Have fun, win prizes, participate in our contests!
May 15th, 2021, 2:10 pm
Puppy Comes ThisClose To Becoming Alligator Food Until Florida Man Saves The Day


Mike McCoy wrestled with the reptile to free his young dog from a death roll.If this dog was a cat, he’d certainly have lost at least one of his nine lives by now.

Image

Jake, an 8-month-old Labrador retriever, came perilously close to becoming an alligator’s lunch when he was dragged into a pond in Holiday, Florida, on Tuesday.

The puppy entered into a terrifying death roll with the reptile, estimated 7 to 9 feet long.

But Jake’s owner Mike McCoy dived into the water and wrestled with the gator to save the day.

“I got around, thumbed him the eye, picked him out of the water so he couldn’t get anywhere until he let the dog go,” McCoy told ABC Action News.

The alligator bit McCoy. Both McCoy and Jake needed stitches, but weren’t seriously injured.

“He’s on the mend,” McCoy said of his pup.

Source and video
May 15th, 2021, 2:10 pm

Image
May 15th, 2021, 2:39 pm
Researchers Find That Wild Donkeys and Horses Dig Desert Watering Holes Vital For Entire Ecosystem

Image

Research on feral horses and wild donkeys in the American southwest show they dig desert wells with their hooves in the soft sand of riverbeds, thus creating a network of extra fresh water sources for the creatures that are native to the area.

This find has thrown a wrench in the prevailing wisdom that feral equids, who were introduced by the Spanish, are pests that should be removed—as the scientist behind the research suggests they could be fulfilling a vital function once performed by now-extinct mammals from the Pleistocene.

In modern conservation, if an animal turns up where it didn’t live a few hundred years ago and thrives there, it’s typically considered invasive. Invasive species are almost always seen as a menace, with animals like foxes, cats, goats, mice, sheep, pigs, cane toads, rats, carp, and others terrorizing delicate ecosystems in Madagascar, Galapagos, and Australia, to name a few examples.

The Sonoran and Mojave Desert ecosystems currently host 95,000 wild horses and donkeys, which are considered invasive pests that outcompete other native herbivores, and suppress or trample native plants.

Conservation doctrine would say they should be exterminated or removed, but sometimes it’s more complex than that, and Erick Lundgren from the University of Aarhus in Denmark has shown that the desert fauna’s eagerness to drink from these equine wells should be considered before making any decisions about the species’ future.

Lundgren found that 59 different species frequented the water holes, and that species diversity around them was 64% higher than the ecosystem’s square-mile average.

Landscape engineers
“Equid wells strongly reduced the isolation of water features, reducing average nearest-neighbor distances between water features by an average of 65%, and at most by 99%,” wrote Lundgren and his co-authors in the paper they published in Science.

Monitoring four different sites in the Sonoran and Mojave Deserts, and sampling over 3,258 trap nights from 2015-2017, Lundgren found bobcats, javelina, mule deer, scrub jays, and 55 other vertebrates enjoying a drink.

“There was a cacophony of organisms,” he told New Scientist.

Digging for water is a common behavior among large mammals across the world, and in Africa, the elephant’s water wells are a gift to surrounding species. Certain animals, such as the elephant, beaver, and bison, are called “ecosystem engineers” because they shape their environment so dramatically, the flora and fauna therein depend and expect their impact, and have adapted to accommodate or exploit it.

In his paper, Lundgren posits that American wild equids should be categorized as ecosystem engineers.

“By changing the abiotic environment around them, certain organisms can really strongly facilitate other species and processes,” Lundgren said in a recent interview with Science. “The most notable aspect of deserts is the scarcity of water, and these animals can really enhance the availability of it through drought and in the hot summers where natural sources of water tend to dry up.”

A role to play
Questions like whether the wild equids’ presence has changed the landscape in positive ways, what really constitutes invasive and how far back is that measured, and whether our role is to constantly try to preserve what exists now, understanding that 99% of all species have gone extinct, and that Earth’s history has seen constant change, are common in mammal conservation.

