We don't wear our shoes in the house. Think about it. You wear them in public restrooms where people pee on the floor.
You wear them outside where animals do #1 and #2. If you then wear them inside, and later walk barefoot... eeew. Here's an article from the Boston Globe about a scientific study investigating that question. >>>>
Should you Wear Shoes in the House?
Boston.com Aug, 27, 2019
Charles P. Gerba, a professor and microbiologist at the University of Arizona, studied how many and which kinds of bacteria linger on the bottom of shoes.
In 2008, researchers tracked new shoes worn by 10 participants for two weeks and found that coliform bacteria like E. coli were extremely common on the outside of the shoes. E. coli is known to cause intestinal and urinary tract infections as well as meningitis, among other illnesses.
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“Our study also indicated that bacteria can be tracked by shoes over a long distance into your home or personal space,” Gerba said in a statement.
Gerba said in an interview this month that the study’s findings had made him change even some of his own behaviors: “It kept me from putting my feet on my desk.”
Contaminated shoes are unlikely to make you sick
It’s possible to transmit germs from your footwear if you touch your shoes and then your face or mouth, for instance, or if you eat food that’s been dropped on the floor.
But in the hierarchy of potential health hazards at home, bacteria-caked shoes rank comparatively low, according to Donald W. Schaffner, a food microbiologist at Rutgers University in New Jersey.
He said there are more important considerations. Is anyone in the house sick? Are there frogs, turtles or snakes nearby, which can carry salmonella? Is food being stored and prepared properly?
Sponges, which retain water and food particles, are a “cesspool” of bacteria, said Dr. Aaron E. Carroll, professor of pediatrics at the Indiana University School of Medicine in Indianapolis.
Outside the home, there are objects and surfaces that are frequently touched but seldom, if ever, washed, such as money, ATM buttons and gas station pump handles, he said, adding, “Focusing on people’s shoes feels like focusing on the wrong vector.”
Overall, experts emphasized that washing your hands with soap and water remained the most important health practice.
Lisa A. Cuchara, professor of biomedical sciences at Quinnipiac University in Hamden, Connecticut, said that fecal bacteria were certainly transferred from your shoes to your floor at home but that “for most healthy adults, this level of contamination is more of a gross reaction than a health threat.”
Putting the threat in perspective, she noted that the floor in a public restroom has around 2 million bacteria per square inch. A toilet seat, on the other hand, has an average of about 50 million per square inch.
“Think about that the next time you place your purse or knapsack on the bathroom floor and then bring it home and put it on the kitchen table or counter,” she said.
Saturday, August 31, 2019
Friday, August 30, 2019
Danube River Cruise #56 - Final Blog : New Friends!
Debbie and Hans from Canada |
Chris and Linda from England |
1) Debbie and Hans from Canada- We got to celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary on the ship (I heard about it and tipped off the crew that led to a special dessert and a crew serenade). We loved spending time with them and so glad we're connected through Facebook!
Mary Margaret and Don from Georgia |
Rob, Nikoli and Tom |
We can't wait to see all of our new friends again!
Rob, Tommy and Tom |
Debbie and Hans Anniversary Treat |
Thursday, August 29, 2019
Danube River Cruise #55: The Amazing Dachshund Museum! Part 2
Rob gets big kisses from 1 of the museum owner's dachshund |
ROB GETS DOGGY KISSES - We spent about an hour in the small Dachshund museum because there were so many things to see that were all Dachshund-related. Wooden and glass figurines, books, records, clothing and really anything you could imagine. It was all there!
After Tom managed to peel me (Rob) out of the gift shop part of the museum, we walked around the city. On our way back to meet the tour guide and return to the ship, we walked past the museum again, and outside was one of the museum owners and his 2 famous Dachshunds, Moni and Seppi! Of course, I had to pose for a picture and when I crouched down, Moni, or was it Seppi, couldn't stop kissing me!!! Obviously he knew I'm a Dachshund dad, too!
BBC News report about the Dachshund Museum!
VIDEO: https://youtu.be/9g9gjmWc6lc
NEXT: The Final Cruise blog, New Friends
and Ship Photos
Wednesday, August 28, 2019
Danube River Cruise #54: The Amazing Dachshund Museum! Part 1:
Moni and Seppi, the Dachshunds who founded the museum |
dachshund planters |
ABOUT THE MUSEUM! -
Our Tyler says you need to check it out! |
It was founded by former local florists and Dachshund parents
No other dog seems to be as world-famous as the dachshund. The 100th anniversary of the Free State of Bavaria, the dachshund in nobility or the dachshund in hunting as well as “Waldi”, the dachshund of the 1972 Olympic Games, are focal points in the museum.
