Tuesday, April 28, 2020

COVID -19 THE PANDEMIC...

All most whole world  has been locked down these days.. due to COVID-19  pandemic.

We don't know 😒😒 what is going to be happen  next day .. but let be positive have faith in yourself.

In country like India we are seeing each day is now going to be challenging for everyone. The small business man whose business are closed WE don't know what would be the next.. the farmers the daily wages worker what are their life upto... Infact there any many working in MNC's company has been got their notice period for termination...


WE aRE here 😞 on disappointment period.. but have faith be patience after the phase of COVID-19 our life style are going to be change.. we suddenly revert back to our some traditional ways of living... after the lockdown will get over phase wise phase, then also WE have to follow many rules and regulations. . what aRE WE upto shall WE know what we have to follow

1. Avoid crowded place
2. Maintain Social Distancing
3. Avoid Unnecessary Travel
4. Avoid Outing with friends for fun 
5. Avoid Social Gathering
6. Prefer Digital payment mode
7. Maintain personal as well as public hygiene
8. Ban should be on public spitting ( mainly in Bihar and UP )

And there many list we should avoid to do... So the lifestyle like outing, dating, unnecessary social gathering and many more WE have to follow... for our own and for our family as well as for our safety for society..

Positive thinking and following some basic rule in our habit will provide a healthy social environment.. Where we have to to work.... time for recession again be just for a while... Days are going to be good or even better after this phase... So learn from this lesson that don't damage your nature ortherwise nature will damage you permanently.. The formula for nature is "GIVE Respect Take RESPECT"

This is way to reopen the economy ...to keep open... maintain SOCIAL DISTANCING





Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Mint or Pudina

Mint leaves are very healthy Rich in Nutrients..
Helps to improve... 
  1. Aids Digestion 
  2. Treats Asthma
  3. Treats Common Cold
  4. Cures Headache
  5. Oral Care
  6. Aids Weight Loss
  7. Improves Brain Power
  8. Skin Care
  9. Help Ease Symptoms Of Morning sickness or Nausea
10. Beats stress and depression 

Question : Can we grow mint leaves in water ???

Answer :

YES, you can grow in your kitchen garden..

STEPS :- 


  1. Make holes in a plastic pot at bottom. 
  2. Put fresh mint leaves which we brought from market. ..
  3. Put them randomly...
  4. Take another vessel pour water in that and put a stand on the water vessel
  5. Put pot of mint leaves in the vessel so that all branches comes out from holes should touch the water.. 
  6. Put your kitchen plant in bright place .. 
  7. Change water everyday ..
  8. Optional-  If you want then you can use some water soluble fertilizer also in the water ....        
  9.  Then you can see the result in  just 12 days ...Try once ... 




In next post you will find some exciting recipe from mint leaves.. 


Same way coriander plant will also can grow in water for kitchen garden..

Tuesday, April 21, 2020

Search of happiness...😊😊

The important things which we are missing in our life is happiness.
We think to get happiness in all materialistic things, name and fame in the world give us happiness. This theory for happiness is completely wrong.
One thought we thought I have to earn more and more but 
what about our inner peace!
what about the environment! 
What about our nature ! 
What about the real happiness! 

Every answer we know very well... but we are scared of it we think without money how can we survive.. it's true money is essential need for surviving but it is only for our surviving not for our inner peace... many of us are suffering from depression as we are not having as much income they need, many of us wants more and more land..

what had happen to us ..!! Are we forget we have in this world empty hand and will go off empty hand.. what will be with us is our ' karm' or 'work'

Inner peace come when we share happiness, when we can able to make smile on others people face.. how can we do this ..  
Is we all had time for it?? 

We are just busy to earn more and more to secure our future.. 
Is we know that whether we will be here to see our future or not .. we don't know next moment what is going to happen.. 

So live happy.. give happiness to others .. let them enjoy for today.. we don't know what will the next day.. be happy... give yourself inner peace as you needed..

What about our nature or environment!! What we have done to them 
Just to fulfill our materialistic need we are destroying natures inner peace.. so have a lesson from nature .. plant more and more three.. respect the animals they are not ment for human to eat everything.. let nature should have their own cycle.. don't break the chain of nature..


please share your thoughts about happiness ...πŸ˜„   πŸ˜ŠπŸ˜Š

The tiger lies low not from fear, but for aim....

Better to live one year as a tiger, then a hundred as sheep                         


Largest cat species and a member of the genus Panthera. It is most recognisable for its dark vertical stripes on orange-brown fur with a lighter underside. It is an apex predator, primarily preying on ungulates such as deer and wild boar. It is territorial and generally a solitary but social predator, requiring large contiguous areas of habitat, which support its requirements for prey and rearing of its offspring. Tiger cubs stay with their mother for about two years, before they become independent and leave their mother's home range to establish their own.

