Arlene Perly Rae

4.7K posts

Arlene Perly Rae

Arlene Perly Rae

@aprae

Happy wife and mother and proud grandma. Live. Love. Care. Do and be good - and have fun.

Katılım Mayıs 2009
1.1K Takip Edilen1.4K Takipçiler
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
The research behind this is wild. A baby owl can sit and starve to death right next to a pile of food. Put a stuffed owl next to it, like in the video, and suddenly it'll eat. An Austrian zoologist, Konrad Lorenz, won the 1973 Nobel Prize for figuring out why. He showed that young birds aren't born knowing who their mom is. In the first few days of life, their brain takes a kind of mental photograph. Whatever they see moving around gets locked in as "parent." After that, only that figure can switch on their feeding instinct. He called it imprinting. Owls have it worse than most birds. They're born blind, naked, and totally helpless. A baby barn owl needs feeding every two to three hours for weeks. It can't even keep itself warm until its feathers come in. And right around the time its eyes finally open, between days 15 and 20, its brain locks onto whoever's been taking care of it. Miss that window with the wrong face nearby, and the owl is wired wrong for life. Even the begging is automatic. In the 1950s, a Dutch scientist named Niko Tinbergen ran experiments with baby seagulls. He found the chicks were pecking at a specific shape. A long thin thing with a colored spot was enough to trigger the full begging routine, even when it was just a painted wooden stick. Take the stick away and the whole sequence shuts down. The chick can be staring straight at food, but if there's no parent-shaped trigger, its body doesn't know how to swallow. There's a tiny patch in the bird brain that runs this whole show. It's the same part that learns and stores faces. Researchers at Cambridge and labs in Japan have mapped it down to the chemistry. They've even found a hormone that, if you inject it in the right spot, can re-open the imprinting window after it closes. That dummy owl in the video carries 40 years of conservation work behind it. In 1982 there were only 22 California condors left in the entire world. The San Diego Zoo started feeding hatchlings with hand puppets shaped like adult condors, hiding the human handler behind a curtain. The condor population is now 607. The Bronx Zoo did the same thing last spring with a baby king vulture. The Barn Owl Trust in the UK feeds orphaned owls through owl puppets while wearing camouflage hoods, because an owl raised by humans can never be released back into the wild. It'll fly toward people, beg from them, and starve. The dummy is the only signal the chick's brain still accepts as "mom." Evolution carved a very specific lock into its brain, and only the right shape fits.
Manoco@Moonlighhy

The baby owl, which refused to eat after being orphaned, was fed using a dummy owl that resembled its mother.

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Warren Kinsella
Warren Kinsella@kinsellawarren·
Eight little children shot to death in the United States and it isn't even the top news on @nytimes @CNN @wapo and many others. That country is so, so lost.
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
All for one
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D.Radka, #NAFO 🇨🇿🤝🇺🇦
Leaders are not those who seek safety for themselves, but those who, in moments of fear, become a shield for others🫂 Zelensky has become a symbol of the will of a nation that refused to fall. Respect to this man, every day🇺🇦🫡❤️
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Mark Carney
Mark Carney@MarkJCarney·
Congratulations to @magyarpetermp on a decisive election victory in Hungary. The Hungarian people have chosen a new path. We are ready to work with you, and our European allies, to deepen our cooperation in trade, defence, and security.
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Michael Beschloss
Michael Beschloss@BeschlossDC·
President Eisenhower in blooming White House Rose Garden with Dr. Jonas Salk, today 1955, celebrating success of new polio vaccine:
Michael Beschloss tweet media
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Morgan Cameron Ross
Morgan Cameron Ross@Morgan_C_Ross·
The very first moments of Terry Fox's Marathon of Hope in St John's, Newfoundland 46 years ago this morning. The Marathon of Hope has raised over $1 billion for cancer research so far. credit: Terry Fox Foundation 🇨🇦
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Scott Robertson
Scott Robertson@sarobertsonca·
PM Carney: "Virtue is like a muscle, it grows with exercise. When we are kind, kindness grows. When we seek unity, unity grows. When we are Canadian, Canada grows. And when we are all in for Canada, we will build Canada strong for all."
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Arlene Perly Rae
Arlene Perly Rae@aprae·
Who knew!?
Massimo@Rainmaker1973

Sticking one foot (or leg) outside the blankets really does help you fall asleep faster—and science explains exactly why. Your feet act as built-in radiators, playing a surprisingly powerful role in regulating body temperature to trigger sleep. Falling asleep isn’t purely a mental state; it’s tightly linked to a drop in core body temperature, a key biological signal that tells the brain it’s time to rest. Research, including work from Northumbria University’s sleep and thermoregulation studies, shows that this natural cooling is essential for initiating sleep onset. Heavy blankets can trap heat and slow this process, delaying the moment your body reaches the optimal temperature window for drifting off. By letting one foot or leg hang out from under the covers, you create a simple but effective heat-loss pathway. The human foot is exceptionally well-equipped for this: it contains a high density of arteriovenous anastomoses (specialized blood vessels) that allow rapid heat exchange with the cooler room air. When exposed, these vessels dilate, cool the blood quickly, and circulate that cooler blood throughout the body—lowering core temperature faster and more efficiently than keeping everything covered. This trick is especially helpful for people who: - struggle with insomnia, - tend to overheat at night (“hot sleepers”), - or simply want to fall asleep more quickly without medication or complicated routines. The effect is natural, free, and non-invasive—just a small adjustment in how you position yourself under the blankets can accelerate sleep onset and improve overall sleep quality. So next time you’re tossing and turning, try letting one foot peek out. Your body’s own cooling system might be the fastest way to reach dreamland.

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Arlene Perly Rae
Arlene Perly Rae@aprae·
The launch of Carolyn Bennett Park. Well deserved recognition for her many decades of public service.
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