Why I Write for Young People

I've said it before, and I'll say it again, letters like this one from Megan in North Carolina, are why I write.

Megan is 13 and in the 8th grade. When I was 13, I was failing English--again. This young lady wants to be writer. I'd say she is a writer.

Thank you, Megan. Your letter inspired me to keep working. Now, if I could only write as well as you do.

Dear Ginny,

    My former best friend (who has abandoned me for a life of heavy eyeliner and break-up songs) and I were scoping through our Scholastic Bookfair a while back (when we were still in good terms). There were little to no horse books there due to the fact we were in middle school and most girls had grown out of that stereotypical pony-loving stage. But not us. While searching for that gem in the rough, we simultaneously spotted your novel, The Outside of a Horse, and bought a copy.
    Kali, my old friend, hated reading. She hated literature, she hated poetry, and to my dismay, she pretty much hated any form of art. But your book- it was different.  Though we were in the 6th grade and she was yet to finish a novel in her life, she actually finished reading before me, which was extremely odd because I was the one with the renowned reading habits. After we had both finished the book, we read it again, talked about it, read it again, cover to cover until we could both recite every chapter. I tried to provide her with similar reading, but nothing stuck as well as your book. You moved not only her, but me as well. For a reason unrelated to your book, we are no longer friends, but every time I want to merrily recollect on how she used to be, I pick up your book and I read.
    Now I am 13 and in the 8th grade. For years I have stifled my love of writing out of doubt; saying you want to be a writer when you grow up is an unanchored ambition. I still am wary of my ability to support myself financially with my writing, but was recently encouraged by one of my teachers. Do you have any advice for an aspiring writer? I know it is hard to recall effort after being relinquished from its hardships, but any word from you would mean a lot to me.

Thank you for everything you have done,
Riley

Megan.

A Peek beneath the Pollution: What's down there?

You did it. Michelle Stauffer's and Justin Lewis' A Documentary About Plastic Pollution in the Atlantic Ocean raised the necessary funds through Kickstarter. It then seemed like a week of thinking and learning about our oceans. Here are some treats.

David Gallo on life in Deep Oceans

Quote from this TED talk: "What we see when we look back in time, in the rocks and sediments, is a record of earth history. Everything on this planet, everything, works by cycles and rhythms. The continents move apart and come back together, oceans come and go, mountains come and go, glaciers come and go, El Nino comes and goes, it's not a disaster, it's rhythmic. It's almost like a symphony, it's just like music. . .and what we are learning now is that you can't listen to a 5 billion-year long symphony, get to today, and say stop, we want tomorrow's note to be the same as it was today. It's absurd, just absurd. What we've got to learn now is where this planet is going and work with it . . ."



Edith Widder: How we found the giant squid

Teachers, there is some adult language in this one.

commons.wikimedia.org

Skidboot


stargazermercantile.com

A friend sent this video. I'd never heard of Skidboot, but the video made me laugh and cry. It's pretty old, but if you love dogs, and/or big slow-talkin Texans, here's one that will warm your cockles.



SO CLOSE!
Justin and Michele only need $1200 more
and there are 49 hours left. When I smoked, I used to empty my car ashtray in store parking lots. I'm a backer, because I owe it the planet.

Monarchs and Monsanto UPDATE

Last year I did a post in support of California's Prop 37 which would have required labeling of foods containing GMOs. We know how that turned out. Monsanto spent millions to defeat it and they were successful. Sort of. There is good news and bad news. Which would you prefer to read first? Take your pick.

The BAD
[T]he decline is due in great part to the widespread use of the herbicide glyphosate. In key U.S. states where the butterfly feeds and breeds — Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, parts of Ohio and the eastern Dakotas — farmers have planted more than 120 million acres of corn and soybeans genetically modified to resist the herbicide… That allows them to use glyphosate to kill milkweed, the monarchs' essential food. [Los Angeles Times]


The GOOD
Whole Foods is doing what Monsanto spent millions to prevent from happening in California.
Despite the ubiquity of GMO foods, consumers intent on avoiding them may have good reason to do so: Pesticides that GMOs are bred to resist have been linked to a handful of health problems, including food allergies, developmental disorders, and even some cancers. The products have also been linked to environmental concerns, including increased mortality rates among monarch butterflies and other insects. Prevention News. Read more: http://www.prevention.com/food/smart-shopping/whole-foods-gmo-policy#ixzz2Niw4GpJ0


This is last year's post, & includes the life cycle of the Monarch butterfly. Because of Whole Foods, all is not lost. We can pressure our favorites grocery chains to follow their lead, and if you have a Whole Foods near you, show your gratitude.

