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20 Amazing Honey Bee Facts!



1. The honey bee has been around for millions of years.

2. Honey bees, scientifically also known as Apis mellifera, are environmentally friendly and are vital as pollinators.

3. It is the only insect that produces food eaten by man.


4. Honey is the only food that includes all the substances necessary to sustain life, including enzymes, vitamins, minerals, and water; and it's the only food that contains "pinocembrin", an antioxidant associated with improved brain functioning.

5. Honey bees have 6 legs, 2 compound eyes made up of thousands of tiny lenses (one on each side of the head), 3 simple eyes on the top of the head, 2 pairs of wings, a nectar pouch, and a stomach.

6. Honey bees have 170 odorant receptors, compared with only 62 in fruit flies and 79 in mosquitoes. Their exceptional olfactory abilities include kin recognition signals, social communication within the hive, and odor recognition for finding food. Their sense of smell is so precise that it could differentiate hundreds of different floral varieties and tell whether a flower carried pollen or nectar from metres away.

 7. The honey bee's wings stroke incredibly fast, about 200 beats per second, thus making their famous, distinctive buzz. A honey bee can fly for up to six miles, and as fast as 15 miles per hour.

8. The average worker bee produces about 1/12th teaspoon of honey in her lifetime.

9. A hive of bees will fly 90,000 miles, the equivalent of three orbits around the earth to collect 1 kg of honey.

10. It takes one ounce of honey to fuel a bee's flight around the world.

11. A honey bee visits 50 to 100 flowers during a collection trip.

12. The bee's brain is oval in shape and only about the size of a sesame seed, yet it has remarkable capacity to learn and remember things and is able to make complex calculations on distance travelled and foraging efficiency.

13. A colony of bees consists of 20,000-60,000 honeybees and one queen. Worker honey bees are female, live for about 6 weeks and do all the work.

14. The queen bee can live up to 5 years and is the only bee that lays eggs. She is the busiest in the summer months, when the hive needs to be at its maximum strength, and lays up to 2500 eggs per day.

15. Larger than the worker bees, the male honey bees (also called drones), have no stinger and do no work at all. All they do is mating.

16. Each honey bee colony has a unique odour for members' identification.

17. Only worker bees sting, and only if they feel threatened and they die once they sting. Queens have a stinger, but they don't leave the hive to help defend it.
18. It is estimated that 1100 honey bee stings are required to be fatal.

19. Honey bees communicate with one another by "dancing".

20. During winter, honey bees feed on the honey they collected during the warmer months. They form a tight cluster in their hive to keep the queen and themselves warm. 

12 Fish To Stay Away From

Yes fish, no fish, red fish…OK fish?

Our oceans have become so depleted of wild fish stocks, and so polluted with industrial contaminants, that trying to figure out the fish that are both safe and sustainable can make your head spin. "Good fish" lists can change year after year, because stocks rebound or get depleted every few years, but there are some fish that, no matter what, you can always decline.
The nonprofit Food & Water Watch looked at all the varieties of fish out there, how they were harvested, how certain species are farmed, and levels of toxic contaminants like mercury or PCBs in the fish, as well as how heavily local fishermen relied upon fisheries for their economic survival. These are the 12 fish, they determined, that all of us should avoid, no matter what.

1. Imported catfish

Why it's bad: Nearly 90% of the catfish imported to the US comes from Vietnam, where use of antibiotics that are banned in the US is widespread. Furthermore, the two varieties of Vietnamese catfish sold in the US, Swai and Basa, aren't technically considered catfish by the federal government and therefore aren't held to the same inspection rules that other imported catfish are.
Eat this instead: Stick with domestic, farm-raised catfish, advises Marianne Cufone, director of the Fish Program at Food & Water Watch. It's responsibly farmed and plentiful, making it one of the best fish you can eat. Or, try Asian carp, an invasive species with a similar taste to catfish that's out-competing wild catfish and endangering the Great Lakes ecosystem.

2. Caviar

Why it's bad: Caviar from beluga and wild-caught sturgeon are susceptible to overfishing, according to the Food and Water Watch report, but the species are also being threatened by an increase in dam building that pollutes the water in which they live. All forms of caviar come from fish that take a long time to mature, which means that it takes a while for populations to rebound.
Eat this instead: If you really love caviar, opt for fish eggs from American Lake Sturgeon or American Hackleback/Shovelnose Sturgeon caviar from the Mississippi River system.

3. Atlantic cod

Why it's bad: This one was difficult to add to the "dirty dozen list," says Cufone, because it is so vital to the economic health of New England fishermen. "However, chronic mismanagement by the National Marine Fisheries Service and low stock status made it very difficult to recommend," she says. Atlantic cod stocks collapsed in the mid-1990s and are in such disarray that the species is now listed as one step above endangered on the International Union for Conservation of Nature's Red List of Threatened Species.
Eat this instead: The good news, if you love fish 'n' chips (which is nearly always made with cod), is that Pacific cod stocks are still strong and are one of Food and Water Watch’s best fish picks. 

4. American eel

Why it's bad: Also called yellow or silver eel, this fish, which frequently winds up in sushi dishes, made its way onto the list because it's highly contaminated with PCBs and mercury. The fisheries are also suffering from some pollution and overharvesting.
Eat this instead: If you like the taste of eel, opt for Atlantic- or Pacific-caught squid instead.