The tiger has a muscular body with powerful forelimbs, a large head and a tail that is about half the length of its body. Its pelage is dense and heavy, and colouration varies between shades of orange and brown with white ventral areas and distinctive vertical black stripes that are unique in each individual. Stripes are likely advantageous for camouflage in vegetation such as long grass with strong vertical patterns of light and shade. The tiger is one of only a few striped cat species; it is not known why spotted patterns and rosettes are the more common camouflage pattern among felids. A tiger's coat pattern is still visible when it is shaved. This is not due to skin pigmentation, but to the stubble and hair follicles embedded in the skin, similar to human beards (colloquially five o'clock shadow), and is in common with other big cats. They have a mane-like heavy growth of fur around the neck and jaws and long whiskers, especially in males. The pupils are circular with yellow irises. The small, rounded ears have a prominent white spot on the back, surrounded by black. These spots are thought to play an important role in intraspecific communication

Beauty of Nature



Tortoises have a shell to protect from predation and other threats. The shell in tortoises is generally hard, and like other members of the suborder Cryptodira, they retract their necks and heads directly backwards into the shell to protect them.


Most species of tortoises lay small clutch sizes, seldom exceeding 20 eggs, and many species have clutch sizes of only 1–2 eggs. Incubation is characteristically long in most species, the average incubation period are between 100 and 160 days. Egg-laying typically occurs at night, after which the mother tortoise covers her clutch with sand, soil, and organic material. 
The eggs are left unattended, and depending on the species, take from 60 to 120 days to incubate. The size of the egg depends on the size of the mother and can be estimated by examining the width of the cloacal opening between the carapace and plastron. The plastron of a female tortoise often has a noticeable V-shaped notch below the tail which facilitates passing the eggs. Upon completion of the incubation period, a fully formed hatchling uses an egg tooth to break out of its shell. It digs to the surface of the nest and begins a life of survival on its own. They are hatched with an embryonic egg sac which serves as a source of nutrition for the first three to seven days until they have the strength and mobility to find food. Juvenile tortoises often require a different balance of nutrients than adults, so may eat foods which a more mature tortoise would not. For example, the young of a strictly herbivorous species commonly will consume worms or insect larvae for additional protein.
The number of concentric rings on the carapace, much like the cross-section of a tree, can sometimes give a clue to how old the animal is, but, since the growth depends highly on the accessibility of food and water, a tortoise that has access to plenty of forage (or is regularly fed by its owner) with no seasonal variation will have no noticeable rings. Moreover, some tortoises grow more than one ring per season, and in some others, due to wear, some rings are no longer visible.
Tortoises generally have one of the longest lifespans of any animal, and some individuals are known to have lived longer than 150 years. Because of this, they symbolize longevity in some cultures, such as China. The oldest tortoise ever recorded, and one of the oldest individual animals ever recorded, was Tu'i Malila, which was presented to the Tongan royal family by the British explorer James Cook shortly after its birth in 1777. Tu'i Malila remained in the care of the Tongan royal family until its death by natural causes on May 19, 1965, at the age of 188. The record for the longest-lived vertebrate is exceeded only by one other, a koi named Hanako, whose death on July 17, 1977, ended a 226-year lifespan.
The Alipore Zoo in India was the home to Adwaita, which zoo officials claimed was the oldest living animal until its death on March 23, 2006. Adwaita (also spelled Addwaita) was an Aldabra giant tortoise brought to India by Lord Wellesley, who handed it over to the Alipur Zoological Gardens in 1875 when the zoo was set up. West Bengal officials said records showed Adwaita was at least 150 years old, but other evidence pointed to 250. Adwaita was said to be the pet of Robert Clive.
Harriet was a resident at the Australia Zoo in Queensland from 1987 to her death in 2006; she was believed to have been brought to England by Charles Darwin aboard the Beagle and then on to Australia by John Clements Wickham. Harriet died on June 23, 2006, just shy of her 176th birthday.
Timothy, a female spur-thighed tortoise, lived to be about 165 years old. For 38 years, she was carried as a mascot aboard various ships in Britain's Royal Navy. Then in 1892, at age 53, she retired to the grounds of Powderham Castle in Devon. Up to the time of her death in 2004, she was believed to be the United Kingdom's oldest resident.
Jonathan, a Seychelles giant tortoise living on the island of St Helena, may be as old as 188 years  or 184 years

Beauty of Nature

COVID -19 THE PANDEMIC...

All most whole world  has been locked down these days.. due to COVID-19  pandemic. We don't know 😒😒 what is going to be happen  ne...