Wednesday, January 27, 2021

Jan. 27/2021

 

Feature:

First dogs Champ & Major moved into the White House Sunday

"(CNN)The first dogs have entered the White House -- the Bidens' 2 German shepherds, Champ & Major, officially joined the first family in their new residence at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue on Sunday.

'The First Family wanted to get settled before bringing the dogs down to Washington from Delaware. Champ is enjoying his new dog bed by the fireplace, & Major loved running around on the South Lawn,' First Lady Jill Biden's press secretary Michael LaRosa told CNN in a statement...


The Bidens' dogs moving in marks a return to a longstanding tradition of Presidents & their families bringing their pets with them to the White House...

Champ has been with the Biden family for more than 10 years -- since December 2008, weeks after Biden became Barack Obama's vice president-elect. Major, a shelter dog, joined the Biden family more recently. He was adopted in November 2018, months before Biden announced he would run for president in the 2020 election cycle.

Major is the first shelter dog to live in the White House. Earlier this month, the Delaware Humane Association, where he was adopted from, & Pumpkin Pet Insurance hosted a virtual celebration — an 'Indoguration Party' — for Major.

Though he is the first shelter dog at the White House, Major is not the first rescue...

Former President Lyndon B. Johnson's daughter, Luci, rescued a mixed-breed pup abandoned by his owner at a gas station in Texas named Yuki. Former President Bill Clinton's family cat, Socks, was also a rescue.

Jill Biden has also said she would 'love to get a cat,' telling Fox 5 in Washington, 'I love having animals around the house.'

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Sunday she did not have an update about the cat.

'I'm also wondering about the cat, because the cat is going to dominate the internet whenever the cat is announced & wherever that cat is found,' Psaki said in a Sunday evening video answering questions posed on Twitter.

The tradition of keeping pets in the White House dates back to Thomas Jefferson, who kept a mockingbird & a couple of bear cubs during his presidency. Throughout the years, presidential pets have become celebrities of sorts."

Donald Judd & Kate Sullivan

CNN.com

Jan. 25/2021

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Thursday, January 21, 2021

Jan. 20/2021

 


Feature:

A French man has left money to 50 cats who live in Russia's Hermitage Museum

"Moscow (CNN) — A generous French philanthropist has left a sum of money to some unusual beneficiaries in his will -- a bunch of cats living in the basement of the State Hermitage Museum in Russia.
Around 50 cats live in the famous St. Petersburg museum... which is home to 3 million works of art, artifacts, & sculptures spread across buildings including the Winter Palace.
The site has been home to cats since the time of Empress Elizabeth, who reigned from 1741 to 1761, according to the museum.
Catherine the Great, the founder of the Hermitage, gave the cats the status of guardians of the art galleries, Russian state-run news agency RIA Novosti reported, noting that the cats were housed to keep rodents from the premises.
Now, they are taken care of by volunteers & museum staff, & supported by donations, according to the museum, which notes that the animals have their own washing machine & the services of a local veterinarian.
The museum's general director, Mikhail Piotrovsky, said in a press conference...that the unnamed French philanthropist was so taken with the animals that he left a 'small sum' to them in his will.
'Our French friend did a very good thing; this is brilliant PR for both the cats & charity...'
'Such a nice gesture that came from France,' he added.
The funds will likely be used to repair the museum's basements, where the cats live, Piotrovsky said.
'I think the cats will express their will -- our colleagues are well-versed in communicating with them & understanding their language,' he added.
The unnamed benefactor certainly wasn't the only person to have fallen for the cats' charms -- according to Piotrovsky, the former president of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Vladimir Fortov, was a 'constant friend' of the Hermitage cats. Fortov, who died last month, would sometimes stop by the museum to leave money for the animals, Piotrovsky said.
This year, more than 800 people submitted pictures & photographs of the cats for the museum's Day of the Hermitage Cat."
Mary Ilyushina & Amy Woodyatt
CNN.com 
Dec. 7/2020
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Wednesday, January 13, 2021

Jan. 13/2021

 

Feature:

You can't squish this 'iron' beetle. Now, scientists know why

"Diabolical ironclad beetles are almost unbreakable — you can smack them, stomp on them or run them over with a car, & they'll scamper away uncrushed.

Now, scientists know why these beetles' outer wing cases, known as elytra, are so tough — they're made up of a series of smoothly interlocking puzzle parts; the geometry & internal structure of this 'jigsaw' design increase the strength of the beetle's armor. 

Ironclad beetles (Phloeodes diabolicus) measure about 0.6 to 1 inch (15 to 25 mm) in length, & are found in woodland habitats in western North America, where they live under tree bark. Though their ancestors could fly, ironclad beetles lost their flight capabilities long ago, and their elytra are fused together, forming a crush-resistant shield... 

Microscopic analysis of exoskeleton cross-sections showed lateral support structures that made some parts of the elytra stiffer than others, to distribute weight uniformly over the beetle's back & protect its organs. And further reinforcement came from the seam where the elytra fused together. 

