium in British Colombia emanating from the hands of prisoners, incarcerated for crimes ranging from burglary to murder.

“I have to say that in some ways they were more attentive or more enthusiastic compared to some concert audiences,” 72-year-old Kremer told CBC news. (See a clip below.)

The concert in the Pacific Institution in Abbotsford was put together by the Looking at the Stars Foundation, a Toronto-based charitable organization that puts on classical music events and performances for those who might not have the opportunity to access traditional theaters and concert halls.

RELATED: Inmates Are Earning Free College Degrees Behind Bars, And Their Recidivism Rate Plunges to 2%

Founded in 2015 by a Lithuanian refugee, Dimitri Kanovich, Looking at the Stars has hosted 37 such concerts in 15 Canadian prisons in just four years.

As the day of the performance arrived, prisoners entered the gymnasium after being searched by a guard and a sniffing dog—then, a personal handshake from Mr. Kanovich ensured they felt welcome.

Encouraging Music in Prison

The audience was spellbound for an hour during the performance, according to Vancouver Symphony Orchestra President, Angela Elster. The orchestra was a production partner for the prison concert, and is soon to work with Corrections Canada to create a program that allows inmates access to instruments that they formerly played and would like to play again.

After the show, there was a Q&A session with the Latvian maestro. Prisoners asked him questions about composers like Vivaldi, about how old he was when he started playing the violin as a child, and who played his antique violin before he came to possess it.

LOOK: Matches Made in Heaven (and Jail): Troubled Dogs Saved From Euthanasia by Doting Inmates

But more than anything else they wanted to express their heartfelt gratitude for coming all the way to their institution and playing for them one of the most complicated pieces of music imaginable.

“I think music is something that can give warmth to everyone in trouble, in prison or not in prison,” said the violinist. “I’m happy to have been here.”

(WATCH a clip of his performance—with ovation at 2:00— from CBC below…)

 

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Cherokee Nation First U.S. Tribe to be Invited to Preserve Their Heirloom Species in Global Seed Vault

With close to 1 million samples from nearly every country on earth, the Svalbard Global Seed Vault in the remote Svalbard Island, between Norway and the Arctic, contains the largest collection of seeds and other plant specimens in the world.

Last week, the Cherokee Nation became the first Native-American tribe to receive an invitation to contribute seeds of their own heirloom crops and join the effort to ensure biodiversity and food security in the uncertain centuries ahead.

“This is history in the making,” said a Cherokee Nation press release. “It is such an honor to have a piece of our culture preserved forever. Generations from now, these seeds will still hold our history and there will always be a part of the Cherokee Nation in the world.”

The tribal office of the Secretary of Natural Resources collected nine samples of Cherokee heirloom crops to send to the Global Crop Diversity Trust, including Cherokee White Eagle Corn, the tribe’s most sacred corn, which is typically used during cultural activities, and three other varieties of corn grown for consumption in distinct locations to keep the strains pure.

RELATEDAt Long Last, Native Californian Tribe Gets Land Back To Call Its Own

Other seeds sent to the Svalbard seed bank include Cherokee Long Greasy Beans, Cherokee Trail of Tears Beans, Cherokee Turkey Gizzard black and brown beans, and Cherokee Candy Roaster Squash.

These heirloom species predate the arrival of Europeans on the American continents, and their preservation offers a chance to secure critical biodiversity for the central North American region in case of crop shortages or other disasters that could result in flora extinction events.

Svalbard Global Seed Vault, Tiq, CC license

It also ensure that the proud history of the Cherokee will live on through the ages.

In 2019, after being interviewed by National Public Radio about the Cherokee Nation’s own heirloom seed bank program, their Senior Director of Environmental Resources, Pat Gwin was contacted by the Global Crop Diversity Trust.

“He sent me an email and said they would be honored to have the tribe’s seeds in the seed vault,” said Gwin. “…Knowing the Cherokee Nation’s seeds will be forever protected and available to us … is a quite valuable thing indeed.”

CHECK OUT: First-of-its-Kind Village for Homeless Native Americans Now Houses Dozens in Seattle

Share This Fabulous Foodie Story With Your Friends On Social Media – Featured photo by petitspapiers, CC license

“The older I get, the greater power I seem to have to help the world; I am like a snowball – the further I am rolled, the more I gain.” – Susan B. Anthony (born 200 years ago)

Quote of the Day: “The older I get, the greater power I seem to have to help the world; I am like a snowball – the further I am rolled, the more I gain.” – Susan B. Anthony (born 200 years ago today)

Photo: by Jerry Zhang – public domain

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Restaurant Server Praised for Pulling Off Epic Save After He Somehow Fell Without Dropping Any of His Four Dishes

This is the impressive moment a waiter fell to the floor while he was carrying four meals—and he didn’t even drop a single plate.

