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Showing posts with the label Scotland

Stealing feathered creatures take clothing skinny dippers

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These red kites merit an award.  The brave fowls have been taking garments from skinnydippers in Angus, Scotland, and afterward concealing them.  For any individual who's ever inadvertently gotten a quick look at a stripped individual swimming, this sounds like equity.  The swimmers at the Scottish excellence spot had been left confounded by the vanishing of their clothing.  Be that as it may, the secret was explained when a gamekeeper went over a natty home lined with appropriated jeans and stolen socks.  'What was truly intriguing was to see socks and clothing from a mainstream swimming spot really in the home and the encompassing trees,' said Dave Clement, head guardian at the Gannochy Estate.  'It was similar to the kites were tidying up the glen.'

Loch Ness Monster just hitched a lift home on a UFO?

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Envision going on a creature chase and winding up discovering a UFO  That is virtually what happened to Alan and Anna Betts when they went to Loch Ness from York.  They needed to discover Nessie, however when they took a photo of the loch,  they saw a weird shape that we accept could really be a few UFOs, floating over the surface of the water.  Obviously their Akita puppy,  Yuka, detected something wasn't right and as any thriller buff knows, this implies inconvenience.  Alan, 48, said he was generally exceptionally wary about UFOs yet couldn't offer a clarification for the spooky snaps  What other confirmation do we require? 

Scotland To Trial Cannabis Based Medicine For Children

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Epidiolex is a treatment based on cannabidiol (CBD), which is a non-psychoactive compound found in the cannabis plant. In previous cases reported in the US, it has been successfully used to treat epilepsy and experts are hoping that it will also help children in Scotland with seizures they cannot control. CBD oil is already available as a nutritional supplemenet, but there could be a much more useful advantage to the substance on the horizon. Many children with serious forms of epilepsy do not respond to the medications that we currently have available. We need new means of treating these conditions so that we can give back some quality of life to these children and their families. Dr Richard Chin, director of the Muir Maxwell Epilepsy Centre Some patients with Dravet syndrome, a rare form of epilepsy, will be given Epidolex, while others will be administered a placebo to measure the effects of the new medicine. Depending on the success of the trials, this could be the start o