Just How Unique Are We? Part V

oddstuffmagazine.com

The House-Building Skill of an Octopus

"Okay, Frank Lloyd Wright's "Falling Water" it is not, but a home built by an octopus has the advantage of being mobile. The veined octopus (Amphioctopus marginatus) can make mobile shelters out of coconut shells. When the animal wants to move, all it has to do is stack the shells like bowls, grasp them with stiff legs, and waddle away along the ocean floor to a new location." From LiveScience.com
cephalopodday.tumblr.com



Great article about a guy and his octopus


Octopus love: G-Rated



Scuba Diver & dead octopuses
asnailsodyssey.com



An interesting way to show how those of us who live along the coast may end up looking for a coconut shell home.  http://www.upworthy.com/artistic-depiction-of-climate-change-freaks-the-heck-out-of-people-on-the-street?c=upw1


 

Violence Against Women



Marco Rubio


I'm stepping outside my main mission--raising awareness of animal issues--to remind us that abuse of animals, children, the elderly, or anything or anyone without a political voice, reflects on our humanity.

 

Twenty-two senators voted against the renewal of the Violence Against Women Act, including Rubio, the Republicans' golden boy. First, we should ask ourselves, what about protecting women, and others, needs re-authorization? Secondly, is to remember every one of these senators in 2014, and the 27 house Republicans.

 

John Barrasso (Wyo.), Roy Blunt (Mo.), John Boozman (Ark.), Tom Coburn (Okla.), John Cornyn (Texas), Ted Cruz (Texas), Mike Enzi (Wyo.), Lindsey Graham (S.C.), Chuck Grassley (Iowa), Orrin Hatch (Utah), James Inhofe (Okla.), Mike Johanns (Neb.), Ron Johnson (Wisc.), Mike Lee (Utah), Mitch McConnell (Ky.), Rand Paul (Ky.), Jim Risch (Idaho), Pat Roberts (Kansas), Marco Rubio (Fla.), Jeff Sessions (Ala.), John Thune (S.D.) and Tim Scott (S.C.).

 

Senators Chuck Grassley (R-IA) and John Cornyn (R-TX) each attempted to tack amendments on to the Act that would annul the protections for undocumented immigrants, Native Americans and LGBTs. Each were voted down.

http://www.upworthy.com/taylor-swifts-new-song-about-feminism-is-pretty-catchy-and-blunt?c=upw1

Violence Against Women Act

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Violence Against Women Act of 1994 (VAWA) is a United States federal law (Title IV, sec. 40001-40703 of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, H.R. 3355) signed as Pub.L. 103–322 by President Bill Clinton on September 13, 1994. The Act provides $1.6 billion toward investigation and prosecution of violent crimes against women, imposes automatic and mandatory restitution on those convicted, and allows civil redress in cases prosecutors chose to leave unprosecuted. The Act also establishes the Office on Violence Against Women within the Department of Justice. Male victims of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking may also be covered.[1]

VAWA was drafted by the office of Senator Joe Biden (D-DE), with support from a broad coalition of advocacy groups. The Act passed through Congress with bipartisan support in 1994, clearing the House by a vote of 235–195 and the Senate by a vote of 61–38, although the following year House Republicans attempted to cut the Act's funding.[2] In the 2000 Supreme Court case United States v. Morrison, a sharply divided Court struck down the VAWA provision allowing women the right to sue their attackers in federal court. By a 5–4 majority, the Court overturned the provision as an intrusion on states' rights.[3][4]
VAWA was reauthorized by Congress in 2000, and again in December 2005.[5] The Act's 2012 renewal was opposed by conservative Republicans, who objected to extending the Act's protections to same-sex couples and to provisions allowing battered illegal aliens to claim temporary visas.[6] In April 2012, the Senate voted to reauthorize the Violence Against Women Act, and the House subsequently passed its own measure (omitting provisions of the Senate bill that would protect gay men, lesbians, American Indians living in reservations, and illegal aliens who were victims of domestic violence). Reconciliation of the two bills has been stymied by procedural measures, leaving the reauthorization in question.[7]