In another of Lundgren’s papers, the author points out that since the Pleistocene, a large variety of worldwide megafauna has gone extinct in many different kinds of ecosystems. The services, or engineering those species performed on the landscape to the benefits of many animals and plants that still exist today are largely a mystery.

Yet in number, introduced megafauna have restored about 15% of the estimated Pleistocene megafauna populations around the world.

Nowhere is this perhaps more distinct than in North America, which not only had prehistoric pachyderms in the form of the mastodon, but also hyenas, sprinting cougars, the largest bear ever, and interestingly, several species of wild horse.

“Recent and ancient extinctions and range contractions of megafauna, and the loss of their distinct ecological functions, has led to highly modified modern landscapes,” he writes. “Although introduced megafauna have primarily been studied as threats to conservation goals, growing evidence suggests that they present a countercurrent to ancient losses, and may replace lost ecological functions.”

Could the desert animals observed in Lundgren’s study be reacting to a function which the ancestors of these modern donkeys and horses performed on the landscape tens of thousands of years ago? It’s a thought-provoking question, one which Smithsonian details has hit the community in different ways, with some choosing to remain with the current doctrine, and others reconsidering the pest-status of wild American equids.
May 15th, 2021, 2:39 pm

Twitter: Fatima99@fatima99_mobi
Image
May 15th, 2021, 2:44 pm
'Extremely Rare' Calf Born With Third Eye On Forehead

An 'extremely rare' cow was born with a third eye in the middle of its forehead - although despite its unique nature, it's still destined for the same fate as other animals on its beef farm.

Image

Vet Malan Hughes was TB-testing animals in North Wales when she stumbled upon a four-month-old calf with an unusual feature at Jake Jones' farm in Brynmawr.

Jones, a beef farmer, said: "I rear about three thousand calves a year and have never seen anything like it."

Hughes, 28, said the third eye had eyelids and eyelashes and is likely a 'developmental anomaly'.

The healthy cow was named 'Isaiah' (geddit?) after Hughes shared a photo of him on social media, asking if anyone had seen anything like it before.

Image

Hughes wrote: "Can't quite believe what we spotted today... anyone else ever seen one?"

Hughes said the eye 'looks fine' from the outside, and is moist - as if some sort of lubricant is being secreted.

She added: "But it's impossible to know if anything is going on behind the eye."

Hughes continued: "Having a calf or any animal with this impairment is extremely rare. I have never heard of, or seen one like this before.

"The calf seems perfectly healthy. We were doing other work with the herd when we noticed the fault.

"He will surely live a normal life for such an animal."

Sadly for Isaiah, his third eye won't be winning him any special favours - as was the case in Tamil Nadu, a village in India, where a three-eyed calf called Shiva is now worshipped as a religious deity after being born in 2014.

Instead, it looks like he'll be headed for the dinner plate, just like the other animals on the beef farm.

Hughes added: "[Isaiah] does not act any differently from any other calf.

"As a veterinary practice, we will certainly be treating it with the same care we give every animal."

Commenting on Hughes' Twitter post, one person wrote: "Come to India..."

Another said: "I bet [Isaiah would] be a hit with Hindus."
May 15th, 2021, 2:44 pm
May 15th, 2021, 3:44 pm
Addressing human rights

Image

Jewellery industry human rights abuses are well documented, not helped by the complexity of supply chains, which see materials pass many hands before the final sale.

Though progress has been made – 82 countries have adopted the Kimberley Process developed in 2003 to block sales of conflict diamonds, for example – problems persist. A 2020 Human Rights Watch report on supply chain ethics found that 11 out of 15 major jewellers it ranked had made improvements since 2018, but none yet ticked all of the boxes for responsible sourcing. Human Rights Watch also highlighted that most big firms don’t know the origin of the metals and gems they use.

To address this, in 2019 Tiffany became the first jeweller to laser unique microscopic serial numbers on to its stones to track where they are sourced, cut, polished and set; while De Beers is working on using blockchain to make its supply chain fully traceable.