5. Imported shrimp

Why it's bad: Imported shrimp actually holds the designation of being the dirtiest of the "dirty dozen," says Cufone, and it's hard to avoid, as 90% of shrimp sold in the U.S. is imported. "Imported farmed shrimp comes with a whole bevy of contaminants: antibiotics, residues from chemicals used to clean pens, filth like mouse hair, rat hair, and pieces of insects," Cufone says. "And I didn't even mention things like E. coli that have been detected in imported shrimp." Part of this has to do with the fact that less than 2% of ALL imported seafood (shrimp, crab, catfish, or others) gets inspected before its sold, which is why it's that much more important to buy domestic seafood. 
Eat this instead: Look for domestic shrimp. Seventy percent of domestic shrimp comes from the Gulf of Mexico, which relies heavily on shrimp for economic reasons. Pink shrimp from Oregon are another good choice; the fisheries there are certified under the stringent Marine Stewardship Council guidelines.

6. Atlantic flatfish

Why it's bad: This group of fish includes flounder, sole, and halibut that are caught off the Atlantic coast. They found their way onto the list because of heavy contamination and overfishing that dates back to the 1800s. According to Food & Water Watch, populations of these fish are as low as 1% of what's necessary to be considered sustainable for long-term fishing.
Eat this instead: Pacific halibut seems to be doing well, but the group also recommends replacing these fish with other mild-flavored white-fleshed fish, such as domestically farmed catfish or tilapia. 


7. Atlantic salmon (both wild-caught and farmed)

Why it's bad: It's actually illegal to capture wild Atlantic salmon because the fish stocks are so low, and they're low, in part, because of farmed salmon. Salmon farming is very polluting: Thousands of fish are crammed into pens, which leads to the growth of diseases and parasites that require antibiotics and pesticides. Often, the fish escape and compete with native fish for food, leading to declines in native populations. Adding to our salmon woes, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is moving forward with approving genetically engineered salmon to be sold, unlabeled, to unsuspecting seafood lovers. That salmon would be farmed off the coast of Panama, and it’s unclear how it would be labeled. Currently, all fish labeled "Atlantic salmon" come from fish farms.  
Eat this instead: Opt for wild Alaskan salmon now, and in the event that GE salmon is officially approved.

8. Imported king crab

Why it's bad: The biggest problem with imported crab is that most of it comes from Russia, where limits on fish harvests aren't strongly enforced. But this crab also suffers from something of an identity crisis, says Cufone: "Imported king crab is often misnamed Alaskan king crab, because most people think that’s name of the crab," she says, adding that she's often seen labels at supermarkets that say "Alaskan King Crab, Imported." Alaskan king crab is a completely separate animal, she says, and it's much more responsibly harvested than the imported stuff.
Eat this instead: When you shop for king crab, whatever the label says, ask whether it comes from Alaska or if it's imported. Approximately 70% of the king crab sold in the U.S. is imported, so it's important to make that distinction and go domestic.

9. Shark

Why it's bad: Problems associated with our eating too many sharks happen at all stages of the food chain, says Cufone. For one, these predatory fish are extremely high in mercury, which poses threats to humans. But ocean ecosystems suffer, too. "With fewer sharks around, the species they eat, like cownose rays and jellyfish, have increased in numbers," Cufone says. "And the rays are eating—and depleting—scallops and other fish." There are fewer of those fish in the oceans for us to eat, placing an economic strain on coastal communities that depend on those fisheries.  
Eat this instead: Among the recommendations for shark alternatives are Pacific halibut and 

10. Orange Roughy

Why it's bad: In addition to having high levels of mercury, orange roughy can take between 20 and 40 years to reach full maturity and reproduces late in life, which makes it difficult for populations to recover from overfishing. Orange roughy has such a reputation for being overharvested that some large restaurant chains, including Red Lobster, refuse to serve it. However, it still pops up in grocer freezers, sometimes mislabeled as "sustainably harvested." There are no fisheries of orange roughy that are considered well-managed or are certified by the Marine Stewardship Council, so avoid any that you see.
Eat this instead: Opt for yellow snapper or domestic catfish to get the same texture as orange roughy in your recipes.

11. Atlantic Bluefin Tuna

Why it's bad: A recent analysis by The New York Times found that Atlantic bluefin tuna has the highest levels of mercury of any type of tuna. To top it off, bluefin tuna are severely overharvested, to the point of reaching near-extinction levels, and are considered "critically endangered" by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. Rather than trying to navigate the ever-changing recommendations for which tuna is best, consider giving it up altogether and switching to a healthy, flavorful alternative, such as Alaska wild-caught salmon.
Eat this instead: If you really can't give up tuna, opt for American or Canadian (but not imported!) albacore tuna, which is caught while it's young and doesn't contain as high levels of mercury.

12. Chilean Sea Bass

Why it's bad: Most Chilean sea bass sold in the US comes from fishermen who have captured them illegally, although the US Department of State says that illegal harvesting of the fish has declined in recent years. Nevertheless, fish stocks are in such bad shape that the nonprofit Greenpeace estimates that, unless people stop eating this fish, the entire species could be commercially extinct within five years. Food & Water Watch's guide notes that these fish are high in mercury, as well.
Eat this instead: These fish are very popular and considered a delicacy, but you can get the same texture and feel with US hook-and-line–caught haddock.