On January 2, 2013, the Senate's 2012 reauthorization of VAWA was not brought up for a vote in the House. While the bill was not reauthorized, its provisions (as enacted in the 2005 reauthorization) remain in effect.[why?]

On February 12, 2013, the Senate passed an extension of the Violence Against Women Act by a vote of 78-22.[8] On February 28, 2013, the House of Representatives passed the extension by a vote of 286-138, with unanimous Democratic support and 87 Republicans voting in the affirmative.[9]

360 Ways to see an Elephant

Oddly, there is a scene in my novel Dolphin Sky where Buddy, my main character, is talking to Jane, the biologist about how differently we see the world. She's concerned that we will never solve any of our problems because we will never see eye to eye on anything. Here's the gist of the conversation:

Jane:
"My mother used to say there are three hundred and sixty ways to see an elephant. That was her way of saying what you just said. We all see things differently. There are three hundred and sixty degrees in a circle. If the elephant is in the center, every one, at each degree, has a different view of him."        

Buddy:
"(So that) means as long as we (are) all looking at it from a different place, we're never gonna agree on what we see.

Jane:
"We can all agree it’s an elephant.”


Doing the right thing starts with each of us.

Film from an elephant orphanage

Baby elephants bathing

  
Adult elephant visiting a pool

Just How Unique are We? Part 4

The Sleep-Talk of a Dolphin
  
Dolphins may sleep-talk in whale song, according to French researchers who've recorded the marine mammals making the non-native sounds late at night. The five dolphins, which live in a marine park in  France, have heard whale songs only in recordings played during the day around their aquarium. But at night, the dolphins seem to mimic the recordings during rest periods, a possible form of sleep-talking. And you thought your nocturnal mumblings were weird. LiveScience.com



Dolphin with a hook in its mouth and the fishing line around its flipper seeks help from human divers.
thanks, Tony





My friend, Katy Pye's, book Elizabeth's Landing will be published in April. Her blog is below.
If you love sea turtles, this one is a winner.

 
seaturtle.org


Thank a Teacher

The Lost in the River of Grass dedication reads:

 

This is dedicated to my husband, Doug Oesterle, to whom this story belongs, to the memory of Bob Kelley, who defined friendship, and to Oscar “Bud” Owre, who taught me to love the Everglades. I miss you to this day.


And to the real Mr. Vickers, my seventh grade science teacher.


And this is opening paragraph:
                                        

The real Mr. Vickers

Mr. Vickers takes the seat behind the bus driver. The other fourteen kids pile in behind him in pairs, like ark animals. Since I’m last on the bus, my choice is to sit next to him, or sit alone. He’s left room for me, but is nice enough not to say anything when I drag my gear to the back row.


After I heard the book was to be published, I tracked him down through the librarian at Glenridge (Jr. High School) Middle School, and wrote him the following letter in 2010.
 
Dear Mr. Vickers,
I don’t expect you to remember me, and it isn’t important that you do.  This is thank you letter, 53 years after the fact.

You were my 7th grade science teacher (1957) In all my years of schooling: grade, middle, and high school, I remember the names of only two of my teachers, yours and Miss Andrews (8th grade algebra.) I was a rotten student, so it’s not that I don’t remember their names because they weren’t worth remembering, or because they didn’t care, or even that that they weren’t good teachers. I’m sure some of them were as meaningful to one of their other students as you are to me. It doesn’t matter. You and Miss Andrews were the only two who offered me a glimpse at my potential.