Pieces by many independent firms, including London designer Simone Faurschou, are Fairmined certified. Meanwhile, Moyo Gems is simplifying the process entirely. Since 2018, it has worked directly with individual miners in Tanzania, connecting them to legal markets that offer a fair price for their stones. Co-founder Cristina Villegas told Positive News: “For every Moyo gem, we can tell you the name of the miner who dug it from the ground.”
May 15th, 2021, 3:44 pm

Image
May 15th, 2021, 4:13 pm
Life-sized game of Monopoly is coming to the UK - dates, tickets and more

Fans of Monopoly will be jumping for joy as creators of the popular board game have launched Monopoly Lifesized - a 4D experience that allows people to play on a giant 15m x 15m board


Image

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VIXSooPsbzg

There's a brand new way to play Monopoly, the world's favourite board game.

This summer, fans can take part in Monopoly Lifesized, a giant, on-your-feet version of the game, played on a giant 15m x 15m board.

The 4D experience features all of your favourite board game elements just with a twist and will be open to the public from August 14.

Players will have four boards to choose from - Classic, Vault (banking-related), City (London-focused) and Junior for kids - where they will take part in 'escape room style challenges'.

Some challenges will be physical, and some will be mental - but you'll need to win to buy a property.

The game takes place at a designated venue on Tottenham Court Road, The Court, which was previously the Paperchase flagship store.

As well as taking part in the immersive experience, fans can also load up on Hasbro-related merch at the shop there and grab a bite to eat and drink at The Top Hat - a Monopoly-themed bar and restaurant.

The website reads: "Monopoly Lifesized is an immersive, on-your-feet version of the world's favourite family game brand played on a 15m x 15m life-sized Monopoly board!

"Compete in one of a kind challenges for your chance to buy properties.

"Experience the thrill of trying to stage a heist in Mayfair, competing against a clock to build some of London's iconic buildings, solving a baffling murder mystery or stepping into the world of codebreakers.

"Win the challenge. Buy the property. Own it all."

https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/weird-new ... g-24114621
May 15th, 2021, 4:13 pm

Image

Believe me, you are someone's crush. Yes, you are!
May 15th, 2021, 5:01 pm
Message in a bottle found on Manitoulin Island brings strangers together

Image
An Oshawa couple is in disbelief after they found a message in a bottle.
Inside was a picture, ten bucks and a poem about a young man who passed away.
Connecting two families who ended up being neighbours.


An Oshawa family is in disbelief after they found a message in a bottle while in Manitoulin Island. The message was a sombre one, found by Oshawa woman Shandelle Carrigan while they were visiting their family cottage.


“I don’t know. I think it was just the excitement of what was going to be inside this bottle,” said Carrigan.

“Once I picked it up, I could see the electrical tape wound around the neck of it and I could tell there was something in it. This was before I flipped it over and saw a picture.”

It happened while her family was on the island in April, when she found a bottle washed up on the shore. But what came after they opened the mystery bottle was a flurry of emotions.

Carrigan’s husband, Jason Poulton, says it was something much more than just a message.

“When we got the bottle open and we realized what it was, that switches the mood a little bit, because it’s quite impactful,” he said.

Inside was a photo, $10 and a poem about a young man who died in 2016. The note said, “Have a drink on us in memory of our son.”

“This became something so big and so powerful,” says Carrigan. “And it just had a huge message behind it.”

“When we saw that, and the $10 bill, both of us kind of felt compelled to locate the family,” said Poulton.

What’s behind the message is the memory of Brandon Walli, who was struck and killed by a car in Flamborough, Ont. This happened while his family says he was texting and walking. After the tribute was discovered, Carrigan and her husband set out to find his family on Facebook and after 24 hours, they did.

“We wanted to say, yeah, we found your bottle and we will definitely have a drink,” they said.

After posting a impassioned message about their find on a local Facebook page for the island, word spread fast.