JFK - Doxie Dad |
1 of the museum owners and kids |
WEBPAGE: https://www.dackelmuseum.de
Abe Lincoln Doxie dad |
SOME FAMOUS DACHSHUND PARENTS!
1) Albert Einstein
NEXT: Rob Gets Dachshund Kisses
VIDEO: https://youtu.be/U_deGPBathY
Tuesday, August 27, 2019
Danube River Cruise #53: Color-Coded Buildings, Deadly Garden & Bizarre Face
the garden of death |
Passau, Germany. One thing we noticed was businesses were color coded. We also visited the "deadly garden" and saw a bizarre face sculpture. Today you'll learn about all of those things in the blog>>>
THE GARDEN OF DEATH - As you walk up from one of the rivers to the elevated street level (where St. Stephen's is located), you'll find a beautiful garden. We were surprised to learn that this garden was planted over a mass grave of bubonic plague victims!
The bizarre face |
THE BIZARRE FACE- To the left of St. Stephen's church (if you're facing it, pun intended) is a sculpture of a giant and ancient face. No one knows what happened to the rest of the sculpture, but the face was discovered intact, so it was preserved and propped up across from the church. The face is a remnant of what is believed to have been a full statue that dates to around 1400.
COLOR CODED BUILDINGS - In the old town, they were pretty organized in the middle ages. That holds true today, too, because different types of businesses are color coded. Here's how they break down:
1) Pink - breads or food stuffs
2) Red - butcher shop
3) Green - pharmacy or doctor's office
4) Yellow - supermarkets
- It's really pretty clever when you think about it! Just like I always think Dunkin' Donuts whenever I see orange and pink - but alas, there were no Dunkin' Donuts in Passau.
NEXT: A True Highlight: The Dachshund Museum!
Monday, August 26, 2019
Danube River Cruise #52: St. Stephen's Big Organ and Onion Towers
St. Stephen's organ |
In this blog we'll tell you who St. Stephen was, why he was stoned (with actual rocks), a brief concert and church "onions"! Read on!
ABOUT ST. STEPHEN'S CHURCH- St. Stephen's Cathedral is a baroque church in Passau, Germany. Since 730, there have been many churches built on the site of the current cathedral. The current church, a baroque building around 100 meters (328 ft) long, was built from 1668 to 1693 after a fire in 1662 destroyed its predecessor, of which only the late gothic eastern side remains. The cathedral's overall plan was made by Carlo Lurago, its interior decoration by Giovanni Battista Carlone, and its frescos by Carpoforo Tencalla.
St. Stephen's Cathedral- Stonig of St Stephen statue |
door handles |
HOW BIG IS THE ORGAN? - According to the website AtlasObscura.com, the organ at St. Stephen’s took shape gradually over the course of centuries. The contemporary version consists of five separate organs in varying tonal styles amounting to 17,774 pipes, 223 registers, and four chimes. Each portion of the organ was built separately, possesses its own unique tone, and can be played as a standalone instrument by way of its own console.
St Stephen's Nave |
St. Stephen's Pulpit |
WHO WAS ST. STEPHEN & WHY STONED TO DEATH? Accused of blasphemy at his trial, he made a long speech denouncing the Jewish authorities who were sitting in judgment on him and was then stoned to death. His martyrdom was witnessed by Saul of Tarsus, a Pharisee who would later become a follower of Jesus and known as Paul the Apostle.
STATUE: STONING OF ST. STEPHEN - There's a statue in the church that depicts the stoning of St. Stephen. The martyrdom of Saint Stephen is recounted in Acts 7 of the bible. This young deacon in the Christian community of Jerusalem was sentenced to death by stoning.
THE 2 CHURCH ONION DOMES - An onion dome is a dome whose shape resembles an onion and is usually associated with Russian architectural style.
St Stephens from a distance |
HIGHEST POINT - The church was built on the highest point in the city of Passau, Germany, to ensure it would never be flooded (like a good portion of the town below).
ornate lockset on the doors |
NEXT: Color-coded signs, and a deadly flower garden
ornate plaster work and statues in the nave. |
Sunday, August 25, 2019
Idiot of the Week: Racist woman Gropes Couple on Cruise and says "Go Back to Where You Came From!"
