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Elderly Father and Son Feast on Free Oysters After Cashing in on Decades-Old Restaurant Promise

Jim and Jimmy Rush with the sign behind on the left highlighted in blue - credit Clay Omainsky
Jim and Jimmy Rush with the sign behind on the left highlighted in blue – credit Clay Omainsky

From Alabama comes the story of two restaurant-regulars chowing down on a 54-year-old promise from their favorite oyster bar.

Jim and Jimmy Rush always wondered whether the sign behind the bar at Wintzell’s Oyster House in Mobile was “for real.” It promised a night of free oysters, as many as could be eaten, for any man 80 years of age accompanied by his father.

Hung by Wintzell’s eponymous original owner, a man fond of quirky and humorous signage, Jim and his son Jimmy made a pact to take the restaurant up on their offer, even if it meant waiting 54 years.

“We kept asking, ‘Was this sign for real?’ and they said yes,” Jimmy Rush, 80, told CBC News “As It Happens” host, Nil Köksal. “We said, ‘Has anybody ever done it?’ And they said no.”

The Rushs ate at Wintzell’s frequently, particularly in the days following Mardi Gras festivities, and they soon became as much a part of the furniture as the sign that always tickled their curiosity.

The years went by—the OPEC embargo, the fall of the Berlin Wall, the advent of the internet; the Great Financial Crisis; and every so often the Rushs would call the restaurant and double check if the deal was still valid.

The Wintzell’s oyster bar with the sign on the left in faded yellow – credit Clay Omainsky, submitted to CBC

Current owner Clay Omainsky said that Mr. Wintzell lived at a time when the only way an 80-year-old man could dine accompanied by his father was if he brought his ashes in an urn and slapped it down on the bar next to him.

But perhaps due to a diet rich in seafood, which Jim Sr. credits for his long life, he was able to walk into Wintzell’s last month, arm in arm with Jim Jr., sit down with over a dozen friends and family, and finally call in that long promised meal.

“Most people read that sign behind the bar and laugh,” read a February Facebook post on Wintzell’s Oyster House’s page. “But tonight, Jimmy Rush walked in on his 80th Birthday with his father, James Rush, 99, right beside him, and turned one of Wintzell’s rarest traditions into a real-life milestone.”

RESTAURANT REGULARS RECOGNIZED: Burger King Workers Show up at Beloved Regular’s Funeral with Chair Engraved in His Honor

“The Rush family has been part of this place for years, and they didn’t come alone. A full room of friends, shared memories—and yes, oysters on the house, true to our founder’s promise.”

The Rushs have already been back—oysters are on the house until Jimmy turns 81, but Jim has another son who will turn 80 next year, so he’s digging in his heels until that second year of free oysters.

MORE GREAT STORIES: Kind Restaurant Owners Take Entire Staff on Paid Bahamas Vacation

“I’ve only been sick twice in my life, once when I was five and once when I was 97,” said Jim, who will turn 100 this July. “I don’t see, but I hear fairly well, and that’s about it—and I don’t take any medications at all.”

When Omainsky heard that the clan is looking to be back in 2027, he told CBC that he’s looking forward to it almost as much as the Jims will be.

SHARE This Simply Wonderful Story Of Family, Food, And Longevity… 

Visionary Birding Route Now Links 5 African Nations Along Ancient River Migratory Map

Likely a Meve's starling in Kafue National Park - credit, Jae Zambia, CC 4.0. via Wiki
Likely a Meve’s starling in Kafue National Park – credit, Jae Zambia, CC 4.0. via Wiki

The announcement of a new transboundary birding route has catapulted southern Africa to the forefront of international birdwatching travel.

Spanning Angola, Namibia, Botswana, Zambia, and Zimbabwe, the route contains an estimated 650 endemic and migratory species, and traverses the world’s largest conservation area—as big as Germany and France together.

Known as the Great Kavango Zambezi Birding Route, the course passes through 36 individual protected areas, encompassing 12 birding zones with ecosystems ranging from dry desert to lush forest and wetlands, and everything in between.

Birdwatchers will follow ancient migratory routes along 5 great rivers: the Zambezi, Chobe, Kwando, Kavango, and Kafue as they wind and carve their way across the landscape of southern Africa.

“No single country could offer what these five nations can achieve together,” said Dr. Nyambe Nyambe, Executive Director of the Kavango-Zambezi Secretariat. “This route is a living example of cross-border cooperation, combining diverse habitats and guiding expertise into a single coherent product that puts southern Africa on the global birding map.”

A hosted international press expedition documented 215 bird species across the region – including 43 species recorded for the first time by experienced international birders, a figure that speaks directly to the route’s credentials among serious avitourists.

BIRDWATCHING STORIES:

Dozens of partners in the endeavor have already got onboard, from BirdLife International’s local chapters who have overseen training courses for guides, to safari lodges and camps that have extensive experience ferrying visitors across the landscape, to conservation organizations who work in these various conservation districts to protect birds and mammals from poaching.

In total, 100 Birding Route Ambassadors have now registered to promote and operate experiences under the KAZA Birding Route brand.

SHARE This Story With Your Birder Friends And Get Ready To Buy A Ticket…

“I am still learning.” – Michelangelo (at 87 years old)

Dome of St. Peter's Basilica by Michelangelo – Credit Evgeny Matveev (cropped)

Quote of the Day: “I am still learning.” – Michelangelo (at 87 years old, he often said in Italian, ‘Ancora imparo’)

Photo by: Evgeny Matveev – Dome of St. Peter’s Basilica by Michelangelo (cropped)

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

Dome of St. Peter’s Basilica by Michelangelo – Credit Evgeny Matveev (cropped)

Good News in History, March 16

Dr Robert Goddard w ‘Nell’ and teaching at Clark University in Worcester (1914-1924)

100 years ago today, Dr. Robert Goddard launched the world’s first liquid-fueled rocket, after building it himself. The New England physics professor, engineer, and inventor is credited with ushering in the era of space flight, but after he asserted in 1920 that rockets could be used to send payloads to the Moon, he was thought to be absurd and mocked by the press, which called him “Moon Man.” LEARN more… (1926)

He Made a Battery Pack Using Disposable Vapes to Power His Electric Car (WATCH)

Chris Doel powers electric car with disposable vape batteries - SWNS
Chris Doel powers electric car with disposable vape batteries – SWNS

A man has powered an electric car using a homemade battery pack built out of discarded vapes, on a quest to show that so many valuable resources are being cast off every day.

