The crazy researchers found it….

The real core cause of joint pain, chronic arthritis, stiffness and bone problems… but it’s not looking pretty.

So if you suffer from any of the above, read below as it’s crucial for your health and future…



Go here now and see for yourself…

Now I warn you, I haven’t seen anything like this in quite some time.

The real reason why your joints hurt like hell is deep hidden inside a core area of your body, but it’s not your arms or legs….

As these crazy private doctors found the reason, they showed how easy joint pain actually is to be fixed.

All this pain, all these years… fixable with some daily habit they developed… takes less than 40 seconds in the afternoon.

You have to see this.

They say - we have posted all our findings online, in spite of top pharmaceutical conglomerates threatening to shut us down. Hoping all these people’s pain will finally stop.

I sure hope so...

This is helping 3,419 men and women every day stop their pain.

So do you want to be amongst them? Don’t waste another second and check these findings…


















ouths have three distinct colour morphs, grey being the most common in both sexes. Males of this morph have silver-grey upperparts with black streaks and slightly paler underparts with white barring and brown to rufous mottling. Females of this morph are often darker with more rufous mottling. Females of the subspecies P. s. strigoides have a chestnut morph and females of the subspecies P. s. phalaenoides have a rufous morph. Leucistic or albinistic all-white aberrant plumage for this species has been documented. Camouflage Camouflaged tawny frogmouths blend in with colour and texture of tree bark in Sydney. Camouflaged tawny frogmouth couple in afternoon sun, Melbourne One of the best examples of cryptic plumage and mimicry in Australian birds is seen in the tawny frogmouth, which perch low on tree branches during the day camouflaged as part of the tree. Their silvery-grey plumage patterned with white, black, and brown streaks and mottles a llows them to freeze into the form of a broken tree branch and become practically invisible in broad daylight. The tawny frogmouth often chooses a broken part of a tree branch and perches upon it with its head thrust upwards at an acute angle using its very large, broad beak to emphasise the resemblance. Often, a pair sits together and points their heads upwards, only breaking cover if approached closely to take flight or warn off predators. When threatened, adult tawny frogmouths make an alarm call that signals to chicks to remain silent and immobile, ensuring that the natural camouflage provided by the plumage is not broken. Differences from owls Tawny frogmouths and owls both have mottled patterns, wide eyes, and anisodactyl feet. However, owls possess strong legs, powerful talons, and toes with a unique flexible joint they use to catch prey. Tawny frogmouths prefer to catch their prey with their beaks and have fairly weak feet. They roost out in the open, relying on camouflage f or defence, and build their nests in tree forks, whereas owls roost hidden in thick foliage and build their nests in tree hollows. Tawny frogmouths have wide, forward-facing beaks for catching insects, whereas owls have narrow, downwards-facing beaks used to tear prey apart. The eyes of tawny frogmouths are to the side of the face, while the eyes of owls are fully forward on the face. Furthermore, owls have full or partial face discs and large, asymm