Thursday, April 23, 2026

The History of the Cape Cod House, America’s Favorite Dwelling

 We live in a Cape Cod style house, and we moved from a Cape Cod style house, so today's blog is especially interesting to us!

The History of the Cape Cod House, America’s Favorite Dwelling

New England Historic Society April 2026

The Cape Cod house, once confined to southeastern Massachusetts, has spread to every corner of the United States.  

The Cape Cod house has come a long way since the Pilgrims invented it out of necessity. They had to adapt the English half-timbered cottage to the New England climate. As the English colonists expanded southward from Plymouth, they built their houses along the King’s Highway (now roughly Routes 3A to 6A) to Provincetown on the tip of Cape Cod, Massachusetts.

They started out as small wooden houses—now called “half houses”—easily expandable for growing families. The half Cape had two windows on one side of the door. A three-quarters Cape had another window on the other side of the door. A full Cape had two windows on each side of the door.

What Is a Cape Cod House? The classic Cape Cod house sits low to the ground, with a steep roof, center chimney and small-paned windows. Shutters often, but not always, bracket the windows. The house typically has shingles covering the exterior and little ornamentation.

Since colonial times, the Cape Cod house has evolved into an all-purpose dwelling. Real estate agents sometimes describe any little house as a Cape—even if it’s asymmetrical, brick and ornamented. But just as colonial homeowners added and added onto their original small house, modern architects design Capes that measure 100 feet long with ells, porches and an attached garage.

Here are just six fun facts about America’s most popular dwelling.

1. A half house measured at least 16 feet wide. The colonists took that measurement from England, where houses often doubled as oxen stables. Two oxen needed at least 16 feet.

2. They didn’t really call them “half houses.” Today Cape Codders will call those tiny houses with one door and two windows a “half-house.” But back in the day, people called a half-house a “house.” If it had three windows in the front, people called it a “house and a half.” And if it had four windows, well then, people called it a “double house.”

The half house consisted of one room with a large brick chimney and fireplace. A small entrance hall led to the attic stairs. As a family grew, they added another room on the other side of the chimney.

The house turned into a saltbox when a family added a lean-to by continuing the slope of the roof in the back and closing in the space. They called it a saltbox because it resembled the wooden box in which they kept salt.

The president of Yale coined the term “Cape Cod house” in 1800. Timothy Dwight took a systematic series of vacations during his college’s summer break. He then wrote his observations, published posthumously, in the form of a letter to an imaginary English gentleman.

Dwight visited Cape Cod in 1800 and noticed the similarity of the houses while traveling through Yarmouth.

“The houses in Yarmouth are inferior to those in Barnstable,” he opined, “and much more generally of the class which may be called with propriety Cape Cod houses.” “These have one story and four rooms on the lower floor, and are covered on the sides, as well as the roofs, with pine shingles, 18 inches in length. The chimney is in the middle immediately behind the front door, and on each side of the door are two windows. The roof is straight. Under it are two chambers, and there are two larger and two smaller windows in the gable end.”

4. You can pretty much date a Cape Cod house by looking at three things. Those are the chimney, the foundation and the front windows, according to Duncan Oliver, writing for the Historical Society of Old Yarmouth. Oliver cautions that Cape Cod house features vary according to their community.

“Dating must be done locally, as styles and trends lagged in some places by as much as 20 years,” he wrote. “However, once one house in the community is dated, others can be dated from it.”

Before 1750, Cape Cod houses had massive chimneys. They sat on the ground and their windows bumped up against the roof. The windows had nine panes over six, and only the six-pane window moved.

Around 1800, their chimneys got smaller, they sat a foot off the ground and the front windows started dropping down from the roof. The nine-over-six window gave way to six-over-six. Cut granite replaced stone as the foundation material of choice.

The reason for the smaller chimney? Benjamin Thompson, also known as Count Rumford. A Loyalist born in Woburn, Mass., he was a British military officer who, like his friend Benjamin Franklin, liked to experiment with heat and light. He designed a smaller, more efficient fireplace that became popular–and didn’t need huge chimneys.

Around 1830, Cape Cod houses began using brick for their foundations. Windows had dropped from the roof by a foot every 10 years. The houses also got taller, so by 1830 windows measured 4 feet down from the roof. Panes got bigger, either two over two or one over one.

Then as Puritanism faded, people began to decorate Cape houses. They’d add a set of fluted Federal pilasters, for example, or a Greek Revival pediment.

5. They’re energy efficient. The early settlers took full advantage of those giant fireplaces by building low ceilings to conserve heat. They also generally built houses so they faced south for maximum sun.