Last year, GNN reported that Chris Doel had stripped down the lithium batteries from 500 disposable vapes, power sources he describes as “fully rechargeable”, to create a power-bank big enough to run his home.

Not willing to stop there, the 27-year-old engineer then decided to reuse the battery pack to power a trip in an electric car.

He needed a vehicle with a small battery so bought a 2007 G-Wiz for £800—named the worst car that year by Top Gear—and spent five months working on the project. He finally took it out for a spin last month.

The young man from Warwickshire, England, who calls himself “the engineer equivalent of a mad scientist”, documented the process on his YouTube channel, which has 164,000 subscribers. (Watch his new car video below…)

He went to the local vape shop last May asking if they would donate their “returns” for his house-battery project. He walked away with bags containing 2,000 vapes.

It took him six months during his free time at home, outside Birmingham, to extract the rechargeable lithium batteries from the devices. He then used a 3D printed case to combine 500 cells wired in parallel into groups connected in series to make a massive battery pack.

27-year-old Chris Doel powers EV with disposable vape batteries – SWNS

The completed pack successfully powered his house for eight hours, before finally running out of juice. Immediately, he set his sights on his next project: the car.

BATTERY REVOLUTION: This Innovation Could Extend Little-Used Zinc Battery Lifespan Hundreds of Times to Create Battery Revolution

“I was speaking with a colleague about how I wanted to power a vehicle, but because EVs have such enormous batteries, I thought it was never going to be possible,” Chris told SWNS news agency.

“My colleague came up with the genius idea of using the G-Wiz. It’s pretty much the only car out there with a 48v battery, (meaning) the power-wall would work with it.

The micro-car only requires a battery with a voltage of 48v—well below Tesla’s 400v. It has a max speed of just 50 mph, yet seats two adults and two small children.

It ran for two hours, covering a distance of 18 miles—entirely powered by vape batteries.

What about the flammability?

Chris bought insurance to cover liability, and was happy to pay around $700 for one year, saying, “Given the fact they’re taking the risk of it being a battery pack literally made of vape cells, it was incredibly cheap in the grand scheme of things.”

He spent five hours a day after work on weekdays, and 12 hours a day on weekends, for five months rewiring the car and sorting out the legal paperwork before he was finally able to take it out for a spin.

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Credit: Pablo Merchán Montes for Unsplash+

“I stripped it all back to re-do all the wiring, making sure it was proper sturdy. I made a big enclosure—worst-case scenario—in case it were to go up in flames. I would want it to be at least somewhat contained and not be rattling all over the place.”

Now, Chris has taken the vape batteries out of the car and replaced them with two Tesla battery modules, but runs it with “special software to fool them into thinking they’re installed in a Tesla Model 3.”

Today, the car is his daily transportation.

“As soon as I get an idea in my head, I’m determined to get it done.”

As an environmentalist who is outraged by the “planned obsolescence”of these disposable vapes, he urges everyone to stop buying the wasteful product which ends up in the landfill within days of purchasing.

Instead, he urges manufacturers to build rechargeable products with long lives that are recyclable to help create a circular economy.

—> CREATIVE ENERGY: ‘Sand Battery’ is Heating Small City, Storing Green Energy for Months at a Time

SHARE HIS GREEN CREATIVITY With Makers on Social Media…

Waitress Has Fed 270,000 Meals to Homeless Floridians Thanks to a Family That Gives Their All

Gloria Vargas feeds the homeless in Florida as founder of Care in Action USA – SWNS
Gloria Vargas feeds the homeless in Florida as founder of Care in Action USA – SWNS

A Florida waitress has served more than 270,000 meals to the homeless, alongside her husband and two vibrant sons who all exemplify their Christian faith.

An immigrant from Barbados, Gloria Vargas, has run the operation since in 2012 largely from her home in Fort Lauderdale.

“I started with buying a little bit of spaghetti and ground beef, and I started with 40 meals,” said the 62-year-old woman. “The next week it went to 60 meals, 80 meals. Before you know it, I was at 200 meals every weekend.”

On a waitress’s salary, using all her resources, Gloria now purchases “huge amounts” of chicken, fish, fresh produce, rice, bread, and bottled water—enough to nourish 175 to 200 people.

Her sons write “God loves you” or an encouraging scripture on each meal’s Styrofoam lid, and minister to the downtrodden by listening to their stories.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, when other organizations were shutting down, Vargas expanded her operation to serve up to 600 meals—feeding communities in both Fort Lauderdale and Miami.

Florida waitress Gloria Vargas feeds homeless in Fort Lauderdale – SWNS

“When it’s cold, when it’s windy, when it’s raining, it doesn’t matter. We have to show up,” Vargas said in an earlier media interview.

Then, thanks to a generous seed grant from the Byers Foundation, she set up a nonprofit, Care in Action USA.

Now a daily operation, Vargas prepares approximately 120 breakfasts and 125 dinners, which are distributed to waiting crowds in under 40 minutes.

ANOTHER HOMELESS HERO: Realtor Transforms Abandoned Properties into Tiny Home Villages That Give Permanent Housing to Chronic Homeless

She says the scope of Care in Action USA extends well beyond meal preparation, too.

Gloria Vargas prepares meals to give away in Florida – SWNS

The family assists people with rent, utility payments, hotel rooms, bus passes, and new clothes.

Her husband, Antonio, is a certified auto mechanic, and has used his skills to repair cars for free, and drive folks to job interviews and appointments.

“My husband can make so much more money doing the job he does, but he takes homeless people to appointments,” said Vargas added.

Thanks to donations and volunteers, the couple says they have even opened a transitional home that has housed eight men who pay between $300 and $400 in rent if they maintain employment requirements.

