Wednesday, March 28, 2018

Almost a Week Late

This doodle is from Friday's lunch. It went in on Thursday too, but the boy chose to buy lunch instead, so his lunch went untouched. It turned out a bit creepier than intended.


In my head, a snowflake face seemed like a great idea. Fifteen inches is bigger than your face, and I was trying to show that with this doodle. Not overly impressed, but it's good enough to get my point across!

We're on Spring Break this week, wildly early it feels like. No school until next Tuesday!

Wednesday, March 21, 2018

Snow Much Fun

I forgot to post yesterday, but there isn't any school today, so there won't be a new doodle today, so it works out.

The fun fact I chose yesterday was specifically chosen due to the wintry forecast on our first day of Spring. We're in the middle of getting our largest snowfall of the year, and it's happening after the equinox.


The biggest snowball fight took place in Canada. Seven Thousand six hundred and eighty one participants pelted each other with snow to make it into the record books. I'm pretty sure I'll be involved in a snowball fight later today, but we'll have considerably less people.

Monday, March 19, 2018

Happiness is Belching

Looks like I forgot to post Friday's doodle. It has nothing to do with belching, that will come later.


It was fun to see folks stretching their arms out to try to see if this is true.

Today's doodle is a bit more fun.


Called belch vocalizations, gorillas make a burping sound when they are at ease. The BBC interviewed Ian Redmond, who worked along with Dr. Fossey of Gorillas in the Mist fame. He said this:

The contentment sound, which is often termed singing, can extend from the belch vocalisation call when gorillas are at ease and can take many different forms. Mr Redmond thinks gorillas can recognise each other’s voices so they can tell who is making the reassuring noises from the tone of their voice.


So, not only do gorillas belch, they also sing!

Thursday, March 15, 2018

Think Pink

Today's doodle looks a bit like an extraterrestrial creature, but I assure you, it's actually a map.


My Crayola sketch doesn't do this lake justice. Here's a real picture of it.


Lake Hillier isn't the only pink lake in the world. It's color alone doesn't make it special. What's different about this lake is that scientists have determined it isn't algae that give Lake Hillier it's pink hue. That's what causes the color in the other lakes. Lake Hillier maintains its pinkness even when water samples are removed. It also doesn't change with the seasons the way the algal lakes do. The reason for its pinkness remains a mystery, and the island is strictly for research purposes. Tourists are only able to admire the pink beauty from above via helicopter rides.



Wednesday, March 14, 2018

Just Like Swimming with Dolphins

Today's fun fact has given me a new travel destination to add to my bucket list.


Google it. Look at the cute little pigs swimming. I'd rather swim with them than dolphins any day.

Tuesday, March 13, 2018

Majestic Choice

National animals are usually something regal or dignified, like the bald eagle. Today's fun fact highlights what is perhaps the best choice for a national animal.


Scotland: you're doing it right.

Monday, March 12, 2018

Splish Splash

Since one of the boy's favorite animals is an elephant, I've drawn my fair share of them over the years. The little fella I drew for today's doodle is my go to. He's cute and simple and can be customized to fit almost any theme. I've drawn him holding balloons, with a heart above his trunk for Valentine's Day, and today he gets to make a splash.


I guess if I drank fifty gallons of water a day (about what a bathtub holds) I'd be good at hunting water down too.

Friday, March 9, 2018

Very Hairy

I had to scrap two facts this morning because a bit of googling proved they were both wrong! The second fact wasn't completely wrong, it just needed some tweaking to correct it.


The original fact said bumblebees have hair on their eyeballs. While searching, all of the hairy eyeball facts I found pertained to honey bees, not bumbles. It looks like scientists aren't certain what the hairs are for, but navigation seems to be the popular consensus.

A short hair grows in the intersections of the compound lenses of the eye. These hairs are believed to detect wind direction and may be used by the bees to stay on course in windy conditions.


I couldn't find anything to confirm that bumblebees also have these small hairs on their compound lenses, so I altered the fact to say honey bees.


Thursday, March 8, 2018

Just a Handful of Tons

We all know giant squids are big. We've seen the artist renditions of them wrapping tentacles around a ship and dragging it into the depths. Today's fun fact will help put their size into perspective.



An African elephant can weigh from 5,000 to 14,000 pounds. That means these fellas are bigger than some elephants. And they're out there, swimming in the ocean, ready to hug you to death. Thalassophobia anyone?

Wednesday, March 7, 2018

Bats and Fireflies

I have two fun facts for you today, since I apparently forgot to post yesterday.

Here's yesterday's doodle:


A chemistry website explained the firefly's light thusly: 

The light from such reactions is called cool light, because it is created without heat. Reactions that produce light without heat are called chemiluminescent reactions. Perhaps the most familiar chemiluminescent reactions are those that occur in living organisms. Fireflies produce light without heat by a chemiluminescent reaction. Chemiluminescent reactions that occur in living organisms are called bioluminescent reactions.




Makes me wonder if bioluminescent algae and angler fish lights would fall into this category though. This fun fact may be only partially true.


Today's fun fact is about bats.

While most bats can take down 600 to 1000 mosquito-sized insects in an hour, a nursing mother bat can eat up to 4000 insects in a single night. I think I need more bat friends to hang around my back porch this summer.

Monday, March 5, 2018

At Least They'll Never Go Hungry

Today's fun fact blows my mind. I assumed ever animal needed to eat to sustain itself. Apparently, I was misguided in that notion.


To add on to this tidbit, some adult moths don't even have a mouth. Luna moths, for example, have an adult lifespan of about a week. Their sole purpose is to mate before they die, so they don't waste time searching for food. Not having a mouth or stomach makes it an easy choice for them.

Thursday, March 1, 2018

So Big

Since most of us have only seen them in pictures or videos, it's easy to forget just how massive blue whales are. Today's fun fact helps put things into perspective.


A whale's tongue isn't the only part of it that is huge. It's heart is as big as a car. It's kind of amazing that something so large can move so gracefully through the ocean.