14 Ways Honey Can Heal

The fossil record tells us honeybees have been around for 150 million years or more. No one knows when we discovered the treasure hidden in their hives, but paintings of beekeepers lining the walls of a cave in Spain prove that we have been practicing the art of beekeeping for at least 7,000 years. Honey is versatile. It has been prized as a sweetener, as medicine, as an offering for the gods, as currency, and as a symbol of love. In Greek mythology, for example, Cupid dips his arrows in honey before aiming them at our hearts.
According to ayurveda, honey is the nectar of life. Because it is created from the essence of a flower’s sex organs, it has a natural affinity with reproductive tissue. It can also heal sore throats, colds, coughs, ulcers, burns, and wounds. And when ingested with a healing herb (like ashwagandha), honey travels to the deepest tissues, transporting the chemical properties and the subtle energies of medicine to the cellular level.
Ayurveda says that raw honey is medicine, but cooked honey is a slow poison. Why? In its natural form, honey is rich in minerals, vitamins, enzymes, amino acids, and carbohydrates. But heat strips honey of most of its nutritional value and transforms the honey molecules into a non-homogenized glue that adheres to mucous membranes and clogs subtle energy channels. Cooked honey creates cellular toxicity and may lead to immunological dysfunction. It can also clog the arteries and lead to atherosclerosis (thickening of the arteries), hampering blood flow to the vital organs. So as a general rule, honey should never be cooked, and nothing should be cooked with honey. Instead, add raw honey to yogurt, warm tea, or spread it on bread or toast.
These days, most honey sold commercially has been heated and should be avoided. Look for the words “raw” or “unpasteurized” on honey at a health-food store.. But the purest form of honey is local and raw because it helps prevent (or calm) seasonal allergies and is full of prana (vital energy). Check your local farmers’ market, and if you live in the country, keep an eye out for roadside honey stands.
Honey, Help Me!
Ayurvedic texts are full of honey-based remedies for a wide range of ailments.
For obesity, high blood pressure, and/or high cholesterol, drink a cup of hot water with a teaspoon of honey and 5 to 10 drops of apple cider vinegar early in the morning daily. (Ayurvedic texts say honey scrapes fat and cholesterol from the body’s tissues.)
To relieve rheumatoid arthritis symptoms, take 1 teaspoon of honey with 200 mg powdered guggulu daily.
To heal oral ulcers, apply 1 teaspoon honey and a pinch of turmeric to canker sores, mouth ulcers, or sores on the tongue. This mixture will generate saliva and draw out toxins; spit it out to speed the healing process. For internal ulcers, mix a cup of warm milk with a teaspoon of honey twice daily.
To heal a wound, dress it daily with sterilized gauze brushed with honey; dispose at night.
For the common cold, mix 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon with 1 teaspoon honey and eat two or three times a day.
To clear your sinuses, take a mixture of 1 teaspoon each of fresh ginger juice and honey two or three times a day.
For asthma, eat a mixture made of 1/2 teaspoon bay leaf powder, 1/4 teaspoon pippali, and 1 teaspoon of honey two or three times daily.
For nausea, vomiting, and/or indigestion, mix one part lemon juice with one part honey. Dip your index finger into this mixture and lick it slowly twice daily.
For anxiety, drink 1 cup of orange juice with 1 teaspoon of honey and a pinch of nutmeg powder twice daily.
To help reduce the craving for cigarettes, chew small pieces of pineapple with 1/2 teaspoon of honey before smoking.
For abdominal pain, take a mixture of 1/4 teaspoon ground bay leaf, 1/4 teaspoon ajwan (celery seeds), and 1 teaspoon of honey before lunch and dinner daily.
For chronic fever, make a tea of 1 teaspoon of holy basil (tulsi) and 1 cup of hot water. Add 1/4 teaspoon of black pepper powder and 1 teaspoon of honey. Take two or three times a day.
To aid poor circulation, mix 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 1/4 teaspoon trikatu, and 1 teaspoon honey in 1 cup of hot water. Steep for 10 minutes. Take twice a day.
To stop hiccups, mix 1 teaspoon honey and 1 teaspoon castor oil in a container. Dip your index finger into the mixture and lick it. Repeat every 10 minutes until your hiccups stop. (Hiccups are due to spasm of the diaphragm, and these ingredients in equal proportion are anti-spasmodic.)
Did you know?
To make one pound of honey, a swarm of honeybees flies about 24,000 miles and visits 3 to 9 million flowers.
Please Note
Raw honey is not recommended for infants under the age of 18 months, the very elderly, or others with compromised immune systems.