24-year-old Jamie Shoebridge has been waiting tables for three years, although he may now be considering a career in the circus after he pulled off this incredible juggling act.

Shoebridge’s little accident occurred on Sunday afternoon during the lunchtime rush. CCTV cameras captured the moment that he slipped on some peppercorn sauce and fell to the floor, taking down a decorative plant in the process.

As bizarre as it is, however, he somehow managed to keep hold of the plate he was holding in his left hand while somehow continuing to balance the three other meals he had been carrying on a tray in his right.

RELATED: Watch Rollercoaster Passenger Use His Astonishing Catlike Reflexes to Catch a Stranger’s iPhone in Mid-Air

Shoebridge, who is a restaurant supervisor from Nottingham, said he then jumped back up and delivered the meals as planned with his guests none-the-wiser.

“One minute I was walking along with the plates and the next minute I was on the floor,” said Shoebridge. “I lost my footing and fell down face first.

“There was some peppercorn sauce on the floor and I slipped on it. It’s all a blur and I’m not sure how it happened,” he continued. “It was just an instinct to lift my arms up and try to save the plates. I just got back up and carried on as normal.”

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The only casualty of the three roast beef dinners and bangers and mash dish was one sausage and a few peas.

“I have no idea how none of the plates got smashed,” said Shoebridge. “I’m impressed with myself.”

“It didn’t hurt but I was very confused as to how it happened. We all had a laugh about it in the office. It has become a bit of a running joke at work now.”

(WATCH the video below)

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Bees Are Benefiting From Hemp Pollen as More Legal Cannabis is Grown Since 2018 Farm Bill

Since the 2018 Department of Agriculture Farm Bill finally legalized industrial hemp in the United States, scientists have discovered an unexpected benefit to the new fields of green sativa: it’s is helping dwindling bee populations.

Cannabis sativa is an exclusively wind-pollinated plant and thereby creates an abundance of pollen for a variety of bee species. And, in the past year, since the legislation passed, industrial hemp plants are more commonly being grown outdoors instead of the closets and basements of years past.

This particular study, published in the journal Environmental Entomology, recently found evidence of increasing bee diversity and population after they studied the species loitering on hemp flowers across 11 farms in the Finger Lakes region of New York.

“We identified all bee visitors to the species level and found that hemp supported 16 different bee species,” state the authors.

RELATED: Want to Help Bees? Leave the Dandelions Alone This Spring

Ninety percent of all the netted bees visiting the hemp flowers were apis mellifera (the honey bee) and bombus impatiens (the bumblebee).

In addition to bee populations suffering from the effects of pesticides, insecticides, and a reduction in plant diversity, bee populations are negatively affected by disruptions in pollen resource availability throughout the year.

The authors of the newly-published study, however, detail that since hemp flowers in late summer, bees in the vicinity have a pollen-rich resource available to them during a time of the year when pollen is scarce.

LOOK: 316 Dutch Bus Stops Are Getting Green Roofs Covered in Plants as a Gift For Honeybees

“Because of its temporally-unique flowering phenology, hemp has the potential to provide a critical nutritional resource to a diverse community of bees during a period of floral scarcity and thereby may help to sustain agroecosystem-wide pollination services for other crops in the landscape,” reads the study.

They also found that plant height played a significant role in the number of bees attracted to each field.

“As cultivation of hemp increases, growers, land managers, and policy makers should consider its value in supporting bee communities and take its attractiveness to bees into account when developing pest management strategies.”

CORRECTION: This article previously confused hemp and marijuana. Both come from the same plant species, Cannabis sativa, but cannabis sativa plants with 0.3 percent of the psychoactive THC, or less, are hemp. Cannabis plants with more than 0.3 percent THC are marijuana.

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Man Has Been Delivering Hundreds of Roses to Widows, Military Wives, and Single Women on Valentine’s Day

 

Valentine’s Day is a day of romance for some—but for others, it might be a reminder of loneliness or grief.

That’s why 29-year-old Seth Stewart has spent the last eight years making sure that local widows, single women, and military spouses in Spokane, Washington are not forgotten during the holiday.

Every morning on Valentine’s Day, Stewart and his brothers deliver single red roses to the homes of women who have lost their spouses or had their significant partners deployed overseas.

Stewart keeps a list of all the women and mothers in his area who he delivers to every year. In the weeks leading up to the holiday, Stewart asks Facebook readers to send him the additional names of women who might need a pick-me-up so he can add them to the list.

LOOKHusband Plants Field of Flowers for Blind Wife to Smell, So Spectacular it Gets Visitors

Stewart says that he and his brothers generally deliver between 400 to 500 free roses every year—with the help of a delivery driving team—but this year, they’re delivering 700 roses to women across the region.

They’re hoping to deliver many more roses in the years to come, and expand into other areas, especially after witnessing the emotional impact that it has had on the recipients.