You also probably don’t recall that you were on a flight of mine some 35 or 40 years ago.  After barely finishing high school, dropping out of Orlando Junior College, getting married and divorced the same year, I landed a job as a flight attendant (stewardess back then) with National Airlines. Pan Am bought us in 1980, but I think you were on my flight when we were still National.  I would have thanked you then, but I didn’t know yet how much I owed you.

It’s no coincidence that my only two As ever in those (middle & high school) years, were your class and Miss Andrews’s. Oddly, I remember you gave us an assignment to draw a floor plan. I don’t remember why, or what I drew, though I remember working hard on it. I got an A+, and you called attention to it.

This all sounds kind of ordinary, doesn’t it? But it wasn’t to me. I had—have—an amblyopic eye, but was too embarrassed to wear my glasses. When my eyes got tired, I would do anything to keep from being called on in class. To see the page clearly, I had to turn my eye in. You can imagine my eagerness to do that—especially in the minefield of middle school.  Because of my vision, I did poorly in school, and because I did poorly, no one ever paid any attention to me. I began to believe I wasn’t really all that bright, except there were those two As—in relatively hard subjects. I suppose I told myself it was because I liked math and science?  It took me awhile to realize that I liked them because the two best teachers I ever had taught math and science.

To make a rambling story mercifully shorter, in 1977, I decided I was tired of feeling intellectually inferior to everyone on the planet and went back to college. On that first day, in the registrar’s office, they noted that the GPA I was transferring in from OJC was 1.7, “Didn’t I think, I might do better in a junior college?” the twit behind the desk asked me.  I registered out of sheer bluff, then he asked me to declare a major.  “Biology,” I said—because of you, Sir.

I flew to London every weekend and went to school all week. It took me 8 years, but I graduated in 1985, with a cumulative GPA of 3.7, and a degree in Biology and English. In 1982, I wrote an editorial about a dog a friend of mine found. It was published in the Miami News. That day one of their editors called me and said if I could write like that, they publish anything I wrote. That phone called changed my life. I began taking creative writing classes, and the rest is history. I now hold an MFA in Creative Writing, and my second novel, Hurt Go Happy, was a Sunshine State Reading award nominee in 2008.

My fourth novel is coming out in March. Lost in the River of Grass, is about two kids who go for a joy ride in an airboat, it sinks and they walk out. It’s based on my second husband’s experience in the Everglades after he sank his airboat. Because I write for kids, the protagonists are teenagers, one of whom is on a field trip to the Everglades with her science class. Their teacher is you, and you do for my character what you did for me—gave me that glimpse of what I was capable of accomplishing. 

The other two men—aside from my husband—to whom the book is dedicated, were also teachers, at University of Miami, and my dear friends.

I wanted you to know, Mr. Vickers, that you impacted my life in ways you can’t imagine. I try every day to be the kind of person you are for the kids who write to me. Some of them have been writing me for years now, looking for that ounce of encouragement, or praise that will make them feel special. You were a gift to me.

*
I was in Florida in 2011, days after Lost in the River of Grass came out. The event was during school hours and poorly attended, but turned out to be the best book signing ever. Mr. Vickers and his family showed up. 

As most of you know, I've just returned again from Florida where I visited a number of middle schools. Mr. Vickers and his family were planning to attend one of my presentations. I worked extra hard on the Power Point, and arranged for him to come to Hunter's Creek Middle School.

I'm so grateful to have had the chance to say thank you in the book, in the letter, and in person. Mr. Vickers passed away on December 31st. My friend, Kellee, at the Hunter's Creek told her students, after my presentation, that she hoped to be their Mr. Vickers. I have a feeling that she is. And wouldn't this be a good time to thank the Mr. Vickers in all our lives.

*


I'm proud to announce that not only is Lost in the River of Grass a Sunshine State Reading award nominee for the 2012- 2013, but it has made the final cut and is a Missouri Truman award nominee for 2013 - 2014.