9 Food Pairings that Fight Disease

Over the last few decades, there has been a mountain of research on the healing powers of individual compounds in foods, such as lycopene, vitamin D and essential fatty acids. Yet, scientists are now realizing that while an antioxidant like sulforaphane in broccoli can be a potent cancer fighter on its own, combining it with another compound such as selenium found in chicken, fish and Brazil nuts, will give you even more impressive disease-fighting results.
“Food synergy ties into the prevention of so many of our chronic illnesses, including heart disease, stroke, cancer and diabetes,” says California-based dietitian Elaine Magee, MPH, RD, author of Food Synergy: Unleash Hundreds of Powerful Healing Food Combinations to Fight Disease and Live Well (Rodale, 2008).
You don’t have to eat in a fancy restaurant presided over by a professional nutritionist to enjoy the benefits of food synergy, either. While researchers haven’t even begun to untangle all the science behind the synergy, these “power couples” can easily come together in your own kitchen — and prove that, when it comes to our diets, one plus one can easily equal three.
Tea & Lemon
Green tea is at the top of the functional-drink heap, promoting wellness through antioxidants called catechins, which can aid in reducing the risk of both heart disease and cancer. But if we want a bigger health boost from our tea, we should be adding a splash of citrus, says Mario Ferruzzi, PhD, associate professor of food science at Purdue University.
“In test tube and animal studies, we discovered that ascorbic acid, such as that in citrus including lemon, orange and lime juice, helps stabilize catechins in the gut and increase absorption into the bloodstream,” he says. Looking for a warm-weather alternative? Brew up a batch of iced tea and add slices of lemon.
Other research suggests that pairing green tea with capsaicin (the compound that gives chili peppers their pow) can increase satiety and potentially aid in weight loss. The tag team of green tea and lycopene, present in watermelon, tomatoes and pink grapefruit, works synergistically to help men dodge prostate cancer. 
Bananas & Yogurt
Yogurt and other fermented foods, such as kefir, tempeh and sauerkraut, are teeming with beneficial live bacteria called probiotics that keep our immune and digestive systems strong. But, like all living creatures, they need something to munch on to thrive. Enter inulin.
Found in bananas, asparagus, Jerusalem artichokes (sunchokes), onion, endive, garlic, leeks, wheat germ and artichokes, inulin is a nondigestible carbohydrate that acts as a food source for intestinal bacteria. “It behaves as a prebiotic to enhance probiotic growth,” says Georgianna Donadio, PhD, program director for the National Institute of Whole Health in Massachusetts. In addition to boosting the friendly critter count in your gut, inulin increases the intestinal absorption of bone-strengthening calcium. 
Calcium & Sun
If calcium could speak to vitamin D, it would say, “You complete me.” That’s because the sunshine vitamin increases the amount of calcium that gets absorbed in the intestines, says Magee. Ergo, you can down all the calcium-rich foods you want, such as tofu, yogurt, sesame seeds, broccoli and cheese, but without a steady supply of calcium’s wingman, your bones won’t reap the rewards.
European scientists recently reported that adequate daily consumption of both calcium and vitamin D was linked to a 20 percent drop in the rates of hip fracture in individuals 47 or older. Harvard scientists found that subjects with the highest calcium intake and blood vitamin-D levels had reduced insulin secretion, which may offer protection from type 2 diabetes. And another Harvard study determined that premenopausal women with the highest intakes of both vitamin D and calcium had a 30 percent lower risk of developing breast cancer.
Your best bet for getting enough vitamin D is to spend a minimum of 10 minutes a day in the sunshine (with a decent amount of skin exposed), but you can also benefit from good food sources, like cod liver oil, salmon and sardines. The latest recommendations from respected experts like Andrew Weil, MD — 2,000 IU of daily vitamin D — suggest that you may also need a daily vitamin-D supplement. 

Salads & Avocado (or Nuts)
Find naked salads unbearably boring? Then, by all means, top them with vinaigrette or a sprinkle of toasted pine nuts. Similar studies from Ohio State University and Iowa State University showed that adding healthy fats like nuts, extra-virgin olive oil or avocado to your salad bowl can increase the amount of beneficial antioxidants — such as lutein in leafy greens, lycopene in tomatoes and red peppers, and beta-carotene in carrots — your body absorbs.
“Fat slows down the digestion process, which gives the plant compounds in the same meal a better chance of being absorbed,” says Magee. Fat also helps fat-soluble antioxidants, such a vitamin E, dissolve in the intestine so they can be passed into the bloodstream more efficiently. After absorption, says Magee, these antioxidants may help vanquish some of the free radicals in our bodies, which can damage DNA and trigger diseases and hasten aging.
In fact, a 2008 Journal of Nutrition study reported that those who ate more alpha- and beta-carotenes — compounds in fruits and vegetables that help bring out their stunning yellow, orange or red hues — had roughly a 20 percent lower risk of dying from heart disease over a 15-year period than those who took in less. 

Beans & Raw Peppers (Iron + Vitamin C)
Long before food synergy became part of our lexicon, scientists knew that iron and vitamin C form a unique relationship. Iron comes in two guises: heme iron, the type found in animal products such as beef, fish and poultry, and a form called non-heme, found in plant foods like beans, whole grains and spinach.
On its own, the body absorbs up to 33 percent less non-heme iron than heme iron, says Donadio, “but you can increase its absorption two- to threefold by consuming it with the vitamin C in whole fruits and vegetables.”
So how does vitamin C pull off this nifty trick? Donadio says it likely participates in the production of an enzyme responsible for changing non-heme iron to a more easily absorbed form called ferrous iron, so you get more mileage, for example, out of the iron in your bean salad. Iron is necessary for producing hemoglobin, which transports oxygen to muscles and the brain. Low levels can lead to fatigue, weakness and poor concentration. Vegans and vegetarians should take particular heed of this food pairing to help keep iron stores replete. Premenopausal women are also particularly vulnerable to iron deficiency due to losses through menstruation.

Burgers & Bananas (Salty Foods + Potassium)
 
By all accounts, the American diet is tantamount to a salt lick. According to Centers for Disease Control data, the average person in the United States consumes an elephantine 3,436 milligrams of sodium daily, double the amount most people should ingest. For some, this is a recipe for cardiovascular woes because of a salt-induced rise in blood pressure, which raises stroke and heart-attack risk. But potassium, which encourages the kidneys to excrete sodium, can counter the harmful effects of sodium overload. So, when noshing on salty dishes or sodium-packed canned soups, frozen meals and fast-food fare, make sure to load up on potassium-plump fruits, vegetables and legumes at the same time. 