“It was shared so much, Robyn had contacted Shan within 24 hours, and that evening we all sat on Facetime and had a shot in memory of Brandon altogether.”

It was an emotional time for his family as well, who had almost forgotten they threw the bottle into Lake Huron.

“All those emotions from that night that Brandon had passed all came kind of flooding back,” says his sister, Robyn Tollar.

Brandon’s family had thrown it in the water, after they loaded his ashes into shotgun shells and shot them off into the lake on Manitoulin Island. The bottle could have floated across the water to the United States, but instead it just happened to float back to the house, right beside them.

“I had no idea where that bottle was going to go,” said Tollar. Their father, Tom Walli agreed.

“We watched it float out, so I have no idea how it came back,” says Walli.

And the return of that message has reinvigorated their desire to continue bringing awareness to the dangers of texting and walking — the very way that Brandon was unfortunately killed.

When he passed, Tom’s employer, Geotab, helped him start up a campaign called Phones Down, Eyes Up, an initiative to raise funds through benefit concerts and offers scholarships for students.

“We really made it our mission as a family to drive awareness to this and spread the word,” says Tollar. “Because if we can save one person, it’s worth it.”

With the bottle found, the family’s sense of purpose has been rejuvenated.

“I’m hoping that we can make this worldwide.”
May 15th, 2021, 5:01 pm

Image
May 15th, 2021, 6:11 pm
Alabama woman with unusual name pleads guilty to bank robbery

Image

It seems appropriate that someone named Iconic Facce delivers a memorable mugshot.

An Ozark, Al., woman who goes by the legal name, Iconic Facce, was convicted of two counts of armed robbery after pleading guilty to a Gulfport, Miss., bank hold up two years ago, reports the New York Post.

Facce, 39, who was born under her birth name of Jimmy Maurice Lewis II, was allegedly involved in the bank robbery to fund her sexual reassignment plastic surgery according to AL.com

Her trial was set for June 28 but she requested to plead guilty beforehand and a Circuit Judge sentenced Facce to the maximum term of 15 years on each count to run concurrently, NBC News reported.

Police in Gulfport, Miss., say they became aware of her presence in the bank by a hidden alarm activated in the branch.

When authorities arrived employees told them the suspect had approached a teller window and handed over a hand-scrawled note that read: “You have 1 min to give the money do not be wrong or die.”

While the tellers didn’t see a weapon they did recall the suspect had a swollen face that seemed to indicate recent cosmetic surgery.

The robbery was also captured on the bank’s surveillance system while an abandoned Cadillac parked nearby was traced back to Facce, according to the Associated Press.

In the meantime, the public was sent images of the suspect asking for help in identifying her.

Facce was eventually detained at Houston’s George Bush Intercontinental Airport on March 30, 2019, after re-entering the country from Mexico presumably having had some surgery given subsequent mugshots showed her sporting surgical tape around her nose.

Earlier Facce was found guilty of another bank robbery on Jan. 20, 2009, in Alabama, AL.com reported, and served 51 months in that case during which she reportedly demanded a teller give her at least $20,000.

https://torontosun.com/news/crime/alaba ... nk-robbery
May 15th, 2021, 6:11 pm

Book request - King Satyr by Ron Weighell [5000 WRZ$] Reward!
https://forum.mobilism.org/viewtopic.php?f=72&t=5459036
May 16th, 2021, 7:44 am
9-Year-Old Dubai Girl Scratching Her Way To DJ Fame
05/11/2021 11:31am EDT*

When her peers were listening to nursery rhymes, Michelle Rasul was hooked on was hooked on rap legends like Tupac Shakur, Jay-Z, and the Notorious B.I.G.


Image
Kamran Jebreili via AP
Michelle Rasul flashes a rockstar sign in the lobby of her apartment building in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Sunday, May 9, 2021. Rasul, a 9-year-old girl from Azerbaijan who lives in Dubai, is scratching her way to the top as a DJ after competing in the DMC World DJ Championship. (AP Photo/Kamran Jebreili)


DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Michelle Rasul had just learned to read and write and was already spinning turntables, scratching hip-hop records and making the beats drop. Four years later, at the age of 9, she’s one of the world’s top DJs and competed in this year’s global championship.

