RJM62
Touchdown! Greaser!
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2007
- Messages
- 13,157
- Location
- Upstate New York
- Display Name
Display name:
Geek on the Hill
It is eerily calm here today, as it was all day yesterday and all of last night. The birds are grounded for the most part: I saw a few sparrows on the lawn yesterday and a buzzard or two yesterday evening, but few others. Nor did I see any deer or bears last night.
And yet the trees seem to be in a great rush to shed their remaining leaves -- as if they somehow know that a storm is coming and that they have a better chance of not being toppled by the wind if they are naked.
The leaves in the picture below fell since yesterday, all from one tree that had been stubbornly hanging on to them; and a great many more had fallen yesterday before I blew them into piles -- many, many more than had fallen during windier days earlier in the week.
I believe that either the Creator or evolution has invested all living things with their own sense of "consciousness," which may not be like ours, but nonetheless prepares them for their respective lives. So I wonder about things like this.
I also blow leaves as recreation (hey, when you work in front of a computer, any excuse to get outside is a good one). I bought an electric leaf blower specifically because I enjoy blowing leaves but don't enjoy breathing fumes, listening to the engine noise, or buying gasoline and oil to power the machine. So I'm kind of in tune with the falling of the leaves -- and this is a lot of leaves to have fallen in a few hours on a dead calm night.
That makes me wonder if the trees know more than we give them credit for. The weather was fairly warm, the air still, the humidity fluctuating widely, and the barometer slowly falling for the past two days. I wonder if the trees can put that information together -- possibly along with other information they can sense, but we can't -- and drop their leaves to reduce their chances of being toppled.
-Rich
EDIT: I took that picture earlier this morning, then ran some errands. Many more leaves have fallen since then -- the grass barely shows now. But my phone is charging and pulling out the DSLR to take pictures of leaves is too much like work.
And yet the trees seem to be in a great rush to shed their remaining leaves -- as if they somehow know that a storm is coming and that they have a better chance of not being toppled by the wind if they are naked.
The leaves in the picture below fell since yesterday, all from one tree that had been stubbornly hanging on to them; and a great many more had fallen yesterday before I blew them into piles -- many, many more than had fallen during windier days earlier in the week.
I believe that either the Creator or evolution has invested all living things with their own sense of "consciousness," which may not be like ours, but nonetheless prepares them for their respective lives. So I wonder about things like this.
I also blow leaves as recreation (hey, when you work in front of a computer, any excuse to get outside is a good one). I bought an electric leaf blower specifically because I enjoy blowing leaves but don't enjoy breathing fumes, listening to the engine noise, or buying gasoline and oil to power the machine. So I'm kind of in tune with the falling of the leaves -- and this is a lot of leaves to have fallen in a few hours on a dead calm night.
That makes me wonder if the trees know more than we give them credit for. The weather was fairly warm, the air still, the humidity fluctuating widely, and the barometer slowly falling for the past two days. I wonder if the trees can put that information together -- possibly along with other information they can sense, but we can't -- and drop their leaves to reduce their chances of being toppled.
-Rich
EDIT: I took that picture earlier this morning, then ran some errands. Many more leaves have fallen since then -- the grass barely shows now. But my phone is charging and pulling out the DSLR to take pictures of leaves is too much like work.
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