Brown Rice & Tofu (Carbs + Protein)
 
If you emerge from the gym with a rapacious appetite, make sure to quell it with a healthy dose of both protein and carbohydrates. “Carbohydrates and protein together after a workout work jointly to speed up muscle recovery by enhancing the blood insulin response,” says Molly Kimball, a sports dietitian at the Elmwood Fitness Center in New Orleans. “Higher insulin levels will supply muscles with a faster and larger dose of repair nutrients such as glucose and amino acids.”
The outcome of this perfect pairing is less muscle soreness and better fitness results. Postworkout, Kimball recommends carbohydrate and protein combinations such as a turkey sandwich, yogurt and fruit; brown rice and grilled chicken or tofu; and pasta with meat sauce. 

Wine & Fish
 
Merlot and salmon may indeed be a perfect pairing. A 2008 study published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition reported that European men and women who consumed as little as 4 ounces of wine a day had higher blood levels of the omega-3 fats found in fish such as trout, salmon and sardines. The same results were not found for beer or spirits.
Scientists believe that heart-chummy polyphenol antioxidants in wine such as resveratrol might be responsible for the improved absorption of omega-3 fats, which have been shown to protect against myriad maladies, including depression, diabetes, mental decline and stroke.
Prefer chardonnay over merlot? According to a 2008 Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry study, white wine contains its own distinct polyphenol compounds that give it the same heart-protective qualities as red. You can enjoy wine with your fish or even use it to marinate your catch of the day.
Both on food labels, and in nutritional reporting, the tendency has been to trumpet one nutrient at a time. But food scientists have uncovered thousands of bioactive phytochemicals in fruits, vegetables and whole grains, says Magee, “and now they are discovering that these often work better in pairs or groups.”
What we’re learning, she says, is that extracting and isolating nutrients doesn’t work very well: “The power is in the packaging, and pills with single nutrients just can’t match the healing power of whole foods.”
The lessons of food synergy, it seems, are the same commonsense lessons we’ve been hearing for a long time now: For good health, eat a variety of whole foods — and eat them together. 

Herbs & Olive Oil + Meat
Good news for grilled-meat lovers: Scientists at Kansas State University discovered that adding rosemary and other herbs to meat cooked at high temperatures reduces the formation of suspected carcinogenic compounds called heterocyclic amines (HCAs) by as much as 70 percent. Antioxidants in extra-virgin olive oil have also been found to help fend off cancer-promoting HCAs. Similarly, marinating meat such as steak and chicken in an antioxidant-rich spice or wine blend has been shown to be a very effective method of reducing HCAs. 


Not-So-Good Pairings:

Alas, some couples were never meant to be. Here are three common food pairings that fail to bring out the best in either party.
Milk and Tea
A recent study in the European Heart Journal suggests you shouldn’t follow the lead of the Brits and spike your tea with milk. The scientists discovered that adding moo juice to black tea blunted its cardiovascular benefits. Casein protein in milk may bind up antioxidants in tea, rendering them less available for absorption.
Milk and Chocolate
A few studies have also found that milk can reduce absorption of flavonoids in cocoa. These flavonoid antioxidants are believed to be behind the numerous health perks, such as reduced blood pressure, attributed to dark chocolate. So choose dark chocolate over milk chocolate when possible.
Coffee and Oatmeal
“Tannins present in coffee, tea and wine are known to interfere with iron absorption, particularly the iron found in plant-based foods like oatmeal, beans and leafy greens,” says Jarod Hanson, ND. The upshot is this: If you’re prone to iron deficiency, you might want to avoid the cup of joe with your morning oats.

10 Surprising Uses for Honey Outside the Kitchen

 

1. Shine up your hair: Add 1 teaspoon honey to a quart of warm water, dilute, then soak your hair in the mixture post-shampoo (no, you don't need to rinse it, since it's already diluted). You can also use straight honey on the ends of your 'do to calm frizzies. 

2. Facewash: Just mix a small dollop of honey with a bit of warm water in the palm of your hand, then massage over face, working up and out. 

3. Fight parasites: A drink made of equal parts honey, vinegar and water is a well-known cure for "backpacker's stomach." 

4. Clean cuts: Honey is naturally antimicrobial (that's why it literally lasts forever; it has been found in tombs and such). So slather a bit on scrapes, minor cuts and basic burns, always using a clean implement, of course. Lightly cover the wound - basically you can use honey like a natural antibiotic cream. Skeptical? Here's proof - scientists are actually using the bee product as a potential future source of antibacterial proteins. 

5. Get rid of acne: Dab a bit of straight honey on your pimple, and let it sit for a half-hour, then gently rinse off. Repeat the next day; this works best for whiteheads. 

6. In the bath: If you are out of fancy bath salts and oils, add 3 tablespoons of honey and 2 tablespoons of olive oil to your bathwater; it will moisturize and condition skin, and smell lovely too. 

7. Anxiety relief: Whether mixed in with a calming tea (try chamomile, fennel or lavender, or a mix thereof), on it's own, or added to oatmeal at the start of the day, honey has long been used in India to quell nervousness, especially the kind associated with the stomach. Dr. Oz recommendes a blendof honey, ginger and lemon juice. 

8: Make lip balm: It's as simple as combining beeswax, olive oil, cocoa butter and honey (and an essential oil if you like). Recipes online abound. 