ZeroEnergy architect Stephanie Horowitz explained how energy efficiency results from the overlapping pine shingles, low roofline and short overhangs. The shingles insulated and waterproofed the house, while the low profile gave it less exposure to the cold and the wind.

“The short or absent overhangs allow us to wrap a house with continuous insulation. In other styles, longer overhangs can create a thermal bridge at a notoriously weak point where the roof meets the wall,” she told NewEngland.com in 2015. “Not so with a Cape.”

6. They experienced a revival in the 20th century because of one man. Architect Royal Barry Wills gets credit for resuscitating the Cape Cod house beginning in the 1920s. Born in Melrose, Mass., in 1895, he graduated from MIT with a degree in architectural engineering. He got a job as a design engineer for Turner Construction, working on commercial buildings.

But he loved residential architecture, and he designed houses on the side. He also submitted architectural drawings to the Boston Transcript and answered readers’ questions about architecture. The publicity got him commissions. He then obtained his architect license and opened an office on Beacon Hill. Wills designed houses until Jan. 10, 1962, the day he died.

He designed many of his firm’s 2,500 houses in the Cape Cod style. But he added dormers, garages, bathrooms, closets, heating vents and refrigerator nooks. And he anticipated Levittown by designing a 300-house development for defense workers in Springfield during World War II.

His influence went beyond the houses he designed. Wills wrote eight books, including “Houses for good living” in 1946. He lectured extensively and received many awards.

In 1938, Life magazine sponsored a contest in which Wills and Frank Lloyd Wright each designed a house for a middle-class family. Wright entered one of his Usonian designs, Wills a Cape Cod house. Wills beat out Wright. The family selected his design and built their house in Edina, Minn.

Fashionable architecture firms had little use for Wills’ traditional houses, but he didn’t care. He understood the appeal of the Cape Cod house. They’re “as unpretentious as they are livable,” he said. “Carping critics may poke fun at their rambler roses, picket fences and stately elms, but such things spell home to us.”

Live Event in Atlantic City, NJ Sat April 25th Rob and Monique at Altercon. Get your tickets

In 2 days!! Saturday, April 25th, 2026-  IN ATLANTIC CITY, NJ!

Medium and Author Rob Gutro will be in Atlantic City, NJ with his friend, co-author and paranormal investigator Monique Toosoon. *They will have books to sign and will be speaking about their investigations** Rob will also be giving a talk about how pets communicate from the afterlife on April 25 at 11am. Conference details below!

ABOUT THE CONFERENCE:

*** Altercon! Where the weird, paranormal, and supernatural collide with alternative styles.
DATE: Saturday, April 25, 2026 Opens at 10:30am

LOCATION: ACX1 Studios, One Atlantic Ocean (Boardwalk), Atlantic City, NJ.
TICKET PRICE : $24.99+
The event focuses on paranormal, cryptid, and weird topics, featuring guests from shows like Ghost Adventures and Ancient Aliens. Unleash your inner fantasy and revel in the gothic, Victorian, witchy, spooky, creepy, kinky, and wonderful delights you secretly adore
INFO/TICKETS: https://blackink.events/altercon-and-cryptid-expo/#premiere-vip-experiences
#atlanticcity #atlanticcityboardwalk #AtlanticCityNJ #atlanticcitynightlife




Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Amazing Signs - Mom Sent after Passing

 On April 14, I taught one of my paranormal courses at Adult Education, and the class was pretty full. As I was teaching people about signs to recognize from loved ones who passed, I kept thinking about the many events that transpired since my mother-in-law passed. There were some amazing things, and by sharing them here, if you had similar experiences, you'll know you didn't imagine it.

(Caption: Eastern Bluebird: York County, Maine, USA, October 2023)

1) During the Services - Because I'm a medium, I can communicate with people and pets who pass. During the services, I heard my mother in law talk about a waterfall, and then mentioned Niagara. I had no knowledge of whether or not she had ever been. It turned out that's where she went on her honeymoon! -

(Photo: Mom and Bob at mom's 80th birthday party)

Then Mom talked with me about a white rabbit. When I told that to Tom, he said the floral arrangement he sent for Easter had a white rabbit in the middle of it, and when mom suffered from what was likely a blood clot to her brain, she repeated "White bunny" over and over before she went comatose. But mom was not referring to that. She told me there was a white bunny figure that she had, like the ceramic ones from Tetley tea, and that she wanted Tom to have one. Tom found one. 