A note from an Optimistic Cynic


18 foot alligator with men proud of their kill
 For the last two weeks I've had the pleasure of meeting some really remarkable kids at a number of middle schools in Florida. As exhausting as a trip like this is/was, it was also invigorating. I came away feeling hopeful for the future of our society and our planet, in spite of evidence to the contrary. I'll do a post in a few days, once I'm caught up with mail and bill-paying. Meanwhile this is from the young man with a million questions in the front row. I'm grateful to Achutha, an autistic middle schooler, for his review. 

Lost In The River Of Grass, by Ginny Rorby, tells about an adventure in the Everglades of a girl named Sarah. While she, along with a fellow boy, Andy, and a baby duckling ,Teapot, become stranded on a small island they are forced to walk ten miles of swampland to reach safety. Unfortunately, with saw-like sawgrass, snakes, water moccasins, lots and lots of bugs, and of course, chomping alligators in the way, this may be impossible.

The author here is not just telling one story, but she is telling two, which compliments the Everglades’ beauty. Once, people thought that the Everglades will be wiped out and there’ll be lots of houses. But with conservation and preservation, the Everglades still lives to the present day. By telling Sarah’s story, the best and finest parts of the Everglades are in the finest details that attracts plants, animals and their naturalization with full glory.

Sarah is a lonely character who tries to make friends but she is disdained because her mother works in the school cafeteria. However, she does befriend Andy and is satisfied. But when Sarah, Andy, and a cute little duckling Sarah names Teapot struggle on the journey to safety, she likes and uses Teapot to conquer her fears. Personally, when I was a kid, I used Thomas the Tank Engine to understand the world around me.

I will best recommend this book to anyone who likes reading adventure stories and nature books.


INTERMISSION

I finally got to Hunter's Creek Middle School and met each and every one of Kellee's 60+ students.

Night, Night.

Just How Unique are We? Part 3

I'm offline again for a couple of weeks.

The Pigeon Brain

santabanta.com

Years ago, a friend of mine started a location-scouting business in Miami. I was the wildlife division. If a company needed an animal for a photo-shoot, I would find what they needed, manage it on location, then find a home for it afterwards. As it turned out there wasn't a lot of demand for the wildlife division.

The first call was for a parrot to take part in a Gloria Estefan video. Hopi, my yellow-naped Amazon, filled the bill. The second, and thankfully last call I got, was for a pair of white doves, to be released during a photo-shoot for a bridal magazine. I had a couple issues with that. First, the only white dove I could find also belonged to me. The same friend's daughter had found her in a cage in a schoolmate's garage, felt sorry for her, and asked if she could have her. They readily gave up Lovey (as in lovey-dovey.) I ended up with her because my friend had a bird-loving cat. (As an aside, Lovey lived for another 25 years.)

From Unlikely Animal Friends
Back to the photo-shoot: I was unwilling to toss my totally tame dove in the air and hope she found a life somewhere. I scoured the pet stores in Miami, only to discover that every white dove in the county had been recently purchased for an upcoming wedding. I did find two white pigeons, bought them, and told the director, who didn't know a bird from a bat, that they were well-fed doves. 

If you've ever watched a film being made, or a commercial being shot, you know that it requires multiple takes to get everything just right. There was no way to encourage the pigeons off the ground and expect to retrieve them for the next take, so I tied little strings around their legs, staked them out on the lawn, and sat nearby guarding them in case a hungry hawk flew by. When the shoot was over, I owed two white pigeons.

At the time, Lovey lived in a large cage on the balcony of my apartment in Coconut Grove. I brought the pigeons home (via the freight elevator) and set up a little feeding station for them on the balcony. I thought Lovey would enjoy their company, and that the pigeons would hang around until they found other digs in the wide world of pigeons. One did. The other became smitten with Lovey, who hated his guts, and his ridiculous displays--puffing up and twirling--every time he returned from wherever he went. He brought her twigs, which she rejected, snapping her wings in anger. His feelings were never hurt. He cooed softly, and napped on the other side of the wire just out of reach of her bill. It was a pitiful affair, which lasted for the next 6 years until Lovey, Hopi and Rosie, my red rat snake, and I moved to California.





baby pigeons
en.wikipedia.org
Here's the Pigeon Brain story from Livescience.com

"Gamblers in Vegas have something in common with pigeons on the sidewalk, and it's not just a fascination with shiny objects. In fact, pigeons make gambles just like humans, making choices that leave them with less money in the long run for the elusive promise of a big payout. When given a choice, pigeons will push a button that gives them a big, rare payout rather than one that offers a small reward at regular intervals. This questionable decision may stem from the surprise and excitement of the big reward, according to a study published in 2010 in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B. Human gamblers may be similarly lured in by the idea of major loot, no matter how long the odds."