“Every single year we do this, there are always one or two women who break down sobbing because it means so much to them,” Stewart told CNN.

“One of our deliveries this year was a widow,” Stewart told GNN. “Her husband passed a few years ago. We were instructed to sign the card from her late Husband: ‘Happy Valentine’s day. I love you. –Floyd’.

“It’s pretty powerful stuff each year,” said Stewart, who pays for any expenses not covered by their crowdfunding page.

If you would like to nominate someone to receive a rose next Valentine’s Day, you can send Stewart a message via his Rose Rush Facebook page.

(WATCH the video below) – Photo by Seth Stewart

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Scientists and Refugees Are Growing Crops in the Desert Using Discarded Mattresses Bound for the Landfill

Photo by University of Sheffield / Desert Gardens
Photo by University of Sheffield / Desert Gardens

British scientists have succeeded in cultivating tomatoes, peppers, aubergines and herbs in the desert using discarded mattresses bound for landfill.

The innovative system, which was tested in a refugee camp in Jordan, could be rolled out to every shelter in the world, helping millions of people to thrive in barren landscapes.

Since aid workers often discard thousands of used foam mattresses in refugee camps across the globe, University of Sheffield scientists began developing foam “soils” in their labs in hopes of using old bed materials as a growing medium for crops.

The research team, led by Professor Tony Ryan, is made up of experts in hydroponics: a technique in which plants are grown with their roots resting in a solution of water and essential nutrients instead of soil. The method uses 70-80% less water than planting straight into the soil and eliminates the need for pesticides.

RELATED: Scientists Use Recycled Sewage Water to Grow 500-Acre Forest in the Middle of Egyptian Desert

In the first trial of its kind, his researchers worked with a group of Syrian refugees at the Zaatari camp, which serves as a shelter to many who are already experienced farmers themselves.

They showed the study participants how to fill waste containers from around the camp with mattress foam and a carefully balanced nutrient solution. Seedlings were then planted straight into the foam so it could support the roots as the plant grew.

Working closely with the refugees, the team successfully created “desert gardens” that provide people in the camp with fresh herbs and vegetables, training opportunities, and longed-for greenery in a challenging desert.

Photo by University of Sheffield / Desert Gardens

“The refugees we have worked with have taken our training and made the project their own, growing things we never thought would be possible in the desert environment using recycled materials,” said Ryan.

“We are only at the start of what might be possible, in terms of what refugees and their situation has to teach us about all of our potential futures.”

Nearly 1,000 refugees have been taught how to manage the hydroponic system thus far—and the team believes it could benefit even more people around the world.

MORE: Coastal Dutch ‘Farm’ Grows Seaweed to Filter Pollution From Their Favorite Beach –And Tackle Climate Change

The project gives people the tools and techniques they need to grow their own food and gain future employment as well as boosting mental health and greening the camp.

In turn, the scientists have learned from the refugees whose use of the foam in real-world conditions has demonstrated its potential to grow crops more sustainably—and in places with degraded soils.

Desert Garden Project Manager Dr. Moaed Al Meselmani said: “I’m a researcher and a Syrian refugee myself—and now I’m helping others like me to learn new skills and feed their families with fresh herbs and vegetables in the desert.

Photo by University of Sheffield / Desert Gardens

“When you’re forced to flee your home, it’s the simple things you miss—like a cup of fresh mint tea or showing your children how to plant a seed. This project connects people with home and gives them hope for the future.”

The Sheffield researchers now hope to raise £250,000 with their Desert Garden appeal to make the project sustainable. The money will be used to supply seeds, nutrients, and training for another 3,000 refugees.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), which runs Zaatari camp, provides Syrian refugees with enough money to buy staples like bread and chickpeas. Nutritious fruit and vegetables, however, are often out of reach—and traditional fresh mint tea is considered a luxury.

CHECK OUT: Drought-Proof ‘Cooling Houses’ Use Saltwater and Cardboard to Grow Tons of Healthy Produce in the Desert

Professor Ryan, director of the university’s Grantham Centre for Sustainable Futures, said: “UNHCR see this as something that can work in nearly every refugee camp to improve mental health and well-being.

“If we can make desert gardens economically and culturally sustainable in Jordan, we can ultimately roll this out around the world and help millions of refugees to thrive.”

Professor Duncan Cameron, director of the Institute for Sustainable Food at Sheffield, said: “It’s astonishing what happens to the collective human imagination when it meets and is ignited by urgent reality.

WATCH: Man Succeeds Where Government Fails: He Planted a Forest in the Middle of a Cold Desert

“Our research on synthetic soils meant we could re-imagine the UNHCR’s waste disposal problem—where aid workers saw used mattresses, we saw an alternative growth substrate.

