Oddity Central |
- Year of No Sugar – American Family Goes Sugar-Free for a Whole Year
- Child Prodigy Aged 11 Creates the Most Amazing Nature-Inspired Drawings You’ve Ever Seen
- Behold the Aquatic Perambulator – A Device That Lets You Take Your Fish for a Walk
Year of No Sugar – American Family Goes Sugar-Free for a Whole Year Posted: 24 Apr 2014 04:35 AM PDT When Eve Schaub came across some disturbing information about the effects of sugar, she felt that she had to do something about it, for her family. She had read that sugar is the number one ingredient making Americans fat and sick. It's because of sugar that one in seven Americans has metabolic syndrome, one in three is obese and the rates of diabetes and cardiovascular disease are skyrocketing. With this newfound knowledge, Eve decided to formulate a special plan for herself, her husband and her two daughters, aged 6 and 11. Eve wanted to see how hard it would be to have her family go through an entire year avoiding foods that contain sugar of any kind. "Call me crazy, but avoiding added sugar for a year struck me as a grand adventure," Eve said. I was curious as to what would happen. I wanted to know how hard it would be, what interesting things could happen, how my cooking and shopping would change. After continuing my research, I was convinced removing sugar would make us all healthier." So the Schaubs went on a complete sugar-free diet for a year. "We cut out anything with an added sweetener, be it table sugar, honey, molasses, maple syrup, agave or fruit juice," Eve said. "We also excluded anything made with fake sugar or sugar alcohols. Unless the sweetness was attached to its original source (e.g., a piece of fruit), we didn't eat it." And once they started looking, they found sugar in the most amazing places: tortillas, sausages, chicken, broth, salad dressing, cold cuts, crackers, mayonnaise, bacon, bread and even baby food. "Why all of this added sugar? To make these items more palatable, add shelf life, and make packaged food production even cheaper."
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Child Prodigy Aged 11 Creates the Most Amazing Nature-Inspired Drawings You’ve Ever Seen Posted: 24 Apr 2014 03:29 AM PDT 11-year-old Dušan Krtolica is a child prodigy artist from Serbia who creates mind-blowing drawings of wildlife. The fifth grade student at 'Laza Kostic' school in New Belgrade first began to draw when he was only two years old. He has already had three national solo exhibitions to his name – the first two by the age of eight. Dušan's drawings are mostly pen-and-pencil works of various species of animals, both alive and extinct. He draws prehistoric animals, birds, insects, and also legendary knights. Dušan's knowledge of the animal world is remarkable. He knows about all the geological eras, and which animals roamed the earth during those periods. He knows all the 65 species of marsupials and can effortlessly recite their names. And when his parents bought him the most comprehensive encyclopedia of animals, it took him less than three weeks to learn it word for word. "I would have studied animals and published a book about them, but I'm going to draw all of them," said Dušan, whose ambition is to become a Zoologist when he grows up.
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Behold the Aquatic Perambulator – A Device That Lets You Take Your Fish for a Walk Posted: 24 Apr 2014 02:11 AM PDT Seven years ago, when Mike Warren-Madden worried that his pet fish Malcolm was getting bored, he decided to do something about it. He spent weeks at the drawing board, designing a unique device – an Aquatic Perambulator – that would allow him to take his fish for a walk. The pram helped Malcolm live a more exciting life; he was probably the most adventurous fish to ever live in a bowl. Sadly, Malcolm is now dead, but the pram still works. The Aquatic Pram is about four foot tall and made from laser-cut mild steel. Mike, a former sheet metal worker, has spent the better part of the past seven years tinkering with the pram, trying to make it better. With the initial design, he didn't take the weight of the water into account. So he's modified it over the years. "I've added better elastic to take the shock out of the water and I hope to get better wheels," he said. "Because of my background as a sheet metal worker I have been able to build this at little cost – but for someone else it would cost hundreds to make," Mike pointed out. "I think I'd like someone to come forward and help me motorize it perhaps with a remote control." He also hopes that an entrepreneur will come forward to invest in the Aquatic Perambulator.
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