People are blessed by Gloria’s food to be sure—but they’re drawn like magnets to her story, her family’s kindness, and her example of love.

MORE GENEROUS INSPIRATION: Crafty Denver Nonprofit Snags Old Hotel and Turns it into ‘Instant Housing’ for Low-Income and Homeless

With the help of friends, volunteers, and donors, they care for the needy and “make a difference one person at a time.”

Donate to her work at Care in Action USA on their website, here.

MULTIPLY THE GOOD By Sharing Her Story of Generosity on Social Media…

Doctor Adopts 4-yo Patient Who had No Family When he Arrived for Heart Surgery –And Found Homes for his 5 Siblings Too

Dr. Amy with adopted son True – Courtesy of Amy Beethe
Dr. Amy with adopted son True – Courtesy of Amy Beethe

The four-year-old boy was headed into heart surgery all alone—a sad circumstance that would soon unleash a “butterfly effect of kindness,” as his anesthesiologist became his mother, helping to deliver the stable home life he never had.

The duo first met in 2022, after the boy named True was born with congenital heart disease requiring surgery, and he spent his earliest years in foster care. On the day of his operation at Children’s Nebraska hospital, his social worker had COVID, so True was admitted for the surgery by himself.

That’s when Dr. Amy Beethe walked in.

“He was sitting there all alone,” Beethe told KETV in Omaha. “It took me back that this 4-year-old was going to go through heart surgery and nobody was there.”

True’s procedure took about 7 hours and Amy spent most of that time thinking about the sweet little kid who was going through it all by himself.

Dr. Amy eventually contacted True’s case worker and learned a little more about the boy. He had six siblings, five of whom were placed with a grandmother due to a domestic violence situation. None of them were thriving, and it was hard to find a permanent home for True considering all his medical needs.

Before long, the social worker asked Amy a question that would soon change everyone’s lives: Are you an option?

The answer was already waiting in Amy’s heart. She was currently a mom of six, with three biological children and three who were adopted. But, she knew her family, and her heart, had room for one more.

Amy and True bonded right away – by Amy Beethe

“After I dropped True off in recovery, I called my husband and I just said, ‘We need to have a talk when we get home. I need you to have an open mind’,” Amy told Steve Hartman of CBS news. (Watch his great video below…)

When Amy’s husband, Ryan, met True in the hospital, he immediately fell in love with him—and the 4-year-old became a Beethe about a month after his surgery.

Then, an even more remarkable thing happened. The Beethes realized how close True was with his other siblings, so Amy sought to find them foster homes too, so the kids could all stay connected.

Amy’s sister adopted one of the girls and her sister-in-law’s family adopted another. A coworker adopted two more, and then, Amy and Ryan opened their hearts and home again to adopt True’s sister Laney.

MORE FEEL-GOOD ADOPTIONS:
Tiny Texas Town Adopted 77 Hard-to-Adopt Kids, Inspired by Baptist Church
NICU Nurse Adopts 14-yo Teen Patient with Triplets, to Keep Them Together
Boy in Foster Care Allowed to Stay With Disabled Brother When Parents Agree to Adopt Them Both–WATCH

“The six all found homes,” Amy told the Washington Post—and the adoptions all became official in August 2023, during “one big, huge adoption” ceremony. (See the family portrait below the video…)

 

It’s hard to measure the positive impact Amy has added to the siblings’ lives, but the biggest benefits likely belong to True. His heart condition will almost certainly require a transplant someday, a procedure that wouldn’t be possible without a reliable support system.

“Without a successful, loving home life, a patient like True with extraordinarily complex congenital heart disease would not be able to survive,” True’s doctor, Jason Cole, told CBS.

The extended family on adoption day–Courtesy of Amy Beethe

So, in 2022, when the little boy’s broken heart required surgery, he may have entered the hospital waiting room all alone, but there was an angel on the other side of the curtain who would fill his future with family—and his heart full of love.

Her name was Dr. Amy.

HAVE A HEART AND SPREAD THE LOVE By Sharing This To Your Social Media Feed…

Jaw-Dropping Image of Spiral Galaxy Captured Light Traveling Since the T. Rex Era–Thanks to Webb Telescope

Spiral galaxy NGC 5134 in the constellation Virgo was 65 million light-years away –NASA/ESA/CSA via SWNS
Spiral galaxy NGC 5134 in the constellation Virgo is 65 million light-years away –NASA/ESA/CSA via SWNS

Light which emanated from a spiral galaxy at the same time the Tyrannosaurus rex was dying out on Earth was captured in striking detail by the James Webb Space Telescope.

Two instruments aboard the Webb observatory have combined to create a jaw-dropping image revealing the structure of NGC 5134, the spiral galaxy 65 million light‑years away.

“NGC 5134 is fairly close by, as far as galaxies go,” said a statement from NASA, the European Space Agency, and the Canadian Space Agency.

“Although 65 million light-years may seem like a huge distance, the light that Webb collected to create this image has been journeying to us from since soon after Tyrannosaurus rex went extinct.”

The image, captured last month on February 20, offers a view from the deep past. Studying “nearby galaxies” like NGC 5134, which is in the Virgo constellation, is aiding astronomers in their understanding of far more distant systems that appear only as faint points of light.

The relative proximity of the star system allowed two of Webb’s powerful cameras to join forces to pick out fine detail in the galaxy’s tightly wound arms.

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Webb’s mid-infrared instrument, a versatile camera/spectrograph, shows warm dust and complex molecules across the galaxy’s clouds, while its near-infrared camera, the primary imaging instrument onboard, highlights the stars and clusters embedded within them.

NGC 5134, which was first discovered in 1785 by German-British astronomer William Herschel, has a possible “active galactic nucleus”—a compact region at the center of a galaxy that emits a significant amount of energy across the electromagnetic spectrum, with characteristics indicating that this luminosity is not produced by the stars.

Within this scenic galaxy view, we see the gas clouds that billow along its spiral arms. These are the sites of star formation, and each star that forms chips away at the galaxy’s supply of star-forming gas. When stars die, they recycle some of that gas back into the galaxy.