9: Fight insomnia: If you don't have much trouble falling asleep, but tend to wake up in the middle of the night, it could be totally natural (for centuries many people had a two-sleep schedule) or it could be due to stress hormones, adrenaline and cortisol, being out of tune. A bit of salted honey (you need both sweet and salty) can help reset these hormones and get you back to sleep. You only need a small amount (this shouldn't be a snack!), so use a teaspoon or egg spoon to keep yourself from overindulging. 

10. Soothe a sore throat or cough: In clinical studies, honey has been shown to be as effective at calming coughs as over-the-counter cough medicines. Take it straight, or mix honey with a bit of coconut oil and lemon juice for additional benefits. 

7 Reasons to Choose a Plant-Based Diet


Going plant-based doesn't necessarily mean you have to. Our definition of a plant-based diet allows for modest amounts of fish and lean meat. But more importantly, choosing a diet heavy in fruits and veggies may help ward off chronic diseases and keep you svelte in 2013 and in years to come. U.S. News has gathered a few reasons to go the plant-based route.

Diabetes prevention

Roughly 370 million people are living with diabetes, and according to the International Diabetes Federation, that number is expected to soar upwards of 550 million by 2030. Type 2 diabetes is entirely preventable, and plenty of research suggests a plant-based diet can help ward off the disease.


Hypertension control


Lots of research, including some from the Harvard School of Public Health, suggests a diet loaded with fruits and veggies can lower blood pressure. About 1 in 3 American adults suffers from high blood pressure, meaning they're at higher risk for heart disease and stroke--two leading causes of death in the United States.

Heart health


Harvard researchers tracked the health habits of about 110,000 people for 14 years, and found that the higher folks' intakes of fruits and vegetables, the lower their chances of developing cardiovascular disease. Specifically, people who averaged eight-plus servings of fruits and veggies a day were 30 percent less likely to have a heart attack or stroke, compared to those who had less than 1.5 daily servings.


Weight loss

There's plenty of research suggesting that vegetarians tend to consume fewer calories, and thus weigh less and have lower body mass indexes than non-vegetarians. While following a plant-based diet doesn't necessarily mean going full-blown vegetarian, opting largely for fruits, veggies, and whole grains in lieu of meat will likely leave you feeling fuller on fewer calories.

Fiber intake


Fiber keeps you "regular" by aiding in digestion and preventing constipation. Plus, it may also lower cholesterol and blood sugar levels. Following a plant-based diet means chowing down on loads of fruits and veggies, which are packed with fiber. Just one cup of raspberries or cooked green peas amounts to eight ounces of fiber or more, according to the Mayo Clinic.


Vision value


As you may know, the Vitamin A in carrots aids night vision. Your eyes might also thank you for a plant-based diet rich in spinach, kale, corn, squash, kiwi, and grapes. The lutein and zeaxanthin pigments in these foods are thought to help prevent cataract and macular degeneration.

Skin care


Cutting back on animal products also means skipping much of their saturated fats, which are notorious for clogging pores. Plus, many of the vitamins, pigments, and phytochemicals in fruits and veggies contribute to healthy skin. The lycopene in tomatoes, for example, helps protect your skin from sun damage, and the Vitamin C in sweet potatoes smooths wrinkles by stimulating the production of collagen.

Ballet dancers striking amazing poses (20pics)


















Marriage the secret to good health, study finds

For centuries couples have pledged to stay together in sickness and in health but now an academic study has found that a happy marriage could itself be the secret to good health.
Marriage the secret to good health, study finds


Researchers in the US charted the ups and downs of more than 2,000 married people over a 20-year period and found a strong correlation between being happily married and in good health.

The team, made up of academics based in Utah and Nebraska, used information gathered during what was the longest study of its kind ever conducted into marital strife, from 1980 to 2000.

Participants were regularly questioned in detail about the state of their relationship and how they felt their spouse treated them.

But throughout they were also asked to rate their general health.

The team analysed the findings breaking the participants into two groups depending on age.
Although the younger people usually started off with better health, those who hard more tempestuous marriages later appeared to suffer poorer health.

Equally those who had overcome marital problems also appeared to see an improvement in their health.

Cody Hollist, an associate professor of child, youth and family studies at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, who co-authored the study, published in the Journal of Marriage and Family, said although marital happiness and health appeared to go hand-in-hand it was still unclear how they were influencing each other.

“There is no way to tease out what caused what,” he said.

“But it is clear that marital quality and health run in tandem.”

Nevertheless the researchers concluded that couples who spoke of planning specific activities strengthen their marriage – such as so-called “date nights” – appeared not only to have stronger relationships but also better health on average.

Equally the team found evidence that relieving existing ailments also appeared to ease a couple’s marriage problems.

He said: "As health worsens, do marriages stay stable?

"What we found is that there's a relationship between health and happiness for both age groups.

"If their health is good, their happiness is up."

One finding which most surprised the researchers, led by Richard Miller of Brigham Young University in Utah, was that those who began the study with what appeared to be the most troubled marriages which nevertheless survived, also reported improved health over time.

“Stressful circumstances can be a wake-up call for some as it can motivate healthier and more adaptive pathways of behaviour over time,” said Mr Hollist.

The findings appear to back up the results of a study published last month which concluded that married people who undergo major heart surgery are three times more likely to survive than those who are unmarried.

Earlier this week new figures from the Office for national Statistics also pointed to a link between marriage and healthier lifestyles showing that married people are less than half as likely to smoke than unmarried people – even if they are in a stable long-term relationship.