“This project is about co-creation, not ‘smart ideas’ parachuted in. As scientists, we’ve learned an enormous amount from the refugees about how our research can be applied in the real world, and they’ve gained valuable skills for the future.”

(WATCH the University of Sheffield video below)

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Boy in Wheelchair Left Awestruck After Seeing Target Store Ad Featuring Boy ‘Like Him’

This is the emotional moment that a young boy in a wheelchair was left awestruck by an advertisement featuring a child who looked just like him.

Oliver Garza-Pena—who turns 2 years old next month—has a condition called caudal regression syndrome. Since the condition impairs the development of his lower body, he relies on a wheelchair to move around.

Earlier this month, Oliver had been on a shopping trip with his parents at a Target store in Arizona when he caught sight of a clothing ad depicting another boy in a wheelchair—and he was floored.

RELATED: First US National Park to Offer Heavy-Duty Wheelchairs for Disabled Visitors to Enjoy the Scenery

“Today Oliver stopped me dead in his tracks and turned back around to see this picture that he spotted! He just stared at it in awe!” his parents wrote on Facebook.

“He recognized another boy like him, smiling and laughing on a display at Target,” they continued. “Oliver sees kids every day, but he never gets to see kids like him.

“This was amazing! I am so happy that other kids that pass through here with their parents will see this! There is a lot of focus on representing diversity, but representing people with disabilities is just as important!”

WATCH: When Family Can’t Afford Motorized Wheelchair for 2-Year-Old, High School Students Modify Toy Car Instead

Since they published a photo of the heartwarming moment to Oliver’s Facebook page “Ollie’s World”, it has been shared more than 30,000 times with the hashtag #RepresentationMatters.

Additionally, the post ended up reaching the news feed of the boy featured in the ad—and Ollie’s parents were delighted over the chance to express their gratitude.

“This post was shared so much that it made it to the family and the boy in the Target display. Thank you Colton in Massachusetts for making a difference!!” they wrote.

Be Sure And Share This Sweet Story Of Representation With Your Friends On Social Media…

“If I had a flower for every time I thought of you… I could walk through my garden forever.” – Alfred Tennyson

Quote of the Day: “If I had a flower for every time I thought of you… I could walk through my garden forever.” – Alfred Tennyson

(Happy Valentine’s Day from GNN!)

Photo: by Polychrome Creative – public domain

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?

 

61% of Americans Say They’ve Turned to a Romantic Vacation to Save Their Relationship

Nearly three in five Americans say a vacation saved their relationship, according to a new Valentine’s Day survey of 2,000 adults who have traveled out of town with their significant other.

The poll also found that 61% have gone on a vacation with their partner in an effort to reignite their romance. And, it’s no wonder: 6 in 10 tended to experience more romance while on vacation, as compared to their everyday lives.

TOP 5 REASONS FOR A VACATION WITH A PARTNER
1. To spend more quality time with significant other 72%
2. To experience something new with partner 72%
3. To see a part of the world never seen before 66%
4. To go on an adventure 63%
5. To reignite the romance 61%

The poll also revealed that the average American will go on three separate romantic getaways, at least overnight, with their partner in a year.

WATCH: After Couple is Mocked for Wedding Proposal at KFC, Thousands Rally To Offer Dream Wedding and Gifts

The survey, conducted by OnePoll in conjunction with Apple Vacations, examined travel habits and compiled a list of the ways that couples are most romantic with each other on vacations—which are different from their normal routines.

TOP 5 WAYS TO TURN UP THE ROMANCE
1. Giving compliments 48%
2. Showering with affection 47%
3. Going out on a planned date 43%
4. Holding the door for me 43%
5. Buying gifts 42%

It’s becoming increasingly popular to propose to a significant other on vacation; 41% percent suspected that their partner might pop the question while on a trip together.

Of those who thought their partners were going to propose marriage while on a trip, four in five had their suspicions confirmed.

But they don’t only get engaged during a romantic getaway. Thirty-one percent have actually eloped while enjoying a destination with their partner.

LOOK: Elderly Man Gazing Fondly at His Date in McDonald’s Inspires Thousands of Romantics Online

So how do you keep romance alive when you’re not on vacation? Here are five of our favorite stories about people going above and beyond the call of duty for the sake of love.

TOP 5 STORIES OF EVERYDAY ROMANCE
1. How a Doting Husband Used 8 Billboards to Tell His Wife He Loved Her More
2. As Wife Loses Eyesight, Husband Learns to Do Her Makeup and Impresses Kardashian
3. Inspiring Couple Made New Year’s Resolution to Go On 52 Dates—and They Succeeded
4. ‘Best Boyfriend Ever’ Fills Prescription of ‘Love Pills’—With Tiny Notes
5. Guy Makes Everybody Smile When He Picks Up Girlfriend in Themed Cars Every Day

Be Sure And Share The Romance With Your Friends On Social Media…