At her home in the skyscraper-studded city of Dubai, the turntable whiz from Azerbaijan nodded her baseball cap-adorned head to the beat and showed off her skills scratching, cutting and fading. Her tiny fingers flew across the turntable as she created a sizzling landscape of electric audio effects and recalled how she got her start as a child turntable celebrity — which, in fact, wasn’t all that long ago.

“I looked at my dad while he was practicing DJ-ing and I saw him and was like, ‘Wow, is he doing magic or something? He’s a real magician, bro!’” Michelle told The Associated Press earlier this week, bubbling with enthusiasm. “When I turned 5 on my birthday, I told him, ‘Dad, I want to be a world famous DJ. I’m going to start practicing.’”

As though recounting a decades-long career, she grinned and added: “And the rest is history.”

Michelle, the youngest-ever contestant in the DMC World DJ Championship, ranked 14th out of 85 DJ stars from around the world in the “Portablist” category this year, the global portable scratch competition. The 2021 competition was held online due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Although she didn’t advance to the next round this time, she’s determined to beat her father, Vagif “DJ Shock” Rasulov, a professional who taught her the tricks of the trade and made 9th this year, in next year’s competition.

“I love competing in battles, I just love DJ-ing,” she said. “It’s my passion.”

Turntabling, which burst onto the music scene from hip-hop artists in the late 1970s, can look like a basic act — taking a record, putting the needle down and sliding it back and forth with one’s fingertips. But for the wizards, it’s an art form, involving spontaneous sound mixing and advanced techniques like quick, rhythmic scratches and “crabs,” rubbing the record under the needle.

From the moment her parents gave her a mini DJ starter kit, they recognized her extraordinary abilities. Even as a baby, she was fascinated and would punch all the buttons on her father’s equipment.

“She just catches things so fast,” said her mother Sadia Rasulova, a former violinist who also encouraged Michelle’s love of music. “I realized that she’s a star, that she’s really talented.”

When her peers were listening to nursery rhymes, or as she put it, “‘Baby Shark’ stuff or ABC songs,” Michelle said she was hooked on rap legends like Tupac Shakur, Chuck D, Jay-Z, the Notorious B.I.G. and Michael Jackson, who remains her favorite.

Her parents started posting footage of her scratching online, and Michelle’s popularity exploded. Her Instagram account and persona as the self-described “ youngest DJ in the world,” has racked up 110,000 followers. Online messages from aspiring DJs ages 6 to 65 poured in from around the globe, she said.

Michelle’s feed is populated with posts of her break dancing and scratching furiously alongside her sunglasses-sporting father, spinning hip-hop and techno tunes live for her listeners, strumming the bass in her free time and playing at events such as Dubai’s recent food festival. Before the pandemic put big gatherings on hold, Michelle performed regularly at weddings, parties and music festivals across the city.

While the rest of the world is focused on her accomplishments as a DJ star, Michelle is busy bouncing through life as a third-grader, attending online school, skateboarding, reading and hanging out with friends and dogs at her neighborhood park. But her heart is always in her turntabling.

“I can’t imagine my life without music,” she said. “Like from the start, from the very beginning, when I was really little.”
May 16th, 2021, 7:44 am

Image
May 16th, 2021, 9:52 am
Illinois 12-year-old builds world's tallest popsicle stick structure

Image
Eric Klabel, 12, of Naperville, Ill., broke a Guinness World Record
when he used popsicle sticks to build a tower measuring 20.2
feet tall. Photo courtesy of Guinness World Records


A 12-year-old Illinois boy broke a Guinness World Record when he assembled a 20.2-foot tower from popsicle sticks.

