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Weston Museum to showcase local businesses every Saturday


Published:
4:00 PM June 4, 2021
  
Weston Museum will showcase homegrown businesses to support the town s economy following the pandemic.
- Credit: Weston Museum
Weston Museum will hold a weekly showcase to highlight independent businesses in the area, beginning tomorrow (Saturday).
Small business Saturday will promote the town s homegrown businesses.
Each week a handful of traders will set up stalls in the museum s courtyard and its services supervisor, Matthew Holden, revealed who will feature in its inaugural event.
Each week up to four local traders will showcase their products at the event.
- Credit: Weston Museum
Mr Holden told the Mercury: This is for the community and hopefully builds footfall after a hard year. ....

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Tattoo therapy


For a long time, the idea of a tattoo was only seen and accepted by limited social groups. On a historical level, you’d only find them on rock stars and musicians, professional athletes, and other people who lived outside the norm. During the 1990s’, tattoos were regularly associated with strong themes of rebellion, youth, originality, and standing out from the crowd. If you liked punk rock or grew up idolizing NBA players, chances are the tattoos they had were also viewed in high regard. But a lot has changed. Now, it is more common with every day people. In fact, tattoos are used to illustrate definitive moments. Montrealers are no exception. ....

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International horse movements play role in spread of strangles, researchers find


Horsetalk.co.nz
International horse movements play role in spread of strangles, researchers find
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A two-year-old Shetland pony with strangles. His first symptom was a runny nose. He then developed a fever, and swelling to the right side of his face. This is a side view before the abscesses burst. ©AkaEmma, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
The latest DNA sequencing techniques have been used to track the bacteria responsible for strangles in horses around the world, in the largest study of its kind into the pathogen.
Researchers said they identified many examples of closely related strains of 
Streptococcu equi in geographically distant nations, highlighting that the lack of pre-export testing, used routinely for many animal diseases, facilitates what they describe as the unbridled international transmission of the bacterium. ....

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Study highlights 'unbridled globetrotting' of the strangles pathogen in horses – India Education,Education News India,Education News


Strangles, caused by the bacteria 
Streptococcus equi, is the most frequently diagnosed infectious disease of horses, with 600 outbreaks estimated to occur in the United Kingdom each year.
Streptococcus equi invades the lymph nodes of head and neck of horses, causing them to swell and form abscesses that can, in around 2% of cases, literally strangle the horse to death. Some of the horses that recover from strangles remain persistently infected. These apparently healthy animals shed bacteria into the environment and spread the disease to other horses that they come into contact with.
Using standard diagnostic testing, the 
Streptococcus equi strains look almost identical. But by carefully examining the DNA of the bacteria, the team were able to track different variants as they spread across the world. ....

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