(Photo: Dragonfly. Credit: South Carolina University)





2) Dragonflies - A couple of days after the services, Tom's sister experienced a dragonfly that came around her outside and kept lingering!  She said it never happened before and that dragonfly was acting very oddly. - She realized that her mom gave her dragonfly earrings before as a gift, so mom was influencing the dragonflies to let Tom's sister know she is okay in spirit.

3) Bluebirds - On April 14, we drove to a local cemetery. The family decided it would be best to place her and Tom's stepdad's ashes in a columbarium near us (in a different state) as we often visit cemeteries to look at stones, walk the dogs, or eat lunch in a peaceful place. When we pulled into the cemetery, Tom parked the truck and got out to meet the manager. I stayed in the truck with the dogs and saw a bluebird that was a deep blue color perched on the roof of a pergula (sitting place) next to the columbarium. The bird fluttered its wings as if to get my attention, then flew to the ground in front of the truck, flew back to the roof, then flew in a circle in front of the truck!  Such odd behavior!  I knew that mom was influencing the bird to give us a sign that she was on-board with the columbarium in our area.


(Photo: Bluebird. Credit: Penn State Extension) 



4) Bluebirds again - Tom's sister had a similar odd behavior experience with a bluebird. She said that a bluebird flew into the front porch area of her house and lingered. No bird had ever flown into that area before, but the bluebird did after mom passed. - She also confirmed that Mom loved bluebirds and had 2 bluebird figurines. 

So Mom will be using bluebirds and dragonflies to let us know whenever she is around! 


Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Rob's Reflections on my mom-in-law's Passing

In yesterday's blog you read Tom's memorial tribute to his mom. In today's blog, you'll read my memories of mom-in-law, Ruth. I was so fortunate to have a second Mom in Tom's mom (my mom passed in 2013). Today's blog is filled with fun memories.  


(Photo: Mom and Rob at Bingo in Sept 2025)

 Tom's mom, Ruth, quickly became like a mother to me after Tom and I met. After my mom passed in 2013, I would always get on a call with Tom weekly to chat with his mom. Until 2021 when she and her husband Bob moved to South Carolina, we were fortunate that they lived just 20 minutes away from us in Maryland (before the moved). We spent every holiday together. 

Mom cooked on our first Thanksgiving together, and she asked if I knew how to cook. When I told her I did, we had every holiday thereafter at our house!! - I also remember going out to Chinese food together on many Christmas days. 

(Tom and Mom at our wedding reception in 2009)

She loved all of our dogs, Franklin, Dolly, Sprite, Tyler and Dash. Although she never met Cody in life, we did video chat with him from a distance so she got to meet Cody virtually. (Buzz passed before I knew Tom, so mom didn't know him either). Mom was famous for always bringing a bag of dog treats and handing them out like candy to our canine kids!

Some days, whenever I would have to work late, mom and bob drove to Doggy day care and picked up the dogs for us and brought them to our house. 

(Mom loved all our kids- Franklin, Dolly, Tyler and Dash- and would sometimes pick them up at daycare) 

Mom's Shopping Deals and Discounts - Mom was good at finding out where the sales were happening. Whether it was at a fast-food restaurant, Kohls department store or somewhere else, she always seemed to know about them (and we didn't until she told us). Sometimes when we called her, she would tell us how she went to Kohls with a 20% off coupon the day after it expired and tried to get the discount.  We laughed about it and told her that Kohls had a wanted poster with her name on it, that said "Wanted for trying to get a discount with expired coupons." 


(Photo: Bob, Mom, Tom and Rob at Red Robin after the infamous dual colonoscopy day) 

You would never think that the event of a colonoscopy would be one you'd fondly remember, but it happened! But it wasn't the event, it was the lunch afterward that was memorable. Mom and Bob drove to our house (20 mins from theirs) picked us up and drove us to our procedure (yes, we both had them done at the same time). The memorable part was lunch afterward, as they took us to Red Robin for burgers and endless fries (as we were famished). I think Tom and I re-ordered fries twice!

(Photo: Bob and Rob during a visit in South Carolina)

When Mom and Bob moved to South Carolina, Tom and I helped them clean out their townhouse, donate stuff, and sell stuff off. It was about a 2 week process, and we were there every day. It was a lot of downsizing from a three floor townhouse to a two bedroom apartment in an assisted living facility.

Sometimes we accompanied mom and Bob to Bingo, too, whether in Maryland or South Carolina

Mom had all the daubers, and everything you needed. The last time I went to Bingo with mom was in September 2025, when I had last visited (I tried to visit in December, but black ice prevented us from reaching the airport on time). Tom's sister and brother in law, Greg found a bingo place about 20 minutes north of their house, so we all went. I won the last game of the night (with 2 others), so I split the winnings among all of us, so everyone won. It was a great memory.

