Author: SeniorWomenWeb

  • Just add water: A Computer That Operates On Water Droplets

    Manu Prakash, an assistant professor of bioengineering at Stanford, and his students have developed a synchronous computer that operates using the unique physics of moving water droplets. Their goal is to design a new class of computers that can precisely control and manipulate physical matter.

    By Bjorn Carey

     The fluid-based chip resembles a Pac-Man maze. Individual water droplets infused with tiny magnetic nanoparticles are drawn in a new, predetermined direction every time the magnetic field flips. (Photo: Kurt Hickman)

    Computers and water typically don’t mix, but in Manu Prakash‘s lab, the two are one and the same. Prakash, an assistant professor of bioengineering at Stanford, and his students have built a synchronous computer that operates using the unique physics of moving water droplets.

    The computer is nearly a decade in the making, incubated from an idea that struck Prakash when he was a graduate student. The work combines his expertise in manipulating droplet fluid dynamics with a fundamental element of computer science — an operating clock.

    “In this work, we finally demonstrate a synchronous, universal droplet logic and control,” Prakash said.

    Because of its universal nature, the droplet computer can theoretically perform any operation that a conventional electronic computer can crunch, although at significantly slower rates. Prakash and his colleagues, however, have a more ambitious application in mind.

    “We already have digital computers to process information. Our goal is not to compete with electronic computers or to operate word processors on this,” Prakash said. “Our goal is to build a completely new class of computers that can precisely control and manipulate physical matter. Imagine if when you run a set of computations that not only information is processed but physical matter is algorithmically manipulated as well. We have just made this possible at the mesoscale.”

    The ability to precisely control droplets using fluidic computation could have a number of applications in high-throughput biology and chemistry, and possibly new applications in scalable digital manufacturing.

    The results are published in the current edition of Nature Physics.

    For nearly a decade since he was in graduate school, an idea has been nagging at Prakash: What if he could use little droplets as bits of information and utilize the precise movement of those drops to process both information and physical materials simultaneously. Eventually, Prakash decided to build a rotating magnetic field that could act as clock to synchronize all the droplets. The idea showed promise, and in the early stages of the project, Prakash recruited a graduate student, Georgios “Yorgos” Katsikis, who is the first author on the paper.

    Computer clocks are responsible for nearly every modern convenience. Smartphones, DVRs, airplanes, the Internet – without a clock, none of these could operate without frequent and serious complications. Nearly every computer program requires several simultaneous operations, each conducted in a perfect step-by-step manner. A clock makes sure that these operations start and stop at the same times, thus ensuring that the information synchronizes.

    The results are dire if a clock isn’t present. It’s like soldiers marching in formation: If one person falls dramatically out of time, it won’t be long before the whole group falls apart. The same is true if multiple simultaneous computer operations run without a clock to synchronize them, Prakash explained.

  • America’s Favorite Dish: Pyrex, Shaped Not Only By Designers and Engineers But By Women Consumers

    Editor’s Note: We broke a Pyrex baking dish — one of many we have, as well as mixing bowls — not long ago and have to replace it, because there is no better material to cook in, serve in and store  existing in the kitchen — today, after a century! The Corning Museum’s exhibition organized in celebration of 100th anniversary of Pyrex  features rare pieces and patterns, historic advertisements, cookbooks, and other Pyrex ephemera.Pyrex ad

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    The Corning Museum of Glass presents America’s Favorite Dish: Celebrating a Century of Pyrex, the first exhibition devoted to the iconic cookware. Organized in honor of the 100th anniversary of the 1915 invention of Pyrex, the exhibition will feature a wide range of objects and materials — from the first pie dish to the famed stackable measuring cup redesigned in 1983, as well as advertisements and ephemera, like product cookbooks and catalogs. The exhibition shows how this common household product, born out of scientific discoveries in glass, was shaped not only by designers and engineers but also by women consumers around the country. 