Eric Klabel of Naperville said he has been building objects with popsicle sticks and other recycled materials since 2015, and he was inspired to chase the world record after watching a Guinness World Records video highlighting other record holders.

Klabel built the 20.2-foot tower in segments measuring about 3 feet each.

"To make the tower I had to build the same 3-feet-long vertical structure many times, which got very repetitive, though it was still very fun to see it getting taller and taller," Klabel told Guinness.

Klabel's other popsicle stick creations include a motorized model car, a boat, a marble run and a functioning chair.

"I felt accomplished and grateful when I became a Guinness World Records title holder. I was so happy that I was able to get to this point. My favorite thing about achieving the record was that I was able to be known for something I am passionate about," he said.
May 16th, 2021, 9:52 am
May 16th, 2021, 12:58 pm
Image

I sometimes get REALLY DEPRESSED reviewing the news these days.
It's always about a global pandemic threatening life as we know it,
protests around the world, stupid politicians, natural disasters,
or some other really bad story.
ENOUGH IS ENOUGH

Welcome to The mobi weekly news magazine
IN OTHER NEWS
SUNDAY MAY 16

What is it?
Here is your chance to become an "ACE REPORTER" for our weekly news magazine.
It is your job to fine weird, funny or "good feel" stories from around the world and share them with our readers in our weekly magazine

How do you play?
Just post a story that you have come across that made you smile, laugh, feel good...
BUT NOTHING DEPRESSING :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

EXAMPLE POST
Naked sunbather chases wild boar through park after it steals his laptop bag
Image
A naked sunbather was seen chasing wild boar through a park after it stole his laptop bag.
Amusing photographs from Germany show the man running after the animal to try and claim the plastic bag back.
But the cheeky boar and its two piglets appear to be too quick for the sunbather, who can't keep up with their speedy little trotters.
As the incident unfolds, groups of friends and family sat on the grass watch on and laugh.
Heads are seen turning in surprise and amusement in the hilarious photographs.
The incident happened at Teufelssee Lake - a bathing spot in the Grunwell Forest in Berlin, Germany.

Rules:
Each Edition of IN OTHER NEWS will be open for 7 days...
You may post One Story in any 24 hour period
So in other words, you can enter only once a day
Each news day will start when I post announcing it
OR at:
9:00 AM CHICAGO TIME (UTC -5)
2:00 PM GMT (UTC -0)

on those days I space out and forget to post or can't due to Real Life :lol:
Stories may be accompanied with images - but No big images, please! 800x800 pixels wide maximum
Videos are allowed, but please keep them to under a minute, and post a short summary for those that don't like to click on videos
No Duplicate stories - Where a post has been edited resulting in duplicates, then the last one in time gets disallowed.
And please limit this to reasonably family friendly stories :lol: :lol: :lol:

Reward:
Each news story posted that I feel is acceptable (must be a real story, too few words or simply a headline are not considered acceptable) will earn you 50 WRZ$
If you post multiple stories on any given day, you will only earn 50 WRZ$ for the first story of the Day
All payments will be made at THE END of the weekly news cycle.
Special Bonus - Each week I will award "The Pulitzer Prize" for the best story of the week
The weekly winner of the "The Pulitzer Prize" will receive a 100 WRZ$ bonus
It's just my personal opinion, so my judgement is final

So help bring GOOD news to the members of mobi, and join our reporting team...

IN OTHER NEWS


Image
May 16th, 2021, 12:58 pm

Image
Image
May 16th, 2021, 1:11 pm
Animals to be formally recognised as sentient beings in UK law

Image

Animal welfare campaigners claimed a major victory this week, as the UK government announced legislative reforms that will ban live animal exports, prohibit trophy hunting imports and formally recognise animals as sentient beings.

“Like London buses, you wait a lifetime for animal welfare legislation to appear and then three bills come along at once,” said James West, senior policy manager at Compassion in World Farming.

Activists have long campaigned against the practice of exporting farm animals for slaughtering and fattening. On Wednesday, their calls were answered. The government also said it would ban the import and export of shark fins, explore a ban on foie gras imports and introduce measures to improve conditions for livestock.