When it came to board games, Mom loved them! Although as she got older, she claimed she didn't realize what she was doing, but we think there was a little intentional cheating! haha. Like when playing Uno, she would put a Green 4 on a Yellow 8. You have to match color and number... and she would tell us it "looked green." :) 

I will miss calling mom every wednesday on New Comic book day. That's when Tom and I would take the dogs in the pickup truck and drive to the comics shop. Afterward, we would stop for Dunkin' sandwich, coffee and iced tea and call mom. 

(Photo: Tom, Rob and Mom) 

During her last year, when she went on hospice, I tried to send her a post card every week. There's nothing like getting a "Hello" through the mail, and it isn't a bill. When I flew down last week to assist Tom's sister Lisa with things after mom's passing, Lisa gave me the stack of postcards I sent Mom as a keepsake. 

The world is a lot emptier for Tom, Lisa and me. But the fun memories will always be there. In fact, she already gave me two signs she's around - one was a waterfall and the other was a little white rabbit. But that's a story for tomorrow's blog. 

Love you, Mom! 

Rob 

Monday, April 20, 2026

In Memory of Tom's Mom who passed April 9, 2026

This has been a very challenging and sad 8 months for us. Tom's Mom, Ruth, passed April 9, 2026 at home. Although she was on hospice, it happened quickly, and Tom was able to be by her side with his sister Lisa who was her caretaker (she lived in another state). Her passing follows the passings of all three of our senior dogs, Cody, Dash and Tyler, we have endured a lot of loss recently. She left behind a lifetime of good memories.   As a tribute, Tom wrote today's blog is about her life.

(Photo: Tom's mom, Ruth and Tom at our wedding reception in 2009)

Mom, Ruth was born September 16, 1938, to Thomas and Grace Frank on a farm in the small rural tidewater community of Index, VA. She graduated from King George High School in 1956, and immediately moved to Washington, DC for better employment opportunities when she was just 18 years old.

(Mom holding Tom) 

(Photo: Mom at 18 years old with her suitcase ready to move to Washington, DC) 
Mom began what would be her lifelong career as a secretary working for the U.S. Coast Guard. Her manager, Karen, encouraged her to get out more and meet people. At an Arthur Murray dance studio, Mom met our Dad, Seth Williams. They were married on Mom’s birthday in 1960, at Pennsylvania Avenue Baptist Church.

In 1965, the couple moved to Prince George's County, MD and attended Riverdale Baptist Church for many years where Mom managed the church's bookstore and also worked for the church's day school. In 1974, Mom went to work in the Health Unit at Goddard Space Flight Center where she worked for the next 27 years.

(Photo: Mom and her father eating watermelon on the farm in Virginia where she grew up.) 

After Dad passed away in 1992, Mom began dating Robert "Bob" Elmendorf; they were married in June, 2001. Residing in the retirement community of Heritage Harbor in Annapolis, MD Mom and Bob were active in many of the community's activities and organizations, most notably the Heritage Harbor Choir. During this time, Mom worked part-time for the Capital Gazette until she fully retired at age 70.

(Photo: Bob and Ruth after singing in a choir performance in Annapolis, Maryland. This was one of mom's favorite pictures. Credit: R.G.) 

In 2021, Mom and Bob moved to South Carolina where they lived for the remainder of their lives. After Bob passed away in April 2023, from COVID complications, Mom moved in with my sister, Lisa, who became her primary caregiver.

(Photo: Sept 2025, playing a game at home: Rob, Greg, Lisa and Mom)

Mom enjoyed having company, playing Bingo on Fridays at the Mauldin Community Center, and playing cards and board games with family and friends. Her favorite card game was Kings-in-the-Corner.

Complying with her request, Mom passed away peacefully at home, surrounded by loved ones. She leaves behind a son, Thomas and husband, Rob; a daughter, Lisa, and husband, Greg.

She will be forever in our hearts.

Sunday, April 19, 2026

Idiots of the Week: 4 MAGA men convicted of Child Sx Abuse

 This week is a quadfecta (collection of 4) idiots, who are all conservative, MAGA movement supporters who claimed to be religious, and haters of people like liberals, drag queens, transgender people, and democrats. Yet, they hide behind their religion and their political party and have committed heinous crimes against children. It seems that every week there are more and more of these people uncovered. Hopefully Americans who once supported that conservative movement can see there are many hiding behind it and attacking innocent others while abusing children. Nothing is more heinous than that. 


