Don’t Lose Your Photos in the Toilet

Virtual school makes you learn the importance of backing up your files. Maybe you wrote an essay that didn’t save, or you lost the connection before your homework finished submitting. You could’ve also experienced, losing your phone full of photos. Today, on World Backup Day, save all your digital stuff, just in case.

Marvelous Manatees

It’s Manatee Appreciation Day! Manatees, also known as sea cows, are slow-moving aquatic mammals, that are vulnerable to extinction. They’re about 10 to 15 feet long, and have 4 rows of teeth! Manatees live in warm shallow waters, and graze on underwater vegetation. Here’s a fun fact; baby manatees drink milk from their mom’s armpit!

Little Red Spud-Wagon

Hip-hip-hooray, it’s Tater Day! Eat some baked potatoes, hash browns, potato dumplings, French fries, potato chips, home fries, sweet potatoes, tater tots, and mashed potatoes! Good thing it’s Little Red Wagon Day, to carry everything to the table. Draw some spuds and color them in with crayons, for Crayon Day. Purple potatoes are beautiful!

Fire in Science Class

On this day in 1889, the Eiffel Tower, in Paris France, was completed. Celebrate Eiffel Tower Day, by eating French food, or building your own tower out of blocks or pillows. It’s also Bunsen Burner Day. It wouldn’t be a proper laboratory, without a vial of liquid, bubbling over the flame of a Bunsen burner!

I’d Like 2000 Boxes of Thin Mints

Girl Scouts are famous for selling cookies. An 8-year-old in California, is an expert on cookies, after selling a record-breaking 32,484 boxes in 1 season! Lilly Bumpus is a Brownie scout, and also a cancer survivor. Many of the cookie orders, were donated to children’s hospitals. She sold 500 boxes in 1 day, right from her driveway!

But How Does It Taste?

Carbon dioxide is found in your breath, car exhaust, and factory pollution. It builds up in the atmosphere, causing global warming. A company has figured out how to produce protein from CO2, and turn it into animal feed. Instead of fishmeal or soybeans, cows could eat the protein pellets, and help the Earth.

Mouthful of Odontoblasts

When you have a damaged tooth, eating or drinking cold things makes it really hurt. Scientists have finally discovered why. Cells in the teeth, called odonotoblasts, act as cold sensors. They contain a protein called TRPC5, that allows cold-signaling chemicals to pass through. If scientists can block the path, cold stuff won’t hurt anymore.

A Tough Year for Doctors

The best way to prevent the spread of coronavirus, is to stay home. But hospitals are packed with healthcare workers, doing their best to save people’s lives. Today is Doctors’ Day, so lets thank them even more than normal. Buy them a meal, by having a restaurant deliver food to your local hospital.

Pencil-In a Walk

It’s feeling like spring, so go outside. It’s Take A Walk In The Park Day! Count how many different birds you hear, and see what flowers are starting to bloom. It’s also Pencil Day, so bring along pencils and paper, and make a list, or sketch a picture. Yay for erasable writing!

Blazing Fireballs

Last week in the Pacific Northwest, people reported seeing a spectacular meteor shower. It was actually the remnants of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, that had launched March 4th. Most space junk remains in orbit, drifting around the planet, but sometimes pieces break free and burn up in the atmosphere, producing an unexpected fireworks show.

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