Wildlife presenter Steve Backshall, a patron of the Bite-Back campaign against shark finning, said: “The government’s decision to ban the trade in shark fins will be significant in helping to restore the balance of the oceans. It sends a clear message to the world that shark fin soup belongs in the history books and not on the menu.”
May 16th, 2021, 1:11 pm

Image
May 16th, 2021, 1:15 pm
Herd of 100 life-sized ELEPHANT sculptures go on display outside Buckingham Palace to promote co-existence of humans and animals

The sculptures, made of weeds, are part of an Elephant Family campaign
Elephants will feature in London parks before going on sale for up to £30,000
Funds will go towards securing wildlife corridors and expanding National Parks


If you spotted a herd of elephants walking down the Mall in London this morning, you wouldn't be the only one.

The 100 life-sized Asian elephant sculptures have gone on display in front of Buckingham Palace to promote to co-existence of humans and animals.

They were put in place marching down the Mall outside the Queen's main residence by conservation group Elephant Family as part of the CoExistence campaign.

Image
The campaign has been launched in response to 'the increasing overlap between the human and animal world'

Image
Each model is made from lantana, an invasive weed which benefits wildlife when it is removed

Image
They were installed by Elephant Family as part of the CoExistence campaign

The campaign has been launched in response to 'the increasing overlap between the human and animal world, which in part responsible for the spread of deadly zoonotic diseases.'

Each model is made from lantana, an invasive weed which benefits wildlife when it is removed from protected areas.

Following their debut in central London, the elephants will be displayed in various parks across the city before going on sale for between £6,000 for a calf and £30,000 for a full grown elephant.

All proceeds will go towards supporting the work of Elephant Family, which includes securing wildlife corridors to enable safe movement for animals and people, and the expansion of national parks.

It is also hoped funds will go towards protecting indigenous and tribal knowledge.

Ruth Ganesh, creative lead and trustee of Elephant Family, said: 'Today marks the first significant step on the herd's 13,000-mile migration around the world. Over the past 18 months, many countries have gone into lockdown.

'Brought about by tragic circumstances, this great pause - coined the anthropause - is providing crucial guidance on how to best share space with animals in our crowded planet.

'The elephants are here to tell their story about the inspiring ways we can co-exist with all the other living beings that make our world magical.'

Image
The elephants are life sized. Pictured a member of the Elephant Family with the sculptures

Source and video
May 16th, 2021, 1:15 pm

Image
May 16th, 2021, 1:36 pm
Spanish Confectioners Give a 'Sweet' Makeover to Picasso’s Iconic 'Guernica' Using Chocolate

Spanish chocolatiers users about 1,102 pounds of chocolate to create the replica of Pablo Picasso's iconic 1937 anti-war painting 'Guernica'.

Image
A sweet makeover | Image credit: AFP

Spanish chocolatiers have achieved a remarkable feat by recreating the life-size painting ‘Guernica’ by the renowned painter Pablo Picasso and that too with chocolate.

The confectioners hailing from Basque Country in Spain accomplished this extraordinary task collaborating with a local association named ‘Euskal Gozogileak’. They used around 1,102 pounds of chocolate to duplicate the famous 1937 anti-war painting. The famous artwork depicts the suffering of people and animals during the bombing of Basque town Guernica during the Spanish civil war. It was the painter’s response to the Nazi’s agenda that led bombing campaign all across Europe by their warplanes and captured the Basque city of Bilbao claiming victory in northern Spain.

The chocolate copy that is almost similar in size to the original Picasso’s painting – 25.5 feet wide and 11.4 feet tall was created to mark the 85th anniversary of the tragic event.

Loren Gomez, president of the Basque Federation of Sweet Artisan Gastronomy revealed the copy was difficult to produce, due to a large amount of chocolate. “We had to divide the painting into 14 different parts around 5.5 feet wide and 3.6 feet tall,” she told Zenger News.