Idiots of the Week: 4 MAGA men convicted of Child Sx Abuse

One was an evangelical pastor, David Rogers of Kentucky, who took his own life after being found out. Another was Former Republican U.S. House Speaker Dennis Hastert, who was sentenced to 15 months in federal prison on April 27, 2016, for violating federal banking laws as part of a hush-money scheme to cover up his past sexual abuse of male students. Two others are MAGA supporters that posted hateful things on their social media pages.

Article: KY Worship Pastor Dies by Suicide After Being Arrested
Ministry Watch.com Feb 26, 2026 

Last week, former Kentucky pastor David Rodgers, 40, killed himself after being arrested on multiple sexual abuse charges, including possession of abuse materials exploiting a minor under 12.  

Police initially arrested Rodgers on February 16. A few days later, on February 19, police responded to the report of a 40-year-old man with a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Kentucky State Police released an updated statement the next day. “The Daviess County Sheriff’s Office and Daviess County Coroner’s Office responded to the apparent suicide of Mr. David Rodgers around 9:45 am yesterday morning near his Utica residence.” Police protocol dictates the case remain open until a formal death certificate is entered, after which the case can be closed. Police began its investigation after receiving a complaint in January 2026 accusing Rodgers of inappropriate behavior against a minor, according to reporting by 14 News.

The former worship pastor of Pleasant Grove Baptist Church was ultimately charged with various sexual abuse crimes, including third-degree rape, second-degree sodomy involving a position of authority, first-degree sexual abuse, procuring or promoting the use of a minor by electronic means, and possession of matter portraying a sexual performance by a minor under the age of 12.

“It looks like it was somewhere around 10-11 years ago where the victim was of early age, perhaps as young as 12 but that can give or take some years with that. The relationship flourished from there where ultimately it went to a sexual relationship and ultimately that’s where the charges stem from with sodomy, rape 3rd, and also the abusing the power of trust,” Kentucky State Police Trooper Corey King said, according to 14 News.  After his arrest, Rodgers confessed to the offenses during his interview with police. He was then released on a $75,000 bond.

THEN THERE IS THIS GUY****Man arrested in Missouri to face child rape charges in North Carolina   WCNC-TV NEWS, February 27, 2026

GASTONIA, N.C. — A man who was arrested recently in Missouri is set to be extradited back to North Carolina to face a child sex charge from eight years ago. The Gastonia Police Department announced on Friday, Feb. 27, 2026, that 65-year-old Arnold Ogle was arrested by the U.S. Marshals Service's Fugitive Task Force in Kansas City. Police said he is accused of the statutory rape of a child in 2018. The department notes that as of publication, he is being held in Missouri as he awaits extradition.

Court documents reviewed by WCNC Charlotte reveal that Ogle's address at the time of his arrest was in Gardner, roughly 30 miles southeast of Kansas City. He was indicted earlier in the month on the statutory rape charge, along with incest.

The indictment also suggests that the crimes Ogle is accused of spanned the course of 13 years; the date range in his indictment suggested a start date of November 2005.

    AND FINALLY THIS GUY   Bonne Terre Man Charged in Jefferson County Child Sex Abuse Case

Dustin Kopp, KFMO-TV February 23rd, 2026 

 Jefferson Co., Mo. (KFMO) - A Bonne Terre man is facing multiple felony charges following allegations of sexual abuse involving a young girl in Jefferson County. Court documents state that 36-year-old David A. Boren allegedly sexually abused a girl for about a year while she was younger than 12 years old.

The Jefferson County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office charged Boren on December 4 with felony first-degree statutory rape or attempted statutory rape and felony statutory sodomy or attempted statutory sodomy. Boren was arrested on February 9 and is being held without bond at the Jefferson County Jail, according to court and jail records.

A probable-cause statement filed by the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office indicates the girl told investigators the abuse occurred between January 2018 and January 2019 and that Boren allegedly told her not to report the abuse.

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Heroes of the Week: California Firefighters use oxygen masks, CPR to save cats from fire

Riverside County, California Firefighters rescued cats from a burning building, and used CPR to resucate them. They are this week's heroes.

Riverside County firefighters and deputy save 4 cats from apartment fire 

By Matthew Rodriguez, : March 23, 2026 / 7:17 PM PDT / CBS LA

Riverside County firefighters and a deputy saved the lives of four cats during an apartment fire in Jurupa Valley.

The Cal Fire/Riverside County Fire Department said crews found the cats inside a fire-damaged apartment, three of whom were unconscious and not breathing.

