THE ULTIMATE
Japan's Sumida Aquarium is asking for help via Facetime, so that its Garden Eels come out of their burrows again to view their human visitors. Since the lockdown they haven't had any visitors, so they have hidden away in their burrows when their keepers walk by. When they are hidden in their burrows away their state of health is impossible to check - so the keepers are going to try putting tablets by their aquarium, and have people Facetime the Garden Eels so they come out of their burrows to view the human visitors and get used to humans again - so their health can be checked. Interested, watch this video on the BBC, and the link to the Sumida Aquarium page is there too... https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/newsbeat-52500113 Picture: Maksim Shutive via Unsplash
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See how 170 trees that survived the Hiroshima Atom Bomb blast, when pretty much everything else in 2km of the blast was destroye, offered hope in the past and today. A wonderful film, by the BBC's 'Witness History', talking to one of the founders of Green Legacy Hiroshima, Tomoko Watanabe, about the detruction of the bombing and how buds on the trees gave the people of Hiroshima hope in the aftermath; how she learned to appreciate the trees and how the seeds of these remarkable survivors being sent around the world offer hope and peace to humanity today. The Green Legacy Hiroshma is at: http://glh.unitar.org/ See the BBC film at: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/stories-52459140/the-trees-that-survived-the-bombing-of-hiroshima Picture; T Grand via Pixabay.
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