HABITABLE PLANET? Webb Space Telescope’s First Look at an Atmosphere on Habitable Zone Exoplanet

This give and take between gas and stars is the focus of a NASA/ESA/CSA program that aims to study 55 galaxies in the nearby Universe that are actively forming new stars using a broad range of wavelengths. (See NASA’s higher resolution version of the photo, here.)

“The new Webb data contribute a rich understanding of individual star clusters and star-forming clouds and have already been used to study the life cycle of tiny dust grains, the shape and properties of star-forming clouds, the links between interstellar gas and dust, and the process by which newly formed stars reshape their surrounding environment,” reports NASA.

THIS IS COOL: Trees Synchronize Their Bio-electrical Signals During Solar Eclipses: ‘The Wood Wide Web in Action’

SHARE THE NEW PHOTO With Astronomy Lovers on Social Media…

“Self-defense is Nature’s eldest law.” – John Dryden

Cheetah Credit: Getty Images for Unsplash+

Quote of the Day: “Self-defense is Nature’s eldest law.” – John Dryden

Photo by: Getty Images for Unsplash+

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

Cheetah Credit: Getty Images for Unsplash+

Good News in History, March 15

Rolls Royce Silver Ghost CC 2.5. Malcolma.

120 years ago today, Henry Royce and Charles Rolls put their brains and surnames together to form the most iconic luxury car maker in history. Rolls-Royce released the 40/50 in 1908, known as the Silver Ghost which became a hit, and sole offering of the company that had recently set up shop in Derby, before World War I forced them to start making aircraft engines. READ more… (1906)

Dramatic CCTV Footage Shows Mom and Daughter Rescued from Sand Sinkhole, Thanks to Heroes With Ropes

Adventure Island heroes rescue mom and daughter from sinking in sand – via SWNS
Adventure Island heroes rescue mom and daughter from sinking in sand – via SWNS

CCTV surveillance footage captured the dramatic scene as a mother and young daughter were rescued after they became stuck waist-deep in wet sand—just meters away from each other.

A young girl was playing in the sand at 5:20 pm, near the Three Shells Lagoon, in Essex, England before she suddenly sinks knee-deep and becomes stuck.

Moments later, her mom can be seen rushing to her daughter’s aid, only to sink fully up to her waist.

The scared duo begin shouting for help during the incident last Tuesday, before four men from the nearby Adventure Island theme park came to their rescue.

The heroes brought a long rope and first pulled the daughter to safety and then worked to free the mother, dragging her a long way across the sand, so no one else would get stuck.

In a post on Facebook, a spokesperson for Adventure Island said the wet sand had recently been placed there by the local council—and the tide coming in—when one of their managers heard the screams.

“Thankfully this happened while our team were still on site at the end of the day, allowing staff to step in when it mattered most.

“He immediately alerted members of our workshop team, who quickly brought ropes to secure around them and carefully pull them to safety. Drawing on their training and expertise, the team acted quickly and calmly to rescue them.” (Watch the video below…)

 

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“A huge ‘well done’ to our team who jumped straight into action and safely rescued them.”

The lagoon is now fenced off with signs warning visitors about the deep wet sand.

Philip Miller, Chairman of Stockvale Group which operates the amusement park, also thanked the rescuers for their efforts.

“They recognized that two people were in real difficulty and worked together, with real calmness and professionalism, to bring them safely out.”

The town council of Southend reported that their engineers installed the fencing and warning signs around the lagoon.

“We will keep the signage on site advising caution…until we are confident that the lagoon is safe (and) will consider any other urgent measures which may be necessary following the next low-tide inspection.”

MORE RESCUES:
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SHARE THE RESCUES With Beach-Lovers on Social Media…

Farmer Saved From Ruin After Strangers Rally to Pay $40k to Remove Tons of Rubbish Dumped on His Land

Archie Ford, 31, helps neighboring farmer remove tons of rubbish dumped on property - SWNS
Archie Ford, 31, helps neighboring farmer remove tons of rubbish dumped on property – SWNS

An 80-year-old farmer in England was being forced to pay $52,000 (£40k) to remove rubbish that was illegally dumped on his land by miscreants, until a kind neighbor set up a fundraising campaign to help clear the mess.

The farmer in his eighties was facing prosecution, after the UK Environment Agency deemed the clean-up job too large for them to get involved, according to SWNS news agency.

200 tons of waste like roofing material, plumbing fixtures, and construction cast-offs was dumped last year in his field alongside a road in Hertfordshire, near St Albans—over 40 dump truck loads.

The perpetrators could never be identified, so responsibility for disposal of the trash fell to the elderly farmer who wishes to remain anonymous.

After reading about the farmer’s plight, Archie Ford launched a JustGiving fundraiser which met its goal in just three days. When the story made headlines, more donations came in raising £58,000 in total.

This week, Archie met with the victim and neighboring farmer Will Dickinson, who has been supporting the effort.

Aerial photo of dumped trash and waste along roadside in Hertfordshire near St Albans, England – SWNS

“I was facing a real-life nightmare, but I’ve been blown away by the support I’ve received from so many people,” said the anonymous farmer.

“This has restored my faith in humanity. I am so grateful to everyone who has supported me. I had no idea what was going to happen to me.”

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Almost 2,000 donors sent money, and the thousands of dollars leftover will be used to support other victims of waste-dumping in Hertfordshire, which is about an hour north of London.

31-year-old Archie said it was ‘outrageous’ that farmers were deemed responsible for dumping if the perpetrators couldn’t be found.

“I knew I had to do something as soon as I read this farmer’s story. The situation he was facing was so unfair—and I have been amazed by how many people have supported the crowd-funder.”

SWNS

The National Farmer’s Union is urging authorities to work together to secure more arrests and convictions—for strong penalties that reflect the impact of the crime. Currently victims may have to report incidents to multiple authorities, which the organization says is time “consuming, confusing and frustrating”.