Image
A dancer performs during the public presentation of a life-size chocolate version of Picasso's
Guernica. (Photo by Ander Gillenea / AFP via Getty Images)
May 16th, 2021, 1:36 pm
May 16th, 2021, 1:57 pm
'BUCKTOOTH BANDITS': RCMP trace stolen lumber to beaver dam

Image
No charges were laid in this theft of fence posts in the Porcupine Plain area after the evidence was discovered having been put to good use. PHOTO BY HANDOUT /Photo supplied

PORCUPINE PLAIN, Sask. — Mounties in east-central Saskatchewan have cracked what they are calling an “extremely Canadian case.”

RCMP officers from the Porcupine Plain detachment were called to a rural area on Friday to investigate a theft of posts that had been piled on a property for fencing.

The thief was soon revealed to have sharp teeth, fur, and a broad tail.

Const. Conrad Rickards says the posts were found in a nearby waterway and it appears a beaver helped himself to the lumber to build a dam — perhaps with the help of some buddies.

Rickards says there was no sign of the culprit.

He says no charges will be laid.

“Who could really blame these little bucktooth bandits, considering the price of wood these days?”

https://torontosun.com/news/weird/buckt ... beaver-dam
May 16th, 2021, 1:57 pm

Book request - King Satyr by Ron Weighell [5000 WRZ$] Reward!
https://forum.mobilism.org/viewtopic.php?f=72&t=5459036
May 16th, 2021, 2:06 pm
Rubber Made From Dandelions is Making Tires More Sustainable – Truly a Wondrous Plant

As companies continue to search for more environmentally regenerative materials to use in manufacturing, the tire industry is beginning to revisit an old Soviet method of rubber cultivation, using a plant that is considered a pesky weed in the West—dandelions.

Image

A major tire company in Germany has partnered with the University of Aachen to produce dandelion rubber tires in a bid to cut back on landfill waste, microplastic pollution, deforestation, and economic shortcomings related to rubber tree cultivation.

While the concept of “dandelion rubber” seems like a Harry Potter spell waiting to happen, as mentioned previously, it was actually developed by the Soviet Union in their quest for self-sufficiency.

Reporting from DW tells the story of a scavenger hunt across the largest country ever, and the testing of more than 1,000 different specimens before dandelions growing in Kazakhstan were found to be a perfect fit.

Previously, the world used the rubber trees, mostly Hevea brasiliensi, from Brazil, but during the Second World War the major powers of the USSR, UK, US, and Germany, were all cultivating dandelions for rubber manufacturing.

After the war ended, demand and supply gradually returned to Brazil and eventually to synthetic tires made from petrochemicals.

Aiding the bees and our environment
Now, Continental Tires is producing dandelion rubber tires called Taraxagum (which is the genus name of the species). The bicycle version of their tires even won the German Sustainability Award 2021 for sustainable design.

“The fact that we came out on top among 54 finalists shows that our Urban Taraxagum bicycle tire is a unique product that contributes to the development of a new, alternative and sustainable supply of raw materials,” stated Dr. Carla Recker, head of development for the Taraxagum project.

The report from DW added that the performance of dandelion tires was better in some cases than natural rubber—which is typically blended with synthetic rubber.

Capable of growing, as we all know, practically anywhere, dandelion needs very little accommodation in a country or business’s agriculture profile. The Taraxagum research team at Continental hypothesizes they could even be grown in the polluted land on or around old industrial parks.

Furthermore, the only additive needed during the rubber extraction process is hot water, unlike Hevea which requires the use of organic solvents that pose a pollution risk if they’re not disposed of properly.

Representing a critical early-season food supply for dwindling bees and a valuable source of super-nutritious food for humans, dandelions can also be turned into coffee, give any child a good time blowing apart their seeds—and, now, as a new source for rubber in the world; truly a wondrous plant.
May 16th, 2021, 2:06 pm

Twitter: Fatima99@fatima99_mobi
Image