    “The history of Pyrex reflects the history of the United States in the 20th century,” said Kelley Elliott, co-curator of the exhibition and assistant curator of modern and contemporary glass at The Corning Museum of Glass. “As the country changed, so did Pyrex. New glass formulas were developed for evolving home technologies, marketing and sales strategies adapted to women’s changing roles in the home and workplace, and Pyrex patterns and advertisements changed to reflect fashions, décor, and world events from the past century.”

    First AdThe origins of Pyrex can be traced to the production of temperature-resistant borosilicate glass for railroad lantern globes by Corning Glass Works (now Corning Incorporated). This new glass was used for several products that required temperature-resistant glass.  Only a few years later, Corning began to explore using this glass for housewares, marketing their new brand of glass housewares as Pyrex. 

    At the same time Corning introduced Pyrex, home economics was emerging as a profession. From its introduction, Corning Glass Works embraced the idea of using these new domestic professionals to test and promote Pyrex. The company hired Sarah Tyson Rorer, an editor at Ladies’ Home Journal, and Mildred Maddocks of the Good Housekeeping Institute, to promote the brand through cooking demonstrations at department stores around the country. In 1929, Corning hired full-time home economist and scientist, Lucy Maltby, to manage the company’s new consumer services office. By 1931, Maltby had established a Test Kitchen at Corning Glass Works, designed to evaluate new products before they were put on the market. 

    The first advertisement for Pyrex by Corning; Good Housekeeping Magazine, October 1915

  • Between Two Worlds: Cruising the Turquoise Coast

    Ephesus Library
     




















     
    Rigorous. Able to walk five miles a day. Overnight on a small ship.” 

    Those are the requirements for my planned trip to Turkey. I’ve done that much walking last year in the Baltics and am excited about the plans to cruise along the Turquoise Coast. Yet there is something about the description that bothers me. Why are some of those walks called “hikes?”

    Facade of the Library of Celsus, Ephesus, Turkey
     
    I know that at age 77 I will be one of the older participants. But I can walk well, climb steps, and have good endurance.  I choose the trip, pay my fee, have my Turkish Visa and am  ready to join my group in Istanbul to begin my adventure. 
     
    It is raining in Istanbul on the first day of the tour. No matter, as we will be inside a mosque. Our tour guide sets a quick pace during our visit to the Hagia Sophia mosque, and though I trot along as fast as I can, I fall behind the group.  As we exit, I peer through the crowds trying to find the guide who has disappeared in a sea of umbrellas.  For a few tense minutes I am alone and lost. Finally our unhappy tour guide finds me and cautions us all not to ever get lost as we will slow up the entire group.   What a great beginning to my tour!
     
     I know that my travel mates are younger than I, but when did my walking pace become slower than those 60 year olds who regularly out distance me ? At home I often have to  call out “passing on your left” when I walk the hallways of my apartment building. I trot briskly with my little dog and out walk many residents.  I follow a nature trail along a creek, climb the steps on the hilly property, go to tap and Jazzercise dance classes and swim twice a week. My world is an active one. 
     
    We arrive in Ephesus, the Greco-Roman town on the Aegean coast, and our energetic guide says “It’s not a hike, just a walk-through.”  The approach to the upper town is a gentle hill and I walk along comfortably. On our descent to the lower town to see the partially renovated library are some rocks and marble-like stones. Anxious to see this remarkable site I depend on my well-fitting shoes to grip the slippery surface. But with my head down, I feel I am missing the views. So I stop occasionally to look up … and see my group disappear in the distance. And now I have to negotiate those steps that look innocent but have a drop deeper than my knees can tolerate. I pray (to the local gods) that I don’t fall too far behind. 
     
    I breathe a sigh of relief when I think of the upcoming  *gulet boat cruise that should give me a break. The wooden yacht-like vessel has a sail and our small group speaks of  swimming in the turquoise waters. But after cruising awhile in calm waters, we approach a shoreline. Our guide informs us that we will hike up the steep hill in front of us to see the five ancient churches along the trail as it climbs up to the light house.   I sigh and unpack my trekking poles that I have resisted doing until now. The dingy takes us to the base of the trail. And as fast as I can clamber over the edge, I look up at the others disappearing from view. 
     