"When I looked under the bed, I found the first one," Engineer Ray Guillen said. "As soon as I went to grab it, it fell over. So, I knew something was wrong."

Firefighters rushed the animals outside and tried to resuscitate them as more crews and a Riverside County Sheriff's deputy helped. In a video released by the fire department, first responders tried performing CPR on the cats, with some attempting mouth-to-mouth resuscitation to help the animals regain consciousness.

"We started CPR, started giving them chest compressions," Deputy Adam Maldonado said. "I know from holding my cats that their hearts beat pretty fast. So, I knew it needed to be pretty deep and pretty fast."

Riverside County firefighters rescued four cats from an apartment fire in Jurupa Valley.

Other firefighters rushed in with oxygen tanks for the three unconscious cats. With fresh oxygen, the cats opened their eyes, one by one, and regained consciousness.

"We just treated it like we would treat a pediatric patient that was unresponsive and not breathing," Firefighter Salvador de La Cruz said. "It's small, press hard and press fast and breathe into them.

After getting some water from the firefighters, the cats perked up and started walking around.

Friday, April 17, 2026

Book of the Week - to SKIP- All-Star Superman: DC Compact Comics Edition

I'm a huge fan of Superman, and I've collected a LOT of Superman comics from the 1970s and 80s (when I think they were at their best).  When I learned that the 2025 Superman film (which I liked) was based on the "All-Star Superman" 12 issue comic run, and put into a compact edition, I bought it.  I was disappointed. That's today's book of the week to avoid if you like Superman of the 70s and 80s. 

I've read Superman pretty consistently from 2005 through 2025, too (with exceptions like the "warworld storyline"). Most of the stories and art I have enjoyed, but this run didn't hit me. 

Although I like writer Grant Morrison, I didn't care for this series which re-wrote and " modernized" Superman's history and added quirks. I also like most of Frank Quietly's art, but he draws Superman in an odd sort of bloated muscle way. 

ABOUT THE BOOK:  All-Star Superman: DC Compact Comics Edition  is a paperback collection of Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely's acclaimed 12-issue comic series, released in a new, smaller format by DC Comics in July 2024. It collects the complete, award-winning story, featuring iconic characters like Lex Luthor, Jimmy Olsen, and Bizarro, and is praised as a definitive, modern take on the Man of Steel, exploring themes like mortality and hope through epic adventures

Thursday, April 16, 2026

A single injection of mRNA-like treatment healed heart muscle after a heart attack in mice and pigs. Could it work in humans too?

 Today's blog is about possible help to heal a heart after a heart attack. It works in mice and pigs. The next step is to figure out if it would work in humans. First, though, I explain what an mRNA shot does so you can understand the story!

(Image Credit: https://kpwashingtonresearch.org/)
WHAT IS mRNA? mRNA shots (messenger RNA vaccines) use a temporary genetic code to teach body cells to create a harmless protein resembling a virus, triggering an immune response without causing disease. These vaccines are highly effective, rapidly produced, and used for COVID-19

A single injection of mRNA-like treatment healed heart muscle after a heart attack in mice and pigs. Could it work in humans too?

Live Science, March 16, 2026 by Eva Amsen

Researchers boosted levels of a heart-healing hormone in mice and pigs with a single injection of a new, experimental form of self-amplifying RNA that prolonged hormone synthesis for many weeks.

A single shot of self-amplifying RNA can repair tissue damage from a heart attack, new research in pigs and mice shows.

It can take weeks or months to recover from a heart attack, but the new study explored a novel way to boost the production of a natural heart-repairing hormone with a single injection. Although the shot hasn't been tested in humans yet, researchers believe it could one day offer hope for a faster recovery.

''This system is revolutionary, because it's using skeletal muscle as a factory to produce the proteins that we need,'' study co-author Dr. Ke Huang, an assistant professor of pharmaceutical sciences at Texas A&M University, told Live Science.

A heart attack is often caused by a blocked artery that prevents oxygen-rich blood from reaching the heart muscle. While surgery can remove the blockage, the heart muscle itself also needs to recover from the oxygen starvation. If it doesn't heal quickly enough, scar tissue will take its place, which is less effective at pumping blood and may precipitate heart failure.

In the study, published March 5 in the journal Science, Ke Cheng, a biomedical engineer at Columbia University and senior author of the new study and his collaborators showed that a single injection of self-amplifying RNA (saRNA) in the muscle tissue of the hind leg could heal heart muscle cells in mice and pigs by increasing levels of a hormone called atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP).

