Guest guest Posted June 5, 2008 Report Share Posted June 5, 2008 Okay, this is not exactly about oleander or cancer or even breaking health news - though I bet the lifespans of animals in the article will come as news to most of you (it did me). It is simply a beautifully written story I wanted to share - As reported at The Best Years in Life Live Longer and Prosper From minutes to centuries, the varied life spans of Earth's plants and animals are inextricably entwined. June/July 2008 By Terry Krautwurst (Mother Earth News) Funny, how some seemingly trivial images stick in your head for decades. You can't explain them, but there they are, stubborn memories that have no more apparent significance than countless others that have long since slipped away. Among my own peculiarly steadfast recollections is one late-summer day on my grandparents' dairy farm in western New York. I remember my cousin Bonnie and me, both of us 9 or 10 then, sprawled side-by-side and belly-down in cool green grass beneath one of the three old maples lined up like leafy-headed, one-legged sentinels in front of the big white farmhouse. The object of our fascination was a restless dinner-plate-size cluster of ladybugs — hundreds of them — at the foot of the tree. Not a hair's width separated one ladybug from the other; they moved like a single red-shelled, black-spotted organism with 3,000 legs. With hands held sideways, karate-chop style, to form walls, we could steer them, nudge them forward or back, right or left, like cowpokes coaxing a miniature herd across valleys and over hills (the tree's aboveground roots). And that's the entire memory — just that image, nothing more; no sense of how long we amused ourselves with those beetles, no recollection of the day's events before or after. I'm tempted to describe it as a moment frozen in time, but I know better. For the rest of this wonderful story, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 5, 2008 Report Share Posted June 5, 2008 Beautiful story, mixed with my memories as a child in the end i was crying. Thanks Hugs Mary - Tony oleander soup Thursday, June 05, 2008 12:02 PM Live Longer and Prosper - the entertwined lifespans of plants & animals Okay, this is not exactly about oleander or cancer or even breaking health news - though I bet the lifespans of animals in the article will come as news to most of you (it did me). It is simply a beautifully written story I wanted to share - As reported at The Best Years in Life Live Longer and Prosper From minutes to centuries, the varied life spans of Earth's plants and animals are inextricably entwined. June/July 2008 By Terry Krautwurst (Mother Earth News) Funny, how some seemingly trivial images stick in your head for decades. You can't explain them, but there they are, stubborn memories that have no more apparent significance than countless others that have long since slipped away. Among my own peculiarly steadfast recollections is one late-summer day on my grandparents' dairy farm in western New York. I remember my cousin Bonnie and me, both of us 9 or 10 then, sprawled side-by-side and belly-down in cool green grass beneath one of the three old maples lined up like leafy-headed, one-legged sentinels in front of the big white farmhouse. The object of our fascination was a restless dinner-plate-size cluster of ladybugs — hundreds of them — at the foot of the tree. Not a hair's width separated one ladybug from the other; they moved like a single red-shelled, black-spotted organism with 3,000 legs. With hands held sideways, karate-chop style, to form walls, we could steer them, nudge them forward or back, right or left, like cowpokes coaxing a miniature herd across valleys and over hills (the tree's aboveground roots). And that's the entire memory — just that image, nothing more; no sense of how long we amused ourselves with those beetles, no recollection of the day's events before or after. I'm tempted to describe it as a moment frozen in time, but I know better. For the rest of this wonderful story, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 5, 2008 Report Share Posted June 5, 2008 Great story Tony! I sit reading this while drinking my water with lemon just after an early morning walk among the trees and birds in a drizzling rain. A great morning cap to being in the here and now. Kelly -------------- Original message -------------- "Tony" Okay, this is not exactly about oleander or cancer or even breaking health news - though I bet the lifespans of animals in the article will come as news to most of you (it did me). It is simply a beautifully written story I wanted to share - As reported at The Best Years in Life Live Longer and Prosper From minutes to centuries, the varied life spans of Earth's plants and animals are inextricably entwined. June/July 2008 By Terry Krautwurst (Mother Earth News) Funny, how some seemingly trivial images stick in your head for decades. You can't explain them, but there they are, stubborn memories that have no more apparent significance than countless others that have long since slipped away. Among my own peculiarly steadfast recollections is one late-summer day on my grandparents' dairy farm in western New York. I remember my cousin Bonnie and me, both of us 9 or 10 then, sprawled side-by-side and belly-down in cool green grass beneath one of the three old maples lined up like leafy-headed, one-legged sentinels in front of the big white farmhouse. The object of our fascination was a restless dinner-plate-size cluster of ladybugs — hundreds of them — at the foot of the tree. Not a hair's width separated one ladybug from the other; they moved like a single red-shelled, black-spotted organism with 3,000 legs. With hands held sideways, karate-chop style, to form walls, we could steer them, nudge them forward or back, right or left, like cowpokes coaxing a miniature herd across valleys and over hills (the tree's aboveground roots). And that's the entire memory — just that image, nothing more; no sense of how long we amused ourselves with those beetles, no recollection of the day's events before or after. I'm tempted to describe it as a moment frozen in time, but I know better. For the rest of this wonderful story, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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