    I have to make a decision. Should I buy into the new world of hiking straight up hill on broken stones and rock?  Or should I rescue my relaxed world by taking a photograph of those churches with a zoom lens and then settling down with a cappuccino in a local cafe to wait for the group to return?

  • Testing a Hypothesis: Poor Sleep Could Be an Early Warning Sign or Biomarker of Alzheimer’s

     Yasmin Anwar

    Painting of woman sleeping
    Andrew Stevovich, Woman With  Autumn Leaves, 1994, 36″ x 72″, oil.  Private Collection. Wikimedia Commons
     
     
     
    Sleep may be a missing piece in the Alzheimer’s disease puzzle.

    UC Berkeley scientists have found compelling evidence that poor sleep — particularly a deficit of the deep, restorative slumber needed to hit the save button on memories — is a channel through which the beta-amyloid protein believed to trigger Alzheimer’s disease attacks the brain’s long-term memory.

    “Our findings reveal a new pathway through which Alzheimer’s disease may cause memory decline later in life,” said UC Berkeley neuroscience professor Matthew Walker, senior author of the study  published today in the journal Nature Neuroscience.

    Excessive deposits of beta-amyloid are key suspects in the pathology of Alzheimer’s disease, a virulent form of dementia caused by the gradual death of brain cells. An unprecedented wave of aging baby boomers is expected to make Alzheimer’s disease, which has been diagnosed in more than 40 million people, one of the world’s fastest-growing and most debilitating public health concerns.

    The good news about the findings, Walker said, is that poor sleep is potentially treatable and can be enhanced through exercise, behavioral therapy and even electrical stimulation that amplifies brain waves during sleep, a technology that has been used successfully in young adults to increase their overnight memory.

    “This discovery offers hope,” Walker said. “Sleep could be a novel therapeutic target for fighting back against memory impairment in older adults and even those with dementia.”

    The study was co-led by UC Berkeley neuroscientists Bryce Mander and William Jagust, a leading expert on Alzheimer’s disease. The team has received a major National Institutes of Health grant to conduct a longitudinal study to test their hypothesis that sleep is an early warning sign or biomarker of Alzheimer’s disease.

    Heavy deposits of the toxic protein, beta-amyloid, shown in red may be paving the way for Alzheimer's disease (Photo courtesy of Bryce Mander and Matthew Walker)Heavy deposits of the toxic protein, beta-amyloid, shown in red in the brain on the right, are linked to poor sleep and may be paving the way for Alzheimer’s disease. A brain benefiting from deep sleep brain waves and an absence of beta-amyloid is shown on the left. (Photo courtesy of Bryce Mander and Matthew Walker)

    While most research in this area has depended on animal subjects, this latest study has the advantage of human subjects recruited by Jagust, a professor with joint appointments at UC Berkeley’s Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, the School of Public Health and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

  • It Was Here a Minute Ago

    Lock bridge

     

    by Rose Madeline Mula

    Most people have time to watch TV, read trashy novels, meander through malls, gossip on the phone, nap, daydream …  Not me.  I can’t indulge in such frivolous pursuits.  I’m too busy looking for things I’ve misplaced. 

     Love Padlocks affixed at the N Seoul Tower, Seoul, South Korea with a sign prohibiting people throwing their key away. Optx, Wikipedia

    In the time I’ve spent searching for lost keys, glasses, my pearl earrings, my favorite chili recipe, I could have written one of those trashy novels other people find time to read.  Instead, I can only dash off this short article  — which is a real exercise in futility since I won’t have time to send it to any publishers.  I’ll be too busy looking for something.  Like my car. 

    Yes, my car.  I’m always losing it … on city streets, parking lots, and once in front of my own house.  I used to rent a garage from the neighbors across the street, you see.  One night I came home late, and instead of driving into the garage, I parked smack up against a stairway that leads up an embankment to my house.  The next morning, a slave to habit, I headed for the garage.  No car!  It must have been stolen!  I rushed back across the street to call the police, but something stopped me.  My car.  It was blocking the stairs.  I had actually had to squeeze past it a few minutes earlier when I went to the garage. 