AND, LIKE A GOOD NEIGHBOR… How Nasty Note From a Neighbor Inspired a Community to Show the Best in Humanity

Archie says not everybody can rely on a fundraising campaign, so things need to change. The London Times reported that waste management companies charge up to £450 per ton of commercial, non-recyclable trash, so wrong-doers are choosing to hire criminals to dump the rubbish illegally.

“The situation is out of control with organized criminal gangs taking advantage of a deeply flawed system and our hardworking farmers are suffering as a result.”

CLEAN-UP IS THE CURE: Man With Unyielding Depression Starts Picking Up Litter–And Helps Clear 13 Tons of Trash with Strangers

Elderly farmer Will Dickinson in field with illegally dumped trash – SWNS

He backs the NFU’s calls for a major shake-up in how waste-dumping is tackled—a crime that costs the UK’s farming industry hundreds of millions of pounds annually in clean-up costs.

The criminal offense in the UK is punishable by unlimited fines or up to 5 years in prison, but the culprits are hard to catch.

Neighboring farmer Dickinson, an NFU member, has dealt with his own share of illegal dumping (which Brits called fly-tipping).

“There are so few arrests for fly-tipping and on the rare occasions when somebody is convicted, they receive a fine which is less than the cost of hiring a skip.”

FARMER CREATES BUZZ: Beekeeper Shocked When Neighbor Gives Up Farmland to Host Hives: “I’ve never experienced anything like that.”

“We need stronger sentences to act as a deterrent, or criminal gangs will continue to wreak havoc on the countryside with impunity.”

OFFSET THE WASTE ON SOCIAL MEDIA By Sharing This Heartwarming Story of Neighbors Helping Neighbors…

Scans That Make Prostate Cancer Cells ‘Glow’ Can Eliminate Invasive Biopsies and False Diagnoses

Clinically significant prostate cancer cells glow in PSMA PET/CT scan despite normal inconclusive MRI Scan SWNS
Clinically significant prostate cancer cells glow in PSMA PET/CT scan despite normal inconclusive MRI Scan SWNS

Scans that make prostate cancer cells ‘glow’ can eliminate the need for invasive biopsies—and they are already available in Australia and Europe.

The state of the art imaging test uses a molecule that binds to prostate cancer cells, causing them to “light up in a remarkable way”—appearing as bright spots in the scanning image.

The process could safely halve the number of men who need to undergo a biopsy for suspected prostate cancer following inconclusive results from an MRI scan, said the Australian scientists.

Their PSMA PET/CT scan identifies the more aggressive prostate cancer cells, which are potentially harmful and may need treatment—and could help reduce the risk of over-diagnosis by determining which cancers are low-risk and will never cause harm.

“It’s rare to see such strong imaging that could be so powerful in the clinic,” said Dr. James Buteau, a nuclear medicine physician at the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre in Melbourne who led the trial in coordination with St Vincent’s Hospital in Sydney.

A common cause of cancer deaths in men, about 1-in 8 males receive a prostate cancer diagnosis, and they usually undergo an MRI scan to look for abnormal growths.

If MRI results are suspicious or inconclusive, patients usually undergo a biopsy that takes small pieces of prostate tissue and looks for cancer cells, but the invasive procedure can be uncomfortable and sometimes worrying for patients, and is also associated with side effects.

“Incorporating this testing into clinical care could help to address the major challenge of prostate cancer over-diagnosis, which leads to at best unnecessary and at worst harmful treatment for cancers that would never cause any harm.”

CANCER TIPS: Improving Physical Fitness with Cardio May Cut Prostate Cancer Risk by More Than a Third

The study

The Primary2 trial recruited men considered at higher risk of prostate cancer—such as having a strong family history—and randomly assigned them to get either a standard biopsy or a PSMA PET/CT scan.

Glowing prostate cancer cells PSMA PET/CT Scan – SWNS

Primary2 found that PSMA PET/CT scanning could identify people who either did not have cancer, or whose cancer was so low-risk or slow-growing it would likely never cause harm.

Those patients did not need a biopsy, while patients with a ‘positive result’ for cancer according to the PSMA PET/CT scan had a biopsy.

Researchers say the approach halved the number of patients who needed a biopsy, without missing any harmful cancers.

For patients who still needed a biopsy, their scan results ensured the procedure was targeted to the suspicious areas identified in the test to minimize complications and improve accuracy.

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The results are the first released from the Primary2 trial, which will follow the 660 patients for two years.

Already, the PSMA PET/CT scan is widely available in Australia, and it is becoming increasingly accessible in the UK and Europe, primarily for diagnosing high-risk or recurrent prostate cancer—but its cost and availability remain limitations to widespread use.

“PSMA PET/CT scanning makes prostate cancer cells light up in a remarkable way, particularly in more aggressive cancers,” said Dr. Buteau.

“Getting told you have a risk of prostate cancer is a huge cause of anxiety and concern,” said study co-leader Professor Louise Emmett.

“Our findings show that PSMA PET/CT after MRI offers a ‘belt-and-braces’ approach that can determine which people have a clinically significant cancer, and which people are at low risk and don’t need a biopsy or further testing.”

Primary2 is the largest of a series of studies undertaken by the team, exploring whether PSMA PET/CT scanning could improve prostate cancer diagnosis and reduce unnecessary biopsies for patients.

HELPFUL CHEMO TIP: The ‘Miracle Berry’ Helps Chemo Patients Remove Metallic Taste So They Can Enjoy Food Again

Dr. Buteau was due to present the findings of the trial at the European Association of Urology Congress in London on Friday.

“This well-conducted trial shows that incorporating PSMA PET/CT in men with low or intermediate risk lesions significantly reduced the number of unnecessary biopsies and the diagnosis of clinically insignificant prostate cancer,” said Dr. Derya Tilki, an Association member and senior urologist at Martini-Klinik Prostate Cancer Centre in Germany.

“Importantly, this didn’t compromise the detection of clinically significant disease,” she said, congratulating the researchers on their study.