In pictures: Vladimir Putin - man of action (19pics)


 The Russian President is not one to shy away from a photo opportunity, especially one that shows what a man of action he is. Here: Putin aims at a target with a replica of the AK-47 assault rifle in a shooting gallery while attending a Russian Railways' research center exhibition in Moscow, 2012
 A holiday in Siberia is just made for a spot of hunting/fishing/shooting. Putin rides a horse during his vacation outside the town of Kyzyl in Southern Siberia.
 Putin fishes in the headwaters of the Khemchik River in the Tuva region of Siberia
 Putin hunting in the foothills of the Sayan Mountains in Republic of Tuva
 Vladimir Putin on horseback in the Karatash area during his working trip to Khakassia, in 2010.
 Putin holds a Kalashnikov machine gun during his visit to the Kalashnikov manufacturing plant in Izhevsk, Russia.
 Vladimir Putin swims butterfly while traveling in the mountains of the Siberian Tyva region
 Russian President Vladimir Putin holds a pistol during his visit to a newly-built headquarters of the Russian General Staff's Main Intelligence Department (GRU) in Moscow, 2006. DMITRI ASTAKHOV/AFP/Getty Images
 Acting President Vladimir Putin, wearing a blue helmet and an oxygen mask, sits in Su-27 fighter jet after his flight into the war zone in Chechnya, in Grozny, Monday, March 20, 2000. Putin took the back seat in the two-man Su-27 fighter jet, which landed at the Severny airport just north of the Chechen capital Grozny after flying in from the southern city of Krasnodar.
Putin attempts to bend a frying pan during his visit to the summer camp of the pro-Kremlin youth group Nashi at Lake Seliger.
 Putin prepares for an arm wrestle during his visits to the Seliger youth educational forum
 Putin climbs on the wall during his visit to the Seliger youth educational forum near Lake Seliger in the Tver region of Russia, 2011.
 Putin with a Semi Automatic .45 at the Construction Design Bureau, Moscow, 2009
 Putin submerges on board Sea Explorer 5 bathyscaphe near the isle of Gogland in the Gulf of Finland, visiting the frigate Oleg which sank in 1869.
 Putin aims at a whale with an arbalest to take a piece of its skin for analysis on the Olga Bay
 Putin embarks on a dive to an underwater archaeological site at Phanagoria on the Taman Peninsula, an ancient Greek Black Sea site
 Putin tries a sport gun at the national championship for ski races and biathlon for athletes with locomotor and vision disorders in the Laura sports complex outside Sochi
 Putin shows a hold to a young judo wrestler at the Regional Judo Center at the Arena Sports Complex in the Siberian city of Kemerovo
Putin shakes hands with Mixed Martial Art (MMA) heavyweight fighter Fedor Emelianenko of Russia after his victory over Jeff Monson of the US in Moscow, 2011

8 Drugs You Don’t Have to Take


COUGHING
Instead of … cough syrup
Try … A dose of honey

Think about how long it takes honey to travel down the inside of a plastic bear squeeze bottle, out its head, and onto your toast. Well, that same thick, viscous quality makes honey a perfect substitute for cough syrup. Both do essentially the same thing—coat the throat, relieving irritation.

In fact, a recent study in the Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine found that a spoonful of honey was better than dextromethorphan (DM), the active ingredient in Robitussin DM and other cough suppressants, at halting hacking in children. Honey should work equally well in adults, says study author Ian Paul, M.D., an associate professor of pediatrics and public health sciences at Penn State University. The best part: You won't feel dizzy or light-headed—one of the side effects of taking DM.

Your Pharma-Free Rx … Try buckwheat honey, a darker variety that contains more antioxidants than lighter shades do. (Antioxidants may help prevent heart disease and cancer, scientists believe.) Take 2 teaspoons when you want to quiet your cough—at night or before a meeting, for example—but don't try to squelch the cough altogether. Productive daytime coughing can help loosen and move mucus out of your lungs.

LOWER-BACK PAIN
Instead of … NSAIDs or acetaminophen
Try … The warrior yoga pose

What's the first thing you do when your back starts hurting? You probably stretch and twist your torso in an instinctive attempt to work out the kinks. Your body is onto something: In a study in the Annals of Internal Medicine, a therapeutic yoga technique known as viniyoga reduced peoples' chronic back pain enough for them to decrease or even eliminate pain medications. And in so doing, they spared themselves the potential liver or gastrointestinal damage that can result from long-term reliance on NSAIDs (such as ibuprofen and aspirin) or acetaminophen. After all, chronic back pain can persist for 3 months or longer after an acute episode, possibly leading sufferers to stay on these medicines longer than the labels recommend.

Your Pharma-Free Rx … The people in the study spent 75 minutes once a week doing the cobra, wheel, bridge, supine butterfly, swimmer's posture, and warrior, among other yoga poses. Not only will you increase your strength and flexibility with these poses, but you may also become more aware of movement habits you've slipped into that caused the pain to begin with, says study author Karen Sherman, Ph.D., a senior investigator at Group Health Research Institute, in Seattle. To see how to do these moves, go to MensHealth.com/yoga.

FREQUENT HEADACHES
Instead of … Painkillers
Try … Fewer pills, more sleep

Who would've thought that taking medicine to stop pain could actually perpetuate the pounding? This can happen with certain headache "remedies." "A medication-overuse headache can occur when people who have frequent headaches take painkillers 15 or more days a month," says Peter Goadsby, M.D., director of the headache center at the University of California at San Francisco. Doctors don't fully understand why it happens, but it appears to occur most often when people take compound analgesics—that is, medicines with multiple active ingredients, such as Excedrin (which contains aspirin, acetaminophen, and caffeine) or Tylenol with codeine.

