This month's quiz questions on y blog are on Physical Science and Mathematics.

https://zenmischief.com/2026/04/april-quiz-questions-5/

#quiz #April #physics #science #blog #zenmischief

April Quiz Questions

Each month we’re posing six pub quiz style questions, with a different subject each month.
As always, they’re designed to be tricky but not impossible, so it’s unlikely everyone will know all the answers – just have a bit of fun.

Physical Science & Mathematics

  • How many faces does a Dodecahedron have?
  • What is the cube root of 64?
  • The Sun is (of course) the closest star to Earth. What star is the next closest?
  • Who discovered that the Earth revolves around the sun?
  • What is the chemical symbol for the element mercury?
  • How is the Earth protected from the effects of Solar Winds from the Sun?
  • Answers will be posted in 2 weeks time.

    #April #blog #physics #quiz #science #zenmischief

    The first of the month on my blog brings us some things which happened this month 100 years ago ...

    https://zenmischief.com/2026/04/april-1926/

    #1926 #April #otd #blog #zenmischief

    April 1926 | Zen Mischief

    April 1926

    Our look at some of the significant happenings 100 years ago this month.

    1. Birth. Anne McCaffrey, American-born Irish author (d.2011)

    2. Birth. Jack Brabham, Australian racing driver (d.2014)

    3. Birth. Gus Grissom, American astronaut (d.1967)

    6. Birth. Ian Paisley, Northern Irish politician (d.2014)

    7. An assassination attempt against Italian Fascist leader Benito Mussolini fails.

    9. Birth. Hugh Hefner, American founder of Playboy magazine (d.2017)

    21. Birth. Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom (d.2022)

    30. A state of emergency is proclaimed in the United Kingdom under the Emergency Powers Act 1920 on account of the “threat of cessation of work in Coal Mines”.

    #1926 #April #blog #otd #zenmischief

    This evening on the blog: Unblogged March, being things I've not otherwise written about.

    https://zenmischief.com/2026/03/unblogged-march-5/

    #March #personal #unblogged #blolg #zenmischief

    Unblogged March

    Some things from this month that I didn’t write about before.

    Sunday 1
    Very pleasant Sunday lunch with friends, including plenty of wine. Must repeat more often.

    Tuesday 3
    It was one of those days.

    Thursday 5
    Today my father would have been 106. It was warm and sunny, and I felt relaxed for once. It was nice to be able to go out in sandals and t-shirt and not get frozen.

    Friday 6
    After a lovely day yesterday, it was dull and rainy today. But then it is only early March. Although things are beginning to move. In the last few days I’ve seen the squirrel(s) going determinedly in and out of the drey in the top of our oldest silver birch – it was started last year by the magpies and the squirrels have taken it over and made a des res.
    Also this morning there were two crows in the top of the far silver birch, tearing twigs off it – so they’re obviously nesting somewhere nearby.

    Monday 9
    So they’re going to completely close the A40 Westway between White City and Marylebone for 6 weeks: late March to end April. That’s our only sensible car route into central London. It will be chaos and the traffic will be a nightmare across the whole of west London. Fortunately I’m not committed to any hospital appointments or the like in central London in that period; just a Saturday pub meet.

    Wednesday 11
    I hosted another good literary society Zoom talk this evening. We do always seem to get a good number attending and some interesting talks. Now I just need to wind down and recover my stamina for next week, which is full (and I mean full) of meetings and medical appointments.

    Thursday 12
    You go to the osteopath and you come home with your arm taped together with zombies.The tape is intended to take some of the strain off the tendons in my damaged wrist.

    Friday 13
    Blimey, that was a marathon! Packing orders for the literary society took both of us all afternoon, and the job still isn’t finished – I still have some of the postage and all the finance logs to complete. It doesn’t help that Royal Mail’s website is a complete nightmare to use; totally unfriendly and unresponsive so you end up doing things by the backdoor just to get the job done. And by tomorrow there will no doubt be more to do.

    Sunday 15
    Why are hearing aid batteries such a pain – apart from being such small fiddly things? This morning I had to put new batteries in my hearing aids as they’d died late yesterday. It took 8 batteries before I got two that worked for more than 10 minutes. It doesn’t seem to matter whether I buy better quality branded batteries, or use the cheap ones provided by the NHS. Yes, the batteries are always in date; I always clean new batteries to degrease them, don’t handle then with sticky fingers, and try to ensure the contacts are clean. Even so it is almost a certainty that at least one of a new pair will be effectively dead on arrival – but eight is I think a record. OK they cost only 20p-25p each, but it is such a waste, and a pain.

    Monday 16
    What a super view of the Kew Gardens Pagoda across Old Deer Park.

    Wednesday 18
    A glorious day. Wall-to-wall sunshine; blue sky; and warm. A trip up to central London for a routine hospital check-up, with all the cherries and magnolias in full bloom, and all the trees starting to break into leaf. Absolutely delightful.

    Thursday 19
    Hot water? We have none. Error code on the boiler. Boiler man supposed to come this afternoon; now coming tomorrow afternoon, allegedly. Well it was a good excuse to cancel my hospital appointment that I didn’t want to go to anyway and get a load of odd jobs (like filing) done.

    Friday 20
    Yes, the boiler man did come. He fixed the boiler (it sounded like a dead sensor) and did a service. It took about an hour. Then he emptied my wallet.

    Saturday 21
    Another glorious Spring day. And a really good doctor’s patient group meeting to go with it. Marred only by news that one of our members had died, although he was well over 80 and hadn’t been well for a couple of years.

    Sunday 22
    This orchid has been amazing. I bought it on 28 November from our local flower shop; it was in full flower with two or three unopened buds. It is still in full flower having opened those buds and dropped maybe four flowers. I know these phalaenopsis orchids normally flower for about six weeks but this is over 16 weeks with even more to come! Just incredible!