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Your Weekly Horoscope – ‘Free Will Astrology’ by Rob Brezsny

Our partner Rob Brezsny, who has a new book out, Astrology Is Real: Revelations from My Life as an Oracle, provides his weekly wisdom to enlighten our thinking and motivate our mood. Rob’s Free Will Astrology, is a syndicated weekly column appearing in over a hundred publications. He is also the author of Pronoia Is the Antidote for Paranoia: How All of Creation Is Conspiring To Shower You with Blessings. (A free preview of the book is available here.)

Here is your weekly horoscope…

FREE WILL ASTROLOGY – Week of March 14, 2026
Copyright by Rob Brezsny, FreeWillAstrology.com

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Can you compel acts of grace to intervene in your destiny? Can bursts of divine favor be summoned through the power of your will? Some spiritual scholars say, “Absolutely not.” They claim life’s wild benevolence arrives only through the mysterious tides of fate—impossible to solicit and impossible to predict. But other observers, more open-minded, speculate that your intelligent goodness might indeed attract the vivid generosity of cosmic energies. I bring this up because I suspect you Pisceans are either receiving or will soon receive blessings that feel like divine favor. Did you earn them, or are you just lucky, or some of both? It doesn’t matter. Enjoy the gift.

ARIES (March 21-April 19):
In theater, “breaking the fourth wall” means acknowledging the audience. An actor steps out of the pretense that what’s happening on stage is real. It’s a disruptive moment of truth that can deepen the experience. I would love you to break the fourth wall in your own life, Aries. It’s a favorable time to slip free of any roles you’ve been performing by rote and just blurt out the more interesting truths. Tell someone, “This isn’t working for me.” Or say, “I need to be my pure self with greater authenticity.” Breaking the fourth wall won’t ruin the show; it will be more fun and real and entertaining.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
English speakers like me use the terms “destiny” and “fate” interchangeably. But a scholar of ancient Sumer claims they had different meanings in that culture. Nam, the word for “destiny,” was fixed and immutable. Namtar, meaning “fate,” could be manipulated, adjusted, and even cheated. I bring this to your attention, Taurus, because I believe you now have a golden chance to veer off a path that leads to an uninteresting or unproductive destiny and start gliding along a fateful detour.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
The coming months will be a favorable time for you to shed the fairy-tale story of success that once inspired you when you were younger and more idealistic. A riper vision is emerging, calling you toward a more realistic and satisfying version of your life’s purpose. The transformation may at first feel unsettling, but I believe it will ultimately awaken even deeper zeal and greater creativity than your original dream. Bonus: Your revised, more mature goals will lead you to the very rewards your youthful hopes imagined but never quite delivered.

CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Even if you’re not actually far from home, Cancerian, I bet you’re on a pilgrimage or odyssey of some kind. The astrological omens tell me that you’re being drawn away from familiar ideas and feelings and are en route to an unknown country. You’re transforming, but you’re not sure how yet. During this phase of exploration, I suggest that you adopt a nickname that celebrates being on a quest. This will be a playful alias that helps you focus on the pregnant potential of this interlude. A few you might want to consider: Journey Seed, Threshold Traveler, Holy Rambler, Map-Edge Maverick, or Wanderlust Wonderer. Others? Choose one that tickles you with the sense that you are being born again while you travel.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Love is more than a gentle glow in your heart or a pleasurable spark in your body. When fully awakened and activated, it becomes a revolutionary way of being in the world that invites you to challenge and rethink all you’ve been taught about reality. It’s a bold magic that alters everything it encounters. You can certainly choose a milder, tamer version of love if you wish. But if you’d like to evolve into a love maestro—as you very well could during the next 12 months—I suggest you give yourself to the deeper, wilder form. Do you dare?

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Octopuses have neuron clusters in their arms that enable them to “think with their limbs.” Let’s make them your spirit creature for now, Virgo. Your body’s intuitions are offering you guidance that might even be as helpful as your fine mind. This enhanced somatic brilliance can serve you in practical ways: a creative breakthrough while doing housework, a challenging transition handled with aplomb, a fresh alignment between your feelings and ideas. I hope you will listen to your body as if it were a beloved mentor. Trust your movements and physical sensations to reveal what you need to know.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22):
I love your diplomatic genius: the capacity to understand all sides, to hold space for contradictions, to find the middle ground. But right now it’s in danger of curdling into a kind of self-erasure where your own desires become the one thing you can’t quite locate. Another way to understand this: You are so skilled at seeing everyone’s perspective that you sometimes lose track of your own. Here’s the antidote I recommend: Practice the revolutionary act of having strong opinions, of preferring one thing over another without immediately undercutting your preference with a counter-argument. I guarantee that your relationships will survive your decisiveness. In fact, they will deepen as people locate the real you beneath your exquisite balance.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
New love cravings have been welling up inside you, Scorpio. These cries of the heart may confuse you even as they delight you and invigorate you. One of your main tasks is to listen closely to what they’re telling you, but to wait a while before expressing their messages to other people. You need to study them in detail before spilling them out. Another prime task is to feel patient awe and reverence for the immensity and intensity of these deep, wild desires.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
If you are fulfilling your birthright as a Sagittarius, you are a philosopher-adventurer with a yearning for deep meaning. As you seek out interesting truths, your restless curiosity is a spiritual necessity. You understand that wisdom comes from collecting diverse, sometimes contradictory experiences and weaving them into a coherent worldview. You have a fundamental need to keep expanding and reinventing what freedom means to you. All these qualities may make some people nervous, but they really are among your primary assignments now and forever. They are especially important to cultivate these days.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
In traditional navigation, “dead reckoning” means finding your position by tracking your previous movements. Where you have been tells you where you are. But it only works if you’ve been honest about your course. If you’ve been misleading yourself about the direction you have been traveling, dead reckoning will get you lost. I bring this to your attention, Capricorn, because I really want you to rededicate yourself to telling yourself the deepest, strongest, clearest truths. Where have you actually been going? Not where you told yourself you were going or where other people imagined you were going, but where your choices have actually been taking you. Look at the pattern of your real movements, not your stated intentions. Once you know your true position, you can chart a true course for the future.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
You’re entering a rambling zigzag phase. Each plot twist will branch into two more, and every supposed finale will reveal itself as the opening act of another surprise. Fortunately, your gift for quick thinking and innovative adaptation is sharper than ever, which means you will flourish where others might freeze. My suggestion? Forget the script. Approach the unpredictable adventures like an improv exercise: spontaneous, playful, and open to the fertile mysteries.