Idiot of the Week: Lisa Matteson, Drumpf Supporter - Racist |
'Go back where you come from.’ That’s what woman said after groping couple on cruise, cops say
By Mark Young
July 23, 2019 08:12 AM
Bradenton Herald, Florida
Visitors aboard the Tarpon Springs Spongeorama dolphin cruise in Florida were promised a day of marine life sightseeing on the afternoon of July 19 but received a whole lot more for which they bargained.
Lisa Matteson’s odd behavior started immediately, witnesses said, as she was described as being unruly and intoxicated, but it only became more strange from there.
The boat’s captain told WFLA that Matteson, 58, began touching passengers in an inappropriate manner, beginning with a man’s wife. When the captain tried to intervene she turned around and groped the husband, as well.
Matteson allegedly grabbed the female victim’s buttocks twice and said, “Oh, it’s curved and nice” and “I would do you,” according to the New York Daily News.
As if that wasn’t strange enough, witnesses say Matteson then began a racist rant about the couple — from Saudi Arabia — “to go back where you came from,” according to Xanthi Zembillas, the cruise line’s ticket seller, who got the call that the boat was returning to dock due to what was happening.
The captain told police that the final straw was when Matteson touched another female passenger and when she was called into the wheelhouse to be warned yet again, then inappropriately touched the captain.
Tarpon Springs police were waiting when the boat returned and according to jail records, Matteson was booked into the Pinellas County jail on a simple battery charge.
According to WTSP, Matteson denied groping the woman and told police she didn’t remember anything and was confused as to why she was being arrested.
Read more here: https://www.bradenton.com/news/local/crime/article233006032.html#storylink=cpy
Saturday, August 24, 2019
In the news: Dogs' Eyes Have Changed Since Humans Befriended Them
As Dog Dads, we love finding out science about
our canine kids. Here's a fascinating scientific study that came out in
June.
Tyler has very expressive eyes |
In the news: Dogs' Eyes Have Changed Since
Humans Befriended Them
Atlantic June 20, 2019
Dogs, more so than almost any other domesticated
species, are desperate for human eye contact. When raised around people, they
begin fighting for our attention when they’re as young as four weeks old. It’s
hard for most people to resist a petulant flash of puppy-dog eyes—and according
to a new study, that pull on the heartstrings might be exactly why dogs can
give us those looks at all.
A paper published on June 18, 2019 in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that dogs’ faces are
structured for complex expression in a way that wolves’ aren’t, thanks to a
special pair of muscles framing their eyes. These muscles are responsible for
that “adopt me” look that dogs can pull by raising their inner eyebrows. It’s
the first biological evidence scientists have found that domesticated dogs
might have evolved a specialized ability used expressly to communicate better
with humans.
For the study, a team at the University of
Portsmouth’s Dog Cognition Centre looked at two muscles that work together to
widen and open a dog’s eyes, causing them to appear bigger, droopier, and
objectively cuter. The retractor anguli oculi lateralis muscle and the levator
anguli oculi medialis muscle (mercifully known as RAOL and LAOM) form two
short, straight lines, which connect the ring of muscle around a dog’s eye to
either end of the brow above.
These researchers have long been interested in
the ways dogs make eye contact with humans and, in particular, how they move
their eyebrows. In 2017, Juliane Kaminski, the lead author of the new paper,
found that dogs moved their eyebrows more often while a human paid attention to
them, and less often when they were ignored or given food (which, sorry to say,
is a more exciting stimulus for them than human love). That suggested the
movement is to some degree voluntary. On our side of these longing glances,
research has also shown that when dogs work these muscles, humans respond more
positively. And both man and mutt benefit from a jolt of oxytocin when locked
in on each other.
This isn’t simply a fortuitous love story, in
which the eyes of two species just so happen to meet across a crowded planet.
Like all the best partnerships, this one is more likely the result of years of
evolution and growth. If dogs developed their skill for eyebrow manipulation
because of their connection to humans, one way to tell would be to look for the
same capacity in wolves. Because dogs split off from their wolf
relatives—specifically, gray wolves—as many as 33,000 years ago, studying the
two animals is a bit like cracking open a four-legged time capsule. Divergence
between the two species marked the start of dogs’ domestication, a long
evolutionary process influenced—and often directly driven—by humans. Today,
researchers can identify and study differences between the species to gain an
understanding of exactly how dogs have changed over time.