    Monday 23
    This morning there was one very secure and relaxed Boy Cat!

    Wednesday 25
    Sitting over lunch I realised just how well off we are for breeding wildlife. Just over lunch we had a pair of coal tits, a pair of great tits, and a solitary blue tit – three species of tit which are likely nesting within 100m or so. Add to that we have a pair of robins, a pair of woodpigeons and a pair of collared doves which must also be nesting close by; likewise the magpies. Some, at least will e nesting in the rampant ivy cover growing up our hawthorn and one of our silver birches. In addition we have at least a pair of squirrels with a drey in the top of the silver birch (see earlier). Plus our local foxes; and who knows where they have their den. And that’s what we know about; there’s likely more.
    I’ve also seen a report today that the peregrines nesting on Ealing Hospital (so maybe 5.5km away) now have four eggs; which likely means they’ll fledge one, two if they’re lucky.

    Friday 27
    Yes! Much to my surprise and delight we got some early English asparagus in today’s supermarket delivery. OK, so it will doubtless have been grown in polytunnels as it’s almost a month before the real season kicks off. But I’ll accept that for English asparagus, as it is the only type we’ll buy (it’s fresher and hasn’t been shipped across the world). So hopefully lots of good asparagus for the next three months or so.

    Tuesday 31
    After a hiatus earlier in the year (see earlier posts) in the last few days I’ve finally completed the next board of 50 Postcrossing cards (numbers 501 to 550). It’s as eccentric as usual!

    #blog #March #personal #unblogged #zenmischief

    This day on the blog, my monthly collection of links to items you'll wish you hadn't missed.

    https://zenmischief.com/2026/03/monthly-links-for-march/

    #biology #books #environment #history #links #physics #science #sexuality #blog #zenmischief

    Monthly Links for March | Zen Mischief

    Monthly Links for March

    Herewith my collection of links to items you may have missed, but didn’t want to. Again this month we have quite a few science and medicine articles, and not so much on the arts – well it all depends on what’s published and looks interesting.

    Science, Technology, Natural World

    Now tell me … would aliens do physics, and do it the way we do? [££££] [LONG READ]

    Beyond which, could aliens in another galaxy see dinosaurs on Earth? [££££]

    So what is time? Is it just a figment of our imaginations?

    A researcher has found Galileo’s handwritten notes in old astronomy text.

    The Eye of the Sahara. They think it’s a circle and it shouldn’t be there. [LONG READ]

    On the dying art of taxonomy and a love of midges.

    In Papua New Guinea scientists have found a tiny possum and a glider which were thought extinct for 6,000 years.

    Staying with discoveries, scientists have found three unknown geckos, and a lot else too, in Cambodia’s limestone caves.

    And still with new discoveries, some other scientists have found lots of strange new species (example below) deep off the coast of Britain’s Caribbean islands.

    Back on dry land apparently hedgehogs can hear very high frequency ultrasound.

    Apparently cacti could help explain one of the oddities of evolution.

    And finally in this section, an immunologist takes a hard look at the science behind the paraben panic.

    Health, Medicine

    Which brings us to the messier bits of the scientific arena …

    We all have skin mites, but should we worry? Are they a health issue or harmless passengers?

    Why do some people (like me) suffer from motion sickness, while others don’t.

    What does body odour actually say about you?

    Have you ever noticed that you breathe out of one nostril at a time. And have you ever stopped to wonder why?

    Researchers have a suspicion that a previously unknown virus, hiding in a bacterium, may be a trigger for colorectal cancer.

    And still wth gut bacteria, apparently couples share 30% of their gut bacteria. [I’m surprised it is so little – K]

    Sexuality & Relationships

    NSFW. So what does science tell us about why breasts send males wild? [LONG READ]

    Remaining with female anatomy for a minute, apparently the clitoris has migrated from the inside (in most species) to the outside (in humans).

    And so to male anatomy … with a look at the history of male member. [LONG READ]

    The myths, misconceptions and realities of how porn shapes sexual health.

    NSFW. Against which the evolution of erotic literature looks fairly tame.

    Environment & Ecology

    For once some good news: the Large Tortoiseshell butterfly (above) is no longer extinct in UK

    It’s definitely counterintuitive, but when the human population fell during the Black Death, plant diversity dropped as well.

    Social Sciences, Business, Law, Politics

    The UK is considering putting native fauna on its banknotes, so some experts have a say.

    Art, Literature, Language, Music

    Here’s an interesting interview with Ruth Scurr who wrote a biography of 17th century antiquarian John Aubrey (below).

    Apparently our least favourite word is all about womb wisdom.

    NSFW. A look at art and the vulva. [LOMG READ]

    History, Archaeology, Anthropology

    The theory of the population of the Americas has again been turned on its head by an archaeological site in Chile.

    King Harold’s movement of troops from the NE to fight the Battle of Hastings … was it (as has been assumed) the most heroic march ever, or did everyone travel by boat?

    London

    Matt Brown takes a look at some of the interesting and varied historical models of London. [LONG READ]

    And I’ll leave you this month with Matt Brown looking at bovine influences on London. [LONG READ]

    #biology #blog #books #environment #history #links #physics #science #sexuality #zenmischief

    Today's offering on my blog is this month's "Something to Think About":

    «Many animals probably need glasses, but nobody knows it and neither do they.»

    https://zenmischief.com/2026/03/something-to-think-about-this-month-15/

    #logic #thoughts #blog #zenmischief

    Something to Think About this Month | Zen Mischief

    Something to Think About this Month

    Each month I offer you something to think about to get the brain working. This month …

    Many animals probably need glasses,
    but nobody knows it and neither do they.

    #blog #logic #thoughts #zenmischief