77 years old. Married 54 years. Six children, 22 grandchildren. Entrepreneur and founder of 8 businesses. Author of 9 books. Motivational speaker with 2,800 appearances.
Hope floats. Swans’ nests do not—unless they get a little help from someone determined to make sure their precious cargo has a chance to hatch.
Rob Adamson, who lives and works at Jones Boatyard in St Ives, England has been a longtime spectator to the world’s “unluckiest swans” efforts to become parents.
For a decade, he looked on sadly as the poor birds’ eggs fell prey to poaching foxes and rising waters. This year as the Great Ouse began to flood, he knew he couldn’t stand by and let another clutch perish on his watch.
“You’re not supposed to interfere, but it had got to the point where they were all going to die,” Adamson told the BBC.
During the night, Adamson fashioned a makeshift raft and moored it with a line to the bank. It was well after dark when he gingerly lifted the nest and its occupants (eight eggs and one hissing mama) to safety, all under the wary eye of Papa swan. (GoodNewsNetwork.com)
Let’s hear it for our British friend, Rob Adamson!
It takes 13 weeks to complete boot camp at Marine Corps Recruit Depot, San Diego, where young recruits become hardened US Marines. The three-month course is considered one of the most difficult in any branch of the US military.
But before this year, male and female recruits never trained side-by-side.
This week, after grinding through three months of training and team building, the San Diego depot’s first gender-integrated class of Marines graduated after completing boot camp together. The historic first was motivated by the National Defense Authorization Act, signed in 2020, which required the Marines to begin training male and female recruits together before 2028.
Until recently, the two training depots were largely segregated by gender: Companies of women trained at the recruit depot in Parris Island, South Carolina, and men trained either in South Carolina or San Diego, but not concurrently with the women recruits. (CNN)
Progress!
If they’re going to fight side-by-side, they should be trained side-by-side!