    I thought no one could ever top that.  But, of course, someone did.  At church last Sunday the priest’s homily concerned memory lapses.  He told about a friend who had driven to Canada for a vacation.  After a few days, he flew home — and promptly reported his car stolen because it wasn’t there. 

     I know my ‘stolen’ car story is true.  It happened to me.  But this parable from the pulpit is hard to believe.  Still, would a priest make something up?  Sure.  Some even write trashy novels.  (Sorry, Father Greeley). 

    I’m walking on thin ice here.  I don’t want to hurt any feelings in high places.  I rely on people at the top, mainly Saint Anthony and Saint Jude, when I’m really desperate to find something.  Scoff if you will.  Whenever I ask, they always come through and lead me directly to whatever had been missing.  So what’s my problem?  Why do I spend hours searching for misplaced miscellany?  Why don’t I just call on Tony or Jude at the outset?  Because I feel guilty diverting them from more important matters.  Like listening to all those people begging for help in finding a cure for cancer, world peace, lost hope … 

    By comparison, locating that travel size bottle of shampoo that I bought for my last trip, for example, is ridiculously trivial.  I sure would like to know what happened to it though.  I clearly remember taking it out of the shopping bag and putting it on my bed, along with everything else I was packing.  Then, somehow, it disappeared.  I stripped the bed.  I checked the floor around the bed, under the bed —even the bedsprings.  That was six months ago, and it hasn’t turned up yet.  Not a trace.  Maybe the dog stole it.  But if she did, she never used it;  she still looks grungy.  Baffling. 

    It’s not surprising that when describing me people often use the phrase, “She’s lost it.”  They’re right.  In more ways than one.

    ©Rose Madeline Mula for SeniorWomen.com

    Editor’s Note: Rose Mula’s most recent book, Grandmother Goose: Rhymes for a Second Childhood is now available as an e-book on Amazon.com for the Kindle and at BarnesandNoble.com for the Nook at $2.99; the paperback edition is still available for $9.95. Her books of humorous essays, The Beautiful People and Other Aggravations, and If These Are Laugh Lines, I’m Having Way Too Much Fun can also be ordered at Amazon.com or through Pelican Publishing (800-843-1724).
  • NCI-MATCH Precision MedicineTrial: Determining whether targeted therapies for people whose tumors have specific gene mutations will be effective regardless of their cancer type

    Cancer institutes

    Investigators for the nationwide trial, NCI-MATCH: Molecular Analysis for Therapy Choice, announced  at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) in Chicago that the precision medicine trial will open to patient enrollment in July. The trial seeks to determine whether targeted therapies for people whose tumors have specific gene mutations will be effective regardless of their cancer type. NCI-MATCH will incorporate more than 20 different study drugs or drug combinations, each targeting a specific gene mutation, in order to match each patient in the trial with a therapy that targets a molecular abnormality in their tumor. The study was co-developed by the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National Institutes of Health, and the ECOG-ACRIN Cancer Research Group, part of the NCI-sponsored National Clinical Trials Network (NCTN). It is being led by ECOG-ACRIN.

    NCI-MATCH is a phase II trial with numerous small substudies (arms) for each treatment being investigated. It will open with approximately 10 substudies, moving to 20 or more within months. The study parameters for the first 10 arms are being sent to 2,400 participating sites in the NCTN for review in preparation for patient enrollment beginning in July. The exact date for the opening of patient enrollment will be decided shortly after the ASCO meeting. Additional substudies are in development and will be added over time as the trial progresses.

    The NCI-MATCH trial has two enrollment steps. Each patient will initially enroll for screening in which samples of their tumor will be removed (biopsied). The samples will undergo DNA sequencing to detect genetic abnormalities that may be driving tumor growth and might be targeted by one of a wide range of drugs being studied. If a molecular abnormality is detected for which there is a specific substudy available, to be accepted in NCI-MATCH patients will be further evaluated to determine if they meet the specific eligibility requirements within that arm. Once enrolled, patients will be treated with the targeted drug regimen for as long as their tumor shrinks or remains stable. Overall, trial investigators plan to screen about 3,000 patients during the full course of the NCI-MATCH trial to enroll about 1,000 patients in the various treatment arms.

