Warning: This Article is Full of Rabies
Let’s demystify a scary thing with knowledge and give you the real facts about rabies.
Let’s demystify a scary thing with knowledge and give you the real facts about rabies.
Plants, trees, flowers, and fruits: They can behave very strangely, all in the name of survival.
Those who participate in the most popular hobbies seek out these things the most.
Nothing looks or feels quite like fall — and here’s the science behind why that is.

IBM scientists created the film with a “scanning tunneling microscope” that manipulated a few dozen carbon atoms placed atop a copper surface. First they had to chill the microscope to just above absolute zero (-450° F) because at a higher temp, the “excitable” atoms would have ignored their stage directions.
We told you the story about the English woman who thought it was “funny” to dump a neighbor’s cat in a garbage can – where it was stuck for fifteen hours.
Waiter: We’ll have the just desserts, please. Thanks.
Extra: Some cat dumped a woman in a garbage bin in revenge! Watch!
If you haven’t seen this story, get a wallet or something to bite on first:
Mary Bale, 45, was caught on CCTV petting four-year-old tabby cat Lola before picking her up, tossing her into a trash can and closing the lid.

• Here’s the official Deepwater Horizon Response Web site:
This is very cool video of a mama grizzly at Bärenpark (Bear Park, naturally) in Bern, Germany. Her cub is caught in thin, not so tall tree, and she’s trying to help. Very persistent:
• “What is a kangaroo doing in the middle of the road in Bemidji, Minnesota in November?” Luke Havumaki said. (Uncle John said, “In November?”)
• Solving the mysteries of the elusive tree kangaroo. (With video.)
• A motorcycle rider was injured when he ran into a kanagroo. In Texas. (Texas, Asutralia.)
• Hankering for a new flavor potato chip? How about BBQ Kangaroo?
• The hunt for a phantom kangaroo…in Japan.
• Shark attacks kangaroo. (Whu-huh?)
• And, finally, more ocean-going kangaroos, with less shark.
Just found this on the intertubes. It’s a fascinating (and creepy) YouTube video about nematomorpha, parasitic creatures more commonly called “hairworms.” We wrote a short piece about them in Uncle John’s Triumphant 20th Bathroom Reader (2007, p. 172). An excerpt:
Tests on grasshoppers that had contracted hairworms by drinking water containing hairworm larvae revealed that the lavrae feed off grasshoppers’ insides and grow until one takes up most of its body cavity. When that worm is ready to reproduce, it secretes a protein concoction that affects the grasshopper’s central nervous system, mimicking messages to its brain. The messages drive the grasshopper to water, where it doesn’t stop for a drink…it jumps in and drowns. It is effectively induced to commit suicide. The worm, which by this time can be three times the length of the grasshopper, then crawls out of the carcass and swims off to find a mate.
Yum!
Here’s the video:
Related Extra: A fungus that brainwashes ants into sacrificing themselves…for the fungus.
And this just in: Yay toads!