WANT MORE? Listen to Rob’s EXPANDED AUDIO HOROSCOPES, 4-5 minute meditations on the current state of your destiny — or subscribe to his unique daily text message service at: RealAstrology.com

(Zodiac images by Numerologysign.com, CC license)

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“The sky broke like an egg into full sunset and the water caught fire.” – Pamela Hansford Johnson

Credit: Getty Images for Unsplash+

Quote of the Day: “The sky broke like an egg into full sunset and the water caught fire.” – Pamela Hansford Johnson

Photo by: Getty Images for Unsplash+

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

Credit: Getty Images for Unsplash+

Good News in History, March 14

123 years ago today, President Theodore Roosevelt at the behest of some naturalists and ornithologists designated Pelican Island off the east coast of central Florida the nation’s first National Wildlife Refuge. The refuge consists of a 3-acre island that includes an additional 2.5 acres of surrounding water that plays host to hundreds of species, including fifteen federally-listed threatened or endangered ones like the West Indian manatees and sea turtles that occupy parts of the lagoon, and wood storks, who enjoy two nearby refuges. READ more about the NWR system in America today… (1903)

Great Lakes Otters Are a Conservation Success Story with Populations Flourishing in US and Ontario

A river otter the moment it was released into the Rio Grande - Credit J.N. Stuart, CC 2.0.
A river otter the moment it was released into the Rio Grande – Credit J.N. Stuart, CC 2.0.

In 1986, Ohio’s Department of Natural Resources began reintroducing North American river otters to the rivers, creeks, and shorelines of the Great Lakes ecosystem.

40 years later, these adorable apex predators have recolonized much of their former aquatic acreage in Ohio, New York, Michigan, and Ontario, fastening the food chain at the top while ecosystem restoration programs have anchored it at the bottom.

The Great Lakes region holds one-fifth of the world’s fresh water. It’s a massive ecosystem that supports tens of millions of people, tens of billions in industry, and thousands of animal and plant species.

Unfortunately for the otter, an apex predator needs a vast and intact ecosystem to thrive, and as industrialization ate away at its prey species and den habitat, hunters reduced their numbers in pursuit of their pelts.

In 1980, an examination conducted on US river otter populations determined they were locally extinct in 11 states, and lost significant population in 9 other states.

It’s a story all-too-familiar the world over, but one that seems now to have had a happy ending.

After the Ohio DNR began releasing river otters from southern states like Arkansas and Louisiana, New York state began a mirrored effort of relocating otters from the Adirondacks, the Hudson Valley, and Catskills to the tributaries of the Great Lakes in the western part of the state.

“All of these efforts were bolstered by the 1972 Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement, a landmark US–Canada treaty that pushed both countries toward reducing toxic discharges and restoring damaged habitats,” writes Timothy Mihocik at Rewilding Magazine.

SIMILAR STORIES: 

Gradual waterfront revitalization and de-industrialization has allowed the otter to go beyond mere sheltered streams in protected areas back into the heart of the Great Lakes ecosystem, a return that also heralds cleaner, uncontaminated water, richer fish stocks, and more biodiverse riverbeds.

GNN has reported over the years that the character of several Midwest rivers, once so polluted they’d catch fire, has now changed. In Toronto, Ohio, and Chicago, rivers are now swimmable and fishable again, and otters stand hugely to benefit from that.

Still, North American river otters have remained rare or absent in the southwestern United States. Water quality and development inhibit recovery of populations in some areas, but here too, otters are returning, with the New Mexican population tripling in the last few years.

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Bahama Boy’s Message in a Bottle Floats 4,000 Miles to Be Read Almost Exactly a Year Later in Portugal

Lorenzo (left) and Maria Enes (right) - credit SWNS
Lorenzo (left) and Maria Enes (right) – credit SWNS

A boy who threw a message in a bottle into the Bahamian seas was stunned when it was found on a beach in Portugal exactly one year later.

Amy Bisterzo and her 10-year-old son Lorenzo live in the archipelago’s town of Fort Old Bay, and on February 10th of last year, they decided to conduct a fun experiment.

“Of course when we first threw it we were so excited to imagine what might become of the bottle and where it would go,” Bisterzo told English media back home. “But honestly as time went by we completely forgot about it.”

She admitted that it was a sort-of exciting activity to do with a child, “but in my adult mind I knew it was highly unlikely to be found.”

Lorenzo wrote down his and his mother’s WhatsApp numbers, along with the name of their town and the date, before they took off in a jet ski and hurled it into the glittering ocean.

It travelled over 4,000 miles from Nassau in the Bahamas and reached Vila Chã Beach, near Porto, in Portugal.

There, 49-year-old schoolteacher Maria Enes was walking her dog on February 12th, 2026, when she spotted the bottle amongst a pile of sticks.

She described the moment of finding a message in a bottle as being a “childhood fantasy.”

“As it said 2025 and it was so new I thought it was from the area and I took it home with me. I took the paper with tweezers and I was astonished that it came from the Bahamas— exactly one year had passed.”

“I thought it was awesome and I called the number in the note,” Enes said.

Back in Fort Old Bay, Bisterzo was getting ready to go to bed when a “random” number from Portugal called.

“Then a strange photo popped up with someone saying ‘I got your bottle,'” the mother recounted.

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When Amy realized it was Lorenzo’s writing on the paper in the photo, she immediately unblocked the number.

“I shouted upstairs to Lorenzo ‘someone found our bottle’ because it was so long ago he didn’t know what I was talking about and then I showed him. Then I started to communicate with Maria, and she sent voice notes and videos, and very quickly I realized this woman was so kind and lovely.”