    Adults 18 years of age and older with solid tumors or lymphomas that have advanced following at least one line of standard systemic therapy, or with tumors for which there is no standard treatment, will be eligible. Each arm of the trial will enroll up to 35 patients. The trial’s design calls for at least a quarter of the 1,000-patients enrolled to involve people with rare types of cancer. 

    “NCI-MATCH is a unique, ground-breaking trial, said Doug Lowy, M.D., NCI acting director. “It is the first study in oncology that incorporates all of the tenets of precision medicine. There are no other cancer clinical trials of this size and scope that truly bring the promise of targeted treatment to patients whose cancers have specific genetic abnormalities. It holds the potential to transform cancer care.

    Since many gene mutations in tumors are infrequent or unique, screening for individual mutations is not cost-effective or efficient in clinical trials. Instead, NCI-MATCH will use advanced gene sequencing techniques to screen for many molecular abnormalities at once. Large numbers of patient tumors will need to be screened because most gene mutations occur in 10 percent or less of cancer patients. Most patients are expected to have one, or at most two, treatable mutations in their tumors. By having multiple treatments available for these genetic abnormalities in a single clinical trial, several different study drugs or drug combinations can be evaluated simultaneously.

    “In addition to exploring very fundamental aspects of cancer biology and therapy, this trial will bring cutting-edge molecular analysis and a large portfolio of targeted therapy treatment regimens to patients being treated at oncology practices large and small,” said ECOG-ACRIN study chair, Keith T. Flaherty, M.D., a medical oncologist at Massachusetts General Hospital and associate professor, Harvard Medical School, both in Boston.

  • Envy: One Sin, Seven Stories On The Hudson, Fairfield and Westchester


    Adrien Broom. Envy and Temptation, 2015. Digital print

    Envy, the most corrosive of the seven deadly sins, makes its appearance at the Hudson River Museum from June 6 to September 26, 2015.  Envy is interpreted by multimedia artist Adrien Broom in photographs and life-sized scenes from fairy tales, the stories of passion, evil and redemption that have thrilled us for centuries.

    Unlike the sins of lust or gluttony, there seems little pleasure taken from envy. Evil stepmothers, plotting kings, and vainglorious queens of fairy tales are alive with desire for what others have, just as alive as the tales themselves, the stories that reflect our own experiences and desires.

    One thing universal in all fairy tales is their colorful recording of the strivings and errors of others and then the moral, the right way to act that emerges from the fairy tale. Connivers for riches or for the love of someone promised to another are sure to be ruined by evil envy just as the person envied will win out, get the prince, win the princess.  Once Upon a Time is the inviting opener to the story the lays before us on the page but the fairy tale has another dimension, eerily similar to the today’s Google Search, where we can see into the lives of others without being seen, not on a page, but on a screen. 

    Snow White’s Evil Queen, the great archetype of envy appears in two guises at the heart of the exhibitions — the White Queen and the Black Queen. She wears custom gowns, one white, one black, and appears in two separate photographs. First, wearing the white gown (standing before her mirror and still morally redeemable) and next, in black (holding a blood-red heart and consumed by envy). 

    A Web of Envy ensnares the Queen, both white and black, embodied as heads locked together in a dance, the Dance of Death.  Cocooned and caught within the poisonous Web, too, are famous fairy tale symbols made real as objects: Pieces of gold and mirrors, objects that connote the age-old envious thirst for beauty, wealth, and power.  Artistic signifiers of envy are seen all through the exhibition.  In particular, an illuminated plinth showcases a hand-blown glass apple that appears in Broom’s photographs.

    Adrien Broom lives and works in Brooklyn and is an artist with a penchant for the bizarre and beautiful. She took a degree in computer animation from Northeastern University and studied fine art in Florence and art history in London. Broom’s photographs have been featured in numerous exhibitions in Connecticut and New York City, as well as in the American Dreamers exhibition at the Palazzo Strozzi, Florence in 2012. The exhibition Envy is organized by the Hudson River Museum and curated by Bartholomew Bland, the Museum’s Deputy Director.