From studying mice, researchers learned that ANP levels are much higher in newborns than in adults ‪—‬ a difference they attributed to ANP playing a role in heart development. This inspired Cheng and colleagues to see if it was possible to increase ANP levels temporarily in adult mice to help heal the heart. ''We wanted to see if we can supplement ANP with self-amplifying RNA,'' Cheng said.

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Found! Tudor Heart necklace: Henry VIII& 1st wife, Katherine of Aragon

In a dried-up pond in central England a heart necklace was found that indentified the love between Henry VIII and his first wife, Katherine of Aragon, but it didn't belong to them.. Learn about the mystery in today's blog.

(Photo: a gold heart-shaped pendant with the letters H and K in red enamel The gold, heart-shaped pendant was discovered by a metal detectorist in 2019. (Image credit: Ben Stansall)

Tudor Heart: A Renaissance gold necklace featuring a French-English pun on the love between Henry VIII and his first wife, Katherine of Aragon

By Kristina Killgrove LIVE SCIENCE, March 30, 2026

A chance discovery of a 16th-century necklace reveals new information about Tudor-era jewelry styles.


 QUICK FACTS 

  • Name: Tudor Heart - 
  • What it is: A gold necklace with a red-enameled pendant 
  • Where it is from: Warwickshire, central England 
  • When it was made: Circa 1518

Half a millennium after a solid-gold Renaissance necklace was forged, a metal detectorist spotted it poking out of a dried-up pond in central England. 

The jewel was discovered by Birmingham café owner Charlie Clarke while metal detecting in a field in Warwickshire on a very auspicious Friday the 13th, December, 2019. After his screaming abated, Clarke notified the Finds Liaison Officer who in turn contacted Historic England

The necklace's heart-shaped pendant — which features the red-enameled initials H and K, as well as a rose and a pomegranate — is one of only a few Tudor-period jewels to survive the bitter divorce of King Henry VIII and his first wife, Katherine of Aragon. (The queen's name is often spelled "Catherine," but she usually signed it "Katherine" while at court in England.)

The Tudor Heart necklace is made up of three parts. The 24-karat gold chain, which consists of 75 links, is 17.1 inches (43.4 centimeters) long and weighs 9.4 ounces (267 grams). A clasp in the shape of a hand coming out of a cloud serves to close the necklace and suspend a heart-shaped pendant. The pendant is 2.3 inches (5.9 cm) long and weighs 1.8 ounces (50 grams). But it's the decoration on the pendant, rather than the necklace itself, that makes the artifact historically significant.


(Photo: A gold heart-shaped pendant with the letters H and K in red enamel, and the red and white rose around a tree on the other side.  (Image credit: Ben Stansall)

On the front of the Tudor Heart, a white-and-red rose is entwined with a pomegranate tree, which represent the House of Tudor dynasty, headed by Henry VIII, and the Spanish homeland of Queen Katherine of Aragon, respectively. The back of the heart pendant is decorated with their initials joined by a tasseled cord. Katherine had originally married England's Prince Arthur, but she was widowed after just five months of marriage. Later, she became the first wife of Henry VIII (who ruled from 1509 to 1547), and their marriage lasted from 1509 until they were divorced in 1533.

Experts at the British Museum have confirmed that the composition of the gold and the style of the jewelry are consistent with an early-16th-century manufacture date, meaning the accessory was likely crafted during Henry VIII's marriage to Katherine. But because the necklace is not listed in inventories of royal jewels from the early 16th century, it's unlikely that either monarch owned it. This raises the question of why or for whom the necklace was made.

One possibility is that the heart was created to celebrate the betrothal of Princess Mary (later Queen Mary I) in 1518. Mary was the only child of Henry and Katherine to survive infancy and was initially promised to Francis III, the Dauphin of France, when she was just 2 years old. The betrothal plan fell through a few years later.

Another possibility is that the necklace was made for someone of high standing, who would have worn it to show allegiance to the monarchs. Elements of the necklace suggest that, although it was made of high-quality gold, the workmanship was not of the same caliber, according to the U.K. Portable Antiquities scheme. If the object was made to be viewed from afar, it may have been given as a prize for winning a royal joust or other equestrian event.

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Antarctica could warm 1.4 times faster than the rest of the Southern Hemisphere

Any educated person knows that climate change is happening, and that Humans and the pollution they've caused is exacerbating (speeding up) the process at a rate greater than some environments can handle. New research indicates Antarctica could warm faster than the rest of the southern hemisphere, and that's alarming. Today's blog explains from an article in Live Science. 