MORE STORIES LIKE THIS: Four-Year-old is Ecstatic to Receive Reply to His Message in a Bottle–and Wonders if He has to Send Another Bottle Back

“I never thought it would be found, let alone almost to the year exactly, let alone go so far and also to be found by the perfect person.”

Maria said she is hoping they can meet her in Vila Chã one day so they can throw a bottle into the ocean together.

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Hedgehogs Could Avoid Extinction by Silent Ultrasound Installed on Cars to Prevent Roadkill

A European hedgehog - credit, Fabian Fromwald
A European hedgehog – credit, Fabian Fromwald

The European hedgehog can hear sounds at higher frequencies than is possible for humans, dogs, and cats, a potential breakthrough finding in protecting these animals from becoming roadkill.

There must be only a handful of critters cuter than the hedgehog, yet one-third of all mortality cases among local populations are attributed to car collisions.

It happens so frequently, that despite their rodent-like fecundity, these animals are now considered “Near Threatened,” by the IUCN.

Researchers at the University of Oxford in the UK, where hedgehogs are at risk of localized extinctions from car strikes, have discovered for the first time that hedgehogs can hear ultrasonic sound waves as high as 85,000 hertz. Humans can hear up to 20,000 hertz, dogs more than twice as many, and cats more than thrice as many; but none can match the hedgehog’s 85 kHz, and potentially higher, sensitivity.

The study subjected hedgehogs at a Danish rescue center to short sonic bursts up to 20 seconds long. The animals wore electrodes to measure brain activity between the inner-ear and the brain, and the result was that peak sonic detection was 45 kHz, around as much as a dog whistle.

The study authors paired this data with micro-CT scans of a mortally-injured and euthanized hedgehog to get a detailed picture of the ear cannel of the animal. Their conclusion was that it seemed similarly constructed and functional to that of echolocating bats.

“It is especially exciting when research motivated by conservation leads to a fundamental new discovery about a species biology which, full circle, in turn offers a new avenue for conservation,” study co-author Professor David Macdonald, told Euronews.

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

Dr. Sophie Lund Rasmussen, corresponding author on the study, agreed.

“A fascinating question now is whether they use ultrasound to communicate with each other, or to detect prey—something we have already begun investigating.”

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In addition, the team is investigating whether ultrasonic sound emitters, mounted on cars, lawnmowers, and hedge trimmers, could serve as effective hedgehog repellants. Blasting an ultrasonic note which only they can hear, might it dissuade them from attempting their long, slow road crossings that sometimes end in disaster?

The team is looking for volunteer collaborators within the car industry who could spare the funds to finance a prototype repellant device and trial it on their cars.

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Park Where Jackie Robinson First Played Baseball Gets Gorgeous $30 Million Renovation

The rendering above illustrates the $30-million renovation of Jackie Robinson Ballpark - credit, Barton Malow and MSA Sport, released as a courtesy to ENR Record
The rendering above illustrates the $30-million renovation of Jackie Robinson Ballpark – credit, Barton Malow and MSA Sport, released as a courtesy to ENR Record

The first baseball park that Jackie Robinson ever played ball on is about to enjoy the fruits of a $30 million renovation that will bring it into the 21st century while maintaining its historic charm.

Though he made his fame with the Dodgers, the first diamond Robinson ever played on was City Island Ballpark in Daytona Beach, Florida.

City Island is around 100 acres in size located on the Halifax River, several miles from Daytona Beach’s center. Here, in 1946, the Brooklyn Dodgers visited on a spring training game against their minor-league affiliate, the Montreal Royals. Among the Royals roster, Robinson had found a place amid a nationally-segregated baseball environment where he could play.

That’s because while many other Florida teams adhered to rules regarding segregation, City Island Ballpark, the Royals, and the local community leaders, would not.

“Jackie Robson was told no, he could not play in many places, but the city of Daytona Beach, with the help of local leaders, said yes,” Dru Driscoll, deputy city manager for Daytona Beach told Engineering News Record.

“So, maintaining that there’s only one place he first played professional baseball, it’s our responsibility to rehabilitate the ball field,” Driscoll adds.

In 2020, Major League Baseball passed an organization change on facility requirements that put some 160 teams and ballparks on notice that they would have to shell out on modernization.

In particular, the change mandated that visiting teams have dedicated clubhouses of a certain size as well as pitching and batting tunnels, that parks should have modern, climate-controlled weight and fitness rooms, and facilities for female players and staff.

This led to 2024 and 2025 being the two largest years in the history of minor league ballpark investment, with total renovations nationwide totaling some $2.3 billion according to the Sport Business Journal.

As the project’s main owner representative, Driscoll faced unique problems in the bid to renovate City Island Ballpark. If one of baseball’s great charms is the wonky irregularities between ballparks, City Island, now called Jackie Robinson Ballpark (JRB) stands among the wonkiest.

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A canal runs in parallel with the third base line, while Orange Avenue hugs first. The ballpark takes up almost the entire dimensions of the property it sits on, so finding room for the 38,000 square-foot player development facility, which would include the weight and fitness areas, required requisitioning from the city a couple of derelict tennis courts abutting the right field wall—another curiosity.

Lead contracting firm on the renovation of the JRB, Barton Malow, got started in 2024. Though hampered substantially at times from the desire not to alter the “sacred” layout of the park, and a water table which becomes especially high during summer rains and required diligent dewatering with high pressure pumps, one might say they hit a home-run, accommodating all of the MLB’s new requirements and then some—including a dining space for the club and management to host events, clubhouse seating, dedicated player parking, and a new grandstand with a brilliant view over the river to downtown Daytona.

The park will also include new water service lines and fire sprinklers, and a 1,500 square foot museum dedicated to the life, times, and excellence of the ballpark’s namesake.

MORE BALLPARK BUSINESS: A Minor League Ballpark Has Revived a Struggling Downtown in S. Carolina, Becoming a Community Hub

In concert with Barton Malow’s work at the JRB, the city of Daytona took the opportunity to do some much-needed civic infrastructure improvements on the island, including a new seawall.

Now home to the Daytona Tortugas, the Cincinnati Reds minor-league affiliate, the JRB is ready for another 80 years of history.

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