In the ironclad beetle's flying relatives, the elytra notch together in 'a tongue-&-groove design,' allowing them to smoothly open, close, & release the lower wings for flight... But in ironclad beetles, the fused elytra fit together like pieces in a jigsaw puzzle along the length of the insect's abdomen. The protruding parts of these interlocking pieces, called blades, also distribute stress across the exoskeleton, preventing it from cracking...

Revealing the biological architecture that makes ironclad beetle exoskeletons near-uncrushable could help engineers design structures that are more impact-resistant..."


Mindy Weisberger 

                                                           Oct. 21/2020

                                                           livescience.com

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Thursday, January 7, 2021

Jan. 6/2021

 

Feature:

You've got snail: why the best pet of 2020 is slow and slimy
"Snails are having a moment as the pandemic is making our worlds smaller, forcing us to slow down our speed.

'You would never imagine that you could connect with a snail,' says Nadia Giosia. But the evidence is inching slowly up her hand.

When the pandemic forced her into her Los Angeles apartment, her initial response was to bring the outdoors inside: she bought houseplants. Giosia did not anticipate a stowaway – but when her new ivy arrived, nestled within its leaves was a snail.

Giosia debated what to do... 
At the start of 2020, Giosia – a comedian & television chef, & former host of the Food Network series Nadia G’s Bitchin’ Kitchen – had been gearing up to pitch a new show. When coronavirus struck, she was able to support herself with consulting work, but she had time to fill.

'And I’ve got to say,' she says, 'a mollusc is a nice companion.'

Giosia kept the snail & called him Leroy. 3 months later, Leroy is 3 times the size he was when he arrived, nourished by cuttlefish bone (for calcium) & cucumber (as a treat).

'What’s nice about snails,' Giosa says, holding up Leroy on her hand to her computer’s camera, 'is that they are very obvious creatures: if they don’t like something, they go into their shell.'

Leroy, antennae waggling, is plausibly upbeat. Now, after all, is his time to shine.
*
Snails are having a moment in 2020, their silvery trail stretching from TikTok, where the #snail hashtag has more than 100m views (& #snailmom, 10m); to the New York Times, which published a 'letter of recommendation' for snails as pets in July. That same month, The Snail Hospital joined Instagram, sharing stories of injured snails on the road to recovery.

This new appreciation seems to be an outcome of the pandemic making our worlds smaller, forcing us to slow down to their speed.

New Zealand pop singer Benee said she was 'fascinated' by snails while in lockdown in Auckland: 'There wasn’t really a lot to be doing, so I would spend a lot of time outside looking at snails.'

The molluscs were mobile where she was not. She started to imagine the pandemic from their perspective: did they wonder where the people had gone?

The result was a song called Snail – with the refrain “When it’s day, hide away / But come out, when it rains”... She called it her 'lockdown song'.
*
On Instagram, snails have emerged not just as a source of inspiration for artists, but their subjects. In September, artist Chloe Wise shared a photo of a tiny snail with the caption: 'Friend'.

Chicago-based creative duo Aleia Murawski & Sam Copeland have been shooting snails in elaborate miniature sets – a bowling alley, a diner, a mall – since about 2016, but their projects have become more ambitious in quarantine. In May, they started staging scenes from classic horror films featuring their snail Velveeta, starting with the bloody elevator from The Shining...
 
For Victoria Cottrell, a 21-year-old engineering student in Los Angeles, what began as a boredom-buster through quarantine sparked a surprisingly lucrative business.

About 6 months ago, she came upon some snails in her neighbor’s yard & thought them 'cute'...Cottrell saw a potential pet.

She took some home & put them in an empty tank. In the summer months, she would spend entire days outside with Gary, Turbo, & Maurice: 'They’d be hanging out on the grass, I’d take a book – it was fun.'
*
But Cottrell was not prepared for them to reproduce: all snails have both male & female reproductive organs. Within a month, she says, 'I had maybe 100, 200 baby snails that I did not know what to do with'.

She took a punt on listing them for sale on Etsy – & was flooded with interest. Today she has sold 57 garden snails at $8 a pop (excluding shipping).

Cottrell is somewhat bemused by her success: 'They’re not different from any other snail than you would find in the garden.' Nevertheless, her customers have been delighted.

...Last month, New York magazine’s cutting-edge consumer vertical The Strategist declared snails the perfect 'pandemic pet' – not least for their ease of disposal, should the novelty wear off.
*
Giosia...does not anticipate losing interest. 3 months ago she knew nothing about snails... Now she rattles off facts with enthusiasm...

Giosia has even acquired a 2nd snail from Cottrell: a 'partner in slime' for Leroy, which she named Edna. They share a 12 sq in tank, kitted out with organic coconut coir, sphagnum moss, filtered water, & a jade plant to climb on.

...One of them is now pregnant; & though Giosia has no desire to branch into snail breeding herself, it at least promises some excitement in the coming weeks.

Leroy’s arrival in her life was a 'slimy little blessing' – not only for adding interest to her days, but also showing her how to pass them. In lockdown, Giosia observes, we have all been forced into the slow lane: 'He really was a great teacher in that regard.'"
*
* All snail pics feature Atticus

Elle Hunt
Nov. 17/2020
theguardian.com

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