  • Shaming Tax Delinquents; A Rotating File of Scofflaws

    By Elaine S. Povich, Stateline

    Almost two-thirds of the states are punishing tax delinquents with a digital version of the Colonial practice of locking lawbreakers in stocks set up in the village square.California State Seal

    It turns out publishing the names of tax scofflaws and the amounts they owe on the Internet works spectacularly well, bringing in millions to states eager for the revenue. In many cases, just the threat of being on the list is enough to get delinquent taxpayers to pay.

    The technique is the flip side of tax amnesty, in which delinquent taxpayers are offered the chance to come forward voluntarily to escape high interest or penalties. The two processes are similar, however, in that states usually work out a payment plan for taxpayers.

    The states that use public lists of delinquent taxpayers range from largely liberal ones such as California and New York to more conservative states such as South Dakota and Alabama.

    In Vermont, the latest state to adopt the strategy, the legislature last year approved publishing the names of the top 100 individual and top 100 business tax delinquents. The state estimated it would collect $800,000 of an estimated $175 million in delinquent taxes in fiscal year 2015, which will end June 30.

    The program has been even more successful than expected: Since the list was posted in January, Vermont has collected $1.3 million, according to Gregg Mousley, deputy tax commissioner. He predicted a total take of $1.5 million by the end of the fiscal year.

    Under its plan, Vermont compiles the two lists, and then notifies the scofflaws by letter that their names are about to be published. According to Mousley, the letter often is incentive enough to prompt payment.

    “At least half of the $1.3 million was collected before we put them on the list,” he said. “The threat of being on the list was a very good motivator.” Mousley predicted, however, that the pace of collections will slow and that the state will collect less in subsequent years because some of the buzz about the program will die down.

    Mousley noted a quirk that also has been documented by researchers — the more money tax scofflaws owe, the less likely they are to be shamed into paying.

    “When you are talking about large debts, you do tend to get some people who just don’t care,” he said. “It’s just not worth playing off their $450,000 or $1.2 million debt. Down on the lower levels, you get more of the Average Joe who is concerned.”

    The effectiveness of the shaming tactic has exceeded expectations in other states, too.

    Wisconsin officials estimated that publicly naming delinquents would allow them to recoup about $1.5 million annually when they first posted the information in January 2006. Instead, they’ve recovered between $11 million and $31 million annually, according to Stephanie Marquis, communications director at the Department of Revenue. Wisconsin collected $12 million in fiscal 2014 and has garnered $10.8 million so far in fiscal 2015, she said.

    The Price of Shame

    In their groundbreaking paper “Shaming Tax Delinquents: Theory and Evidence from a Field Experiment in the United States,” researchers Ugo Troiano and Ricardo Perez-Truglia found that the “optimal policy” for collecting tax debts was shaming. But the price of the shame varied among taxpayers, according to Troiano. 

    “First, the price of the shame is not fixed,” he said in an interview. “If I am on the list for $200, it’s relatively easy to get off the list and not be shamed. But if the price is $10,000, it costs more to get off the list and it’s harder.

  • On Tanzanian Safari: The Guides’ Big Five Wildlife Lessons

    A sequel to Safari To The Serengeti For a Birthday Trip, Both Hair Raising and Life TransformingA Vender's Tiop to Hillary Clinton

    By Sonya Zalubowski*

    Here’s some of what I learned about African animals from the guides on my game-viewing safari to Tanzania:

    We saw all of the ‘Big Five’ on our safari. I never knew exactly what they were and what the term meant, ‘the five most dangerous animals to hunt on foot in Africa’. They include the Cape buffalo, the elephant, the leopard, the lion and the now rare black rhino, hunted for its horn, prized in Asia as a medicine. That last, the rhino, was so far away the only way we could tell that was what we were seeing was through magnification in our cameras.