Your Pharma-Free Rx … Avoid the compound meds, and scale back using any pain pills as much as you can tolerate, Dr. Goadsby says. Strive for no more than two a week. Then focus on your sleep as a way of heading off headaches. The areas of your brain that contribute to your cranial pain are also involved in sleep, he says. By sticking to a strict—i.e., consistent—sleep schedule, you may be able to desensitize those trouble spots.

MILD DEPRESSION
Instead of … Antidepressants
Try … Retraining your brain

To fight depression, consider battling the negativity head-on. That's the thinking behind a DIY treatment known as mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT). With this technique, you focus on controlling your reactions to certain thoughts and emotions—you learn to see them objectively rather than allowing them to sweep you away. In recent studies, MBCT proved to be as effective as antidepressants in preventing relapse, and more effective at enhancing quality of life. "When people stop taking antidepressants—and they often do because of side effects—they're vulnerable to relapse," says Willem Kuyken, Ph.D., of the mood disorders center at the University of Exeter. "MBCT gives people skills that help keep them well."

Your Pharma-Free Rx … One MBCT technique, the "3-minute breathing space," is designed to help end the swirl of negative thoughts in your head. You start by focusing on how your body feels as well as on what you're thinking and feeling right now. Then you shift your attention to your breathing to bring yourself further into the present moment. Finally, you expand your awareness back out to your entire body while deliberately breathing in and out. If that sample feels effective for you, ask your doctor to recommend a therapist trained in MBCT.

INSOMNIA
Instead of … Sleep aids
Try … A few late nights

Chronic toss-and-turner? Just give up. Go flip on Letterman. That's because cutting back your restless hours by delaying your bedtime could ultimately point you toward more solid slumber—and keep you off prescription sleep aids, says Lee Ritterband, Ph.D., an associate professor at the University of Virginia's department of psychiatry. That's good, because drugs like Ambien aren't permanent solutions. "Sleep medicines commonly lose their effectiveness over time because your body can grow used to them," says Men's Health advisor W. Christopher Winter, M.D., medical director of the Martha Jefferson Sleep Medicine Center in Charlottesville, Virginia.

Your Pharma-Free Rx … If you usually go to bed at 10 p.m. but don't nod off until 1 a.m., try to hit the sack at 1 a.m.—but wake up the same time you ordinarily would, Ritterband suggests. "You're creating some sleep deprivation, of course," he says, "but that makes it easier to fall and stay asleep on subsequent nights." After a few weeks of this, start pushing your bedtime up in 20-minute increments to see if you can maintain the gains.

CONSTIPATION
Instead of … Laxatives
Try … Turning on the waterworks

Your colon moves. It twitches and tightens to keep things rolling down the line. But your colon can slow down or absorb too much liquid (for any number of reasons, including insufficient fiber in your diet, inactivity, dehydration, or certain meds), making waste linger and dry up. That's constipation. Americans spend about $725 million a year on over-the-counter laxatives, according to the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases. Frequent users typically need to increase the dose over time because their bowels become dependent on the medicine. (Some laxatives create small bowel spasms to help things along.)

Your Pharma-Free Rx … Eliminate the laxative habit by downing two full glasses of water before breakfast. Liquids add fluid to the colon and bulk to stools, making them softer and easier to pass. While you're at it, eat a banana or an apple. "The bulk provided by their fiber stimulates the bowel to move in a rhythmic way—hence the phrase 'bowel movement,' " says Dr. Abramson. "Why would you use something to irritate your bowel—which is what many laxatives do—when you can simply eat fruit instead?"

ASTHMA and ALLERGIES
Instead of … Daily medicines
Try … An air filter

Instead of trying to change the way your body responds to irritants—that's how most asthma and allergy meds work—go after the irritants directly. Whole-house air filters and even portable units can significantly reduce the triggers that cause your wheezing, chest tightness, and coughing, says Ted Myatt, Sc.D., a senior scientist at the consulting firm Environmental Health and Engineering, near Boston. His 2008 study in Environmental Health found that high-efficiency in-duct air filters reduced cat allergens by up to 55 percent and fungal spores by up to 75 percent. Your doctor can tell you whether home filtering can minimize your need for an OTC or prescription drug.

Your Pharma-Free Rx … A whole-house air filtration system has a big price tag—$900 to $1,200 for installation into existing ductwork. Or you can place a portable HEPA air filter in your bedroom, where you spend most of your time at home. Myatt's study found that a portable unit like the $115 Hunter QuietFlo HEPA 30090 still does the job in a single-room scenario.

FLU
Instead of … Antiviral meds
Try … Jacking up the humidity

Wage your flu battle at the hardware store, not the pharmacy. Your weapon of choice: a humidifier. "The airborne influenza virus survives longer in drier air," Myatt says. His newest study in Environmental Health found that a humidifier in a bedroom produced significant reductions in flu-virus survival. Given the disputed effectiveness of the popular antiviral drug Tamiflu—a 2009 study was underwhelmed by it—this ounce of prevention has obvious appeal.

Your Pharma-Free Rx … If the flu is going around, place a portable humidifier in your bedroom and set it for 50 percent humidity, Myatt says. Better-quality models come with microbe-fighting UV lights or silver in their filters. We like the Air-O-Swiss 7135 humidifier, at $170. Bonus: It'll keep your skin from becoming itchy and scratchy as well.