Animals, of Personal Acquaintance
A few years ago I mentioned on this web site having found a big Leopard Moth caterpillar clinging to my clothes, looked it up, confirmed that the younger one I'd found would grow into the older, bigger one I also knew and that it was harmless, and left it nibbling on a plantain leaf beside the front steps.
Since then I've continued to see Leopard Moth caterpillars beside the front steps. They're not that common. They tend to wander about, munching on a different plant every day, and they've always been attracted to the not-a-lawn, but it seemed as if a local family had learned that they'd found a safe place. I don't know that they are capable of learning anything. Caterpillars and even adult moths have very little in the way of brains, and their behavior usually shows this. But these little animals kept finding their way to the front steps.
When their remote ancestors used to find their way to the front yard, so many Leopard Moth generations ago, I used to be scared of them, assuming that any caterpillar that big with that much stiff, bristly hair would have to pack a lot of venom. Actually they contain no venom at all. Touching caterpillars is not good for the caterpillars and should always be avoided, since the ones you want to kill are the ones you don't want to touch, but for the human who touches a baby Leopard Moth, they feel just like the round brushes they look like. Prickly but harmless.
Anyway, last winter the Leopard Moth larva who was hibernating off and on beside the front steps, burrowing into the ground when it felt cold and coming out to eat when it felt warm, was a casualty of the Big Freeze. I don't think it had even achieved its final molt. It was hardly more than two inches long.
I found myself missing the hapless moth-child.
Books
I've linked to other reviews of the Little House books here, so...
Fwiw, I was a farm girl and I enjoyed Almanzo's interest in crops and livestock. Though I'm pretty sure he didn't eat as much as his memories of home cooking must have suggested to his wife. And I could do without the pigs.
Chocolate
Found this on an old link I was clearing out of "history"...
I wonder what this has to do with my sudden intolerance of the chocolate in some gluten-free baking mixes, whose ingredients are otherwise the same as the ingredients in tolerable non-chocolate-flavored baking mixes--although M&Ms have been on the safe list of foods I can eat for a long time. The chocolate in King Arthur's and Betty Crocker's brownies does not induce a glyphosate reaction; it just doesn't seem to want to stay down.
I wonder how many other people are noticing bizarre new reactions to chocolate...but only some chocolate.
I wonder what we'd learn by proper labelling of chocolate to identify which chocolate products are coming from "vaccinated" trees.
I wonder if these helpless trees are being used as test subjects for mRNA "vaccines" (if it's mRNA, is it still a vaccine?).
I wonder if virus-infected trees, or vaccinated trees, or both, are the ones suddenly making people sick.
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Ethical Purity, Importance of
The wrong means to the right end...
Dandelions are food for bees.
And for the Little Yellow Bear caterpillar, and most of the other Bear Caterpillars that turn into Tiger Moths, or Giant Leopard Moths--they like variety, they typically nibble on one plant one day and another plant the next day.
And for Iryna's Azure butterfly, the warm-weather-long Azure with white undersides on "her" wings. (It sometimes flies around the Cat Sanctuary.) Protect your dandelions in memory of the little Ukrainian girl who was murdered in Charlotte...
And, of course, unsprayed dandelions are excellent good for people. Specifically they're said to be good for the kidneys. In moderation, of course. If you pay attention your body will tell you how many you should eat; probably a smaller volume than you would eat of lettuce or spinach. When they stop tasting fresh and interesting and start tasting bitter to you, even though you're an adult and are accustomed to the basic dandelion flavor, you've eaten enough.
Dandelion stems are also good to apply to warts. If you lack or lose resistance to the virus that causes warts, they will come back, but if you apply enough dandelion sap almost all warts will wither up and fall off.
So let's make this meme viral:
A lawn without dandelions is suspicious. This is the year when nobody likes a "pesticide" sprayer. If your friends' lawns lack dandelions, try to help them fix this.
Islam
Worth reading. If the United States stays predominantly Christian, we have nothing to fear from Islam. If we go Socialist, letting the state compete with or usurp the functions of the church, those "God-shaped vacuums" in the human soul will suck Islam in, and since Socialism never works for very long at all but Islam works--badly--for centuries, we will soon be a Muslim country.
("So, by 'Christian' the writer means capitalist?" I do not. I do mean individualist--believing in the primacy of, and respecting the liberty of, the individual. Individuals can choose communist, or say "communalist," styles of life and work for themselves, so long as they don't try to enforce such styles on others through any system of tyrannical government.)
Land Use
Shared by Joe Jackson (surely you guessed). Google doesn't find any other source for the photo; it's probably his own. Goes double for Virginia.
Logic, Leftists' Lack Of
Of course, right-wingers aren't necessarily doing all that much better. JJ also posted this meme:
One of JJ's readers mentioned a stamp for use on $1 bills that gives George Washington a speech balloon saying "I grew hemp." I thought it worth mentioning here...George Washington did indeed raise hemp, or have his staff raise it, at Mount Vernon. But they used it, as people back in England did, to make rope, and cheap heavy (itchy) fabric for the servants' clothes. They had not yet noticed any reason to smoke it.
About hemp clothing a British legend records that a brownie, you know, one of the sort-of supernatural beings that looked and acted remarkably like men who were in hiding, did so much good work for the humans who fed him at night that at length they decided he might want a new suit of clothes like their regular servants were getting at Christmas. Like many brownies he was oddly shaped, but they told the seamstress that he was about the size of their twelve-year-old son and she should do the best she could. So she did; made him a nice little hempen suit. The family laid it out for him on Christmas Eve. The brownie came in, and the humans sitting upstairs, listening, heard him yell, "What have we here? Hempen-hampen! Here will I never more tread nor stamp in!" And they never sawhim, or any of his helpful work, again.
But for real stupidity, consider:
It'll be "What are you going to believe--your teacher or your lying eyes?" Teachers' credibility was none too high, among students, without that.
Parents who don't like their children's teachers can always suggest that their children enlighten their teachers. "MY Daddy says there WAS no 'insurrection' during the Censorship Riot! What happened was that Trump saw that some troublemakers were trying to turn the rally into a riot and told people to go home from the rally, but because of CENSORSHIP nobody got the message!"
Meh. When I was in grade one I said "ag'in," the way most people in my home town did. Mrs. Fatso said that the word was "a-gann." I went home and mentioned this to my parents. "That woman's trying to teach you to talk like her?" Mother bristled, and Dad said the word was "a-gayne." (Senator John Warner was the only person I heard who said "a-gayne" all the time.) Mrs. Fatso had to admit that we were in Virginia and in formal speech the upper-crust way to pronounce "again" in Virginia is "a-gayne." And that young Georgia Crackers were in no position to teach us how to speak (one never says things like that out loud, at the time--one looks them). And I was Mrs. Fatso's least favorite child all year long.
Even a person who's still confusing the Loony Limousine Lefties with the real Democratic Party, who obviously is not very observant, ought to be able to perceive that it's just plain wrong to order teachers to teach things that (a) set them against the students' parents and (b) are easily disproved. What did those poor longsuffering teachers ever do to these Ds?