(Image: This color picture of Antarctica is one part of a mosaic of pictures covering the entire Antarctic continent taken during the hours following Galileo's historic first encounter with its home planet. The view shows the Ross Ice Shelf. Credit: NASA)


Antarctica could warm 1.4 times faster than the rest of the Southern Hemisphere 

LIVE SCIENCE, March 24, 2026

Antarctica could heat up 1.4 times faster than the rest of the Southern Hemisphere over the coming decades, which would lock in extreme sea-level rise and ravage polar ecosystems, a new modeling study shows.

This acceleration of warming in Antarctica relative to other regions, known as Antarctic amplification, would likely occur if global temperatures reached 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit (2 degrees Celsius) above preindustrial levels, according to the study. The world has already warmed by 2 F (1.1 C), and the pace at which new temperature records are being set is intensifying. If emissions stay around current levels, we will likely reach 3.6 F of warming around 2050 — but if emissions keep rising, we could hit that threshold around 2040.

The new research is among the first to find a clear sign of Antarctic amplification, which has been hard to detect due to the Southern Ocean's enormous capacity to absorb heat and the powerful circumpolar currents that isolate the frozen continent from rising temperatures. Yet most scientists think Antarctic amplification will happen, because amplification in the Arctic is already underway.

"For many years, Antarctica seemed isolated from the effects of increasing global temperatures," Ariaan Purich, a senior lecturer and climatologist at Monash University in Australia who was not involved in the research, told Live Science in an email. "In this new study, the authors propose that long-term surface warming of the ocean around Antarctica, projected by climate models over the coming century, leads to Antarctic amplification."

(Image: Antarctic sea ice maximum extent, September 10 2023. Credit: NASA) 

Arctic amplification has been documented for years, with temperatures in this region climbing about four times faster than the global average increase over the past five decades. The main mechanism driving Arctic amplification is the ice-albedo feedback, where the melting of snow and ice accelerates warming because water reflects less heat back to space. Where there once used to be reflective sea ice, there is now an ocean that absorbs more heat from sunlight. This causes more ice and snow to melt, in turn exposing even more heat-absorbing water.

Antarctica behaves differently, partly because swirling ocean and wind currents shield the continent from rising air and sea temperatures elsewhere in the world. Contrary to the Arctic, most of Antarctica experienced only gradual warming and no declines in sea ice until about a decade ago, Purich said.

But then, between 2014 and 2016, Antarctica lost as much sea ice as the Arctic had lost in four decades. The continent hasn't bounced back since, Purich said, with exceptionally low winter sea ice extent recorded in 2023, in particular.

"We're now seeing abrupt changes occurring in Antarctica, at very rapid rates," Purich said. "With low Antarctic sea ice coverage, there is now the potential for the ice-albedo feedback to start exacerbating warming of the southern high latitudes."

Monday, April 13, 2026

Big Thanks to Animal Rescue League of NH for my event!

On March 29, 2026, I gave a fundraising lecture at the Animal Rescue League of New Hampshire in Bedford, NH. This was my 7th year teaching people how their pets communicate from the afterlife, and it's always emotional and moving. This year was no different.

(Photo: Rob and Marianne) 

My thanks to Marianne and Charlotte who manage the shelter and the events. They do this every year for me, and help me bring comfort to many. This year was especially tough for me after we lost all three of our dogs, Tyler, Dash and Cody. 

(Photo: Two of the cats at the Shelter needing a home. The pictured cat is 11 years old)

ABOUT THE ANIMAL RESCUE LEAGUE OF NH- It's a Non-Profit, and their operating budget is $1.7 million annually and they rely on YOUR DONATIONS. So, please consider helping them out. 

For 121 years, the Animal Rescue League of NH has been a lifeline for animals in need, providing shelter, medical care, and the chance to find loving homes. Our work is only possible because of compassionate supporters like you. Your donation helps us continue this legacy of care, rescue, and hope. Every dollar makes a difference, for the animals, and for the community that loves them. 

Donate today and be part of something life changing.

WEBSITE/ADOPTABLE ANIMALS/DONATEhttps://www.rescueleague.org/ 


I also stopped by the Rabbit house!  ARLNH also has several rabbits, who make wonderful pets. 

 

Who I am

I'm a simple guy who enjoys the simple things in life, especially our dogs. I volunteer for dog rescues, enjoy exercising, blogging, politics, helping friends and neighbors, participating in ghost investigations, coffee, weather, superheroes, comic books, mystery novels, traveling, 70s and 80s music, classic country music,writing books on ghosts and spirits, cooking simply and keeping in shape. You'll find tidbits of all of these things on this blog and more. EMAIL me at Rgutro@gmail.com - Rob

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