In this case, those eyebrow-raising muscles do
appear to be an addition to dogs’ anatomy. In the four gray wolves the
researchers looked at, neither muscle was present. (They did find bundles of
fibers that could be the precursors to the RAOL and LAOM.) In five of the six
breeds of dogs the researchers looked at, both muscles were fully formed and
strong; in the Siberian husky, the wolflike, oldest breed of the group, the
researchers were unable to locate a RAOL.
Sometimes, the origins of changes like these
aren’t immediately apparent. Certain physical dog traits—including floppy ears
and short snouts—likely originate from the same set of developmental cells that
code for tameness, a preferable trait in household pets, for instance. In the
case of this new research, though, the connection between the physical trait
and the related behavior is a bit more direct. “Previous work—and much of it by
these same authors—had shown that these muscles were responsible for enhancing
positive responses in humans,” Brian Hare, the director of Duke University’s
Canine Cognition Center and the editor of the paper, told The Atlantic via
email, “but the current suggests the origin of these facial expressions is
after dogs split from wolves.”
By evolutionary standards, the time since this
split has been remarkably short for two new facial muscles to have developed.
For a species to change that quickly, a pretty powerful force must be acting on
it. And that’s where humans come in. We connect profoundly with animals capable
of exaggerating the size and width of their eyes, which makes them look like
our own human babies and “hijacks” our nurturing instincts. Research has
already demonstrated that humans prefer pets with more infantlike facial
features, and two years ago, the authors of this latest study showed that dogs
who made the facial movement enabled by the RAOL and LAOM muscles—an expression
we read as distinctly humanlike—were more likely to be selected for adoption
from a shelter than those who didn’t. We might not have bred dogs for this
trait knowingly, but they gained so much from having it that it became a
widespread facial feature. “These muscles evolved during domestication, but
almost certainly due to an advantage they gave dogs during interactions with
humans that we humans have been all but unaware of,” Hare explained.
“It’s such a classically human system that we
have, the ways we interact with our own infants,” says Angie Johnston, an
assistant professor at Boston College who studies canine cognition and was not
involved with the study. “A big theme that’s come out again and again in canine
cognition and looking at the domestication of dogs is that it seems like they
really just kind of dove right into our society in the role of being an infant
or a small child in a lot of ways. They’re co-opting existing systems we have.”
The same humanlike facial gestures could also
be a dog’s way of simply securing attention in the first place. Eyebrow raising
is one of the most well-understood examples of what researchers call ostensive
cues, a family of nonverbal signals (often facial movements and expressions)
humans send one another to convey their intention to directly communicate.
Dogs’ uncanny ability to mimic this human expression likely leads us to project
certain human emotions onto them in ways we don’t with other animals,
regardless of what they might actually be feeling.
The movement of the RAOL and LAOM muscles is
particularly open to interpretation. “In different contexts we’ll call that
something different,” says Alexandra Horowitz, a senior research fellow at the
Barnard College Dog Cognition Lab. “In one case, I might say it’s sad, but in
another case I’ll say, He’s really paying attention. It can look wry, like a
questioning or unbelieving look.” According to Horowitz, dogs are the only
animals aside from our primate cousins that are expressive in this eerily
familiar way. Horses alone share the ability to twist their eyes into the same
doleful shape, but their overall expressions don’t strike us as humanlike in
the same way that dogs’ do. With dogs, Horowitz points out, we’re so driven to
connect that we often search for “smiles” in the shapes of dogs’ mouths. The
new research, she says, “makes me think it’s more about being able to move the
face in a way that humans move the face. We don’t like unexpressive faces.”
Dash |
Both Horowitz and Johnston suggested that
similar studies looking at populations of dingoes (which Johnston researches)
and Siberian foxes could provide yet another time capsule of sorts for
understanding eyebrow movements and other evolutionary traits. Both species
live near humans and are some of the closest living relatives to the earliest
dogs. Why did they stay wild while dogs drifted into domestication? “Anything
to do with getting to the bottom of why we as a species picked out this one
animal can carry a huge amount of information,” Horowitz says. “In some ways,
it’s discovering something about ourselves.”
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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