    Photograph 2015 ©Sonya Zalubowski

    The wildebeest, comical-looking animals that they are with their higher front haunches, big heads, and striped sides, don’t as individual animals set any intelligence records. We saw two herds milling about near our tents one early morning, as though they were trying to decide the direction where they might find the water and new grass they sought. Suddenly, the herds took off, one group going the right way toward the river down below our camp while the other herd headed back in a string in the very direction from which they’d just come. Later, a short  distance  away, we found the errant herd milling around again, looking at the lead wildebeest — any one of the herd can step up to the job — and wondering, doubtless, where there might be a zebra to save them.The wildebeests can smell the rains from miles and miles away, the very water that the zebra need even more frequently than wildebeest for their existence. That’s when the two species’ instinctual smarts kick in — and the wildebeest and zebra work together to accomplish their migration.

     The wildebeest have also found a way as a species to thwart all the predators lying in wait for them. They give birth to their calves on the plains in February, always around high noon when most of those predators are seeking shade somewhere else. Even if some are around, the numbers of dropped calves are so huge that no predator could consume them all. The timing also coincides with just the right amount of minerals in the grass necessary for their offspring and those of the zebra, who give birth one to two months earlier.

     The awkward looking but graceful giraffes, their small heads and long necks moving forward like a crane when the animal walks, have a symbiotic relationship with their main food source, the tall flat-topped acacia trees dotted all over the savannahs of northeastern Tanzania. The tree manages to have small leaves, even in dry times, protecting them from most scavengers with their long prickly thorns. However, the giraffes’ agile tongue manages to work between those obstacles to take the leaves. But, when the tree has had enough of the browsing, it unleashes its secret weapon: a chemical that is distasteful to the animal, driving it to another part of the tree, and eventually away all together. In that way, both manage to survive, the tree and the giraffe.

    Hippos – officials consider adding them to the Big Five as number six — must keep their skin moist at all times or it will crack and they may die of infection. The massive animals do that by staying in a river or watering hole all day long when the sun is out, choosing to go out on land during the cool nights to eat the grass that keeps them alive. They also excrete a red gel that covers the parts of their backs still exposed in a river. They huddle together in the water, ocasionally yawning and exposing their giant teeth. At night, you can hear them on the land, grunting and wheezing and honking as they browse.Safari companies in Tanzania

    We saw one big male lion, the likely patriarch of his pride, with a female flirting around him at his vantage point near a river. It was springtime in Africa after all. A short time later, when the big male was on his own, reclining with his big dark ruff of a mane at the same spot, another female and her male friend crossed in front of him. The female seemed very determined as she and her suitor took off. Pretty soon, we saw them in hot pursuit of that other female. Our guides said she must have been from outside the pride and the female now in pursuit wanted her out of there. The entourage made a big circle crossing right in front of our game jeep. We watched them disappear into the nearby woods, only to see them once again rushing in front of the dominant male on the other side of the river. The threesome circled once again in front of us and disappeared into the woods. The next day, we saw that same female back with the dominant male, doing what animals do in springtime.

  • Sonya Zabulowski

    Sonya Zalubowski is a journalist whose work took her all over the globe.  Her specialty was Eastern Europe. As a correspondent first for the Miami Herald and later the Chicago Sun-Times Field news service and Seattle Post-Intelligencer, she had a front seat at history. Sonya’s reporting covered the spectrum, from the rise of Solidarity in Poland to the fall of the Berlin Wall.
     
    After returning to the Pacific Northwest and family, she worked for Newsweek magazine and The Oregonian newspaper.   She has studied fiction writing with author Tom Spanbauer’s Dangerous Writers and has published several short stories, including in the Alimentum food journal, VoiceCatcher and BellaOnline
     
    Sonya’s latest direction is a return to travel and travel writing and her blog can be read at seniortravelswithsaz.blogspot.com
     
     
    By Sonya Zalubowski*. The red dust of Tanzania’s iron-rich soil still clings to my athletic shoes. I’ve been loathe to clean them, wanting in this small fashion …
    www.seniorwomen.com/…/safari-to-the-serengeti-for-a-birthday-trip