My friend's business sans a wildlife division is

The Great Florida Python Hunt

blogs.scientificamerican.com
I'm interrupting my Just How Unique are We mini series for a post that illustrates how unique we are--as a species, I mean.


Reading this by Dave Barry required me to hook myself up to a nebulizer to recover. A warning don't drink coffee while reading. I'm not sure what to use to get Cafe Vienna off my monitor.

Python after a hearty meal
outdoorlife.com

Just How Unique are We: Part 2

mostbeautifulpages.com

An Asian elephant in a South Korean zoo has learned to mimic human words. According to Livescience.com, the elephant can say "hello," "good," "no," "sit down" and "lie down," all in Korean, of course. Though scientists don’t think the elephant knows what these words mean, I bet he does. If my cats know what I mean when I shout “no birds” at them, or “sit” before they get a treat, I’ll lay you odds the elephant has made the link between these words and the behavior associated with them. My parrot knows the difference between hello and goodbye. If I wave when I’m walking out the door, she says “Bye, bye.” Every time. This particular elephant lived alone at this zoo for 7 years, leaving him to bond with humans instead of other elephants.

The deepest calls of an elephant can be heard by other elephants over a range of 6 miles. As it turns out they make these thunderous calls the same way we talk, by pushing air across their vocal cords, which are eight times longer than ours. 

"The sounds the elephants make are off the piano keyboard," said study researcher Christian Herbst, a voice scientist at the University of Vienna, Austria. In fact, at less than 20 hertz in frequency, the main components of these ultra-deep calls aren't detectable to the human ear. 

Until now, researchers weren't sure how elephants produced such low sounds. In fact, it's difficult to study voice production in animals in general, Herbst told LiveScience. "In humans, researchers can insert cameras through the throat into the larynx, or voicebox, while people make different sounds. Animals tend to be less cooperative on that front."

There are two ways to produce sound by vibrating the vocal cords (or vocal folds, as scientists call them). The first is called active muscular contraction, or AMC. With this method, the throat muscles actively contract to vibrate the vocal folds. AMC is how cats purr. The other method of sound production is called the myoelastic-aerodynamic (MEAD) mode. The MEAD mode uses air from the lungs to vibrate the vocal folds. MEAD is how humans talk and sing.

Herbst and his colleagues were able to investigate which one elephants use when they had the opportunity to investigate the larynx of an elephant that died a natural death at the Berlin Zoo. The researchers mounted the larynx on a tube and blew humidified warm air through it to mimic breath. If this method produced vibrations that matched the low-frequency calls of living elephants, the findings would bolster the argument for MEAD-produced sounds. If the vibrations didn't match up, the sounds would have to be produced by the AMC "purring" method. The vibrations matched. That doesn't entirely rule out AMC in elephants, the researchers report in the Aug. 3 issue of the journal Science, but it suggests that MEAD is the more likely culprit for low-frequency cries.

"What is cool to me is that nature came up with a system that you can find in mammals from the very, very large — so basically we now have evidence for the largest land-based mammal — to very, very small like tiny bats," Herbst said.

That size range brings with it an impressive range in frequency, from elephants at less than 20 hertz to bats that can squeak at more than 110,000 hertz. The human vocal cords can produce sounds ranging from about 50 hertz to 7000 hertz, with most voice sounds falling between 300 hertz and 3,400 hertz.

"It still strikes me as fantastic what we humans can do with this system," Herbst said. "Comparative anatomy of the same system in different animals can help researchers understand how voice evolved in the first place. We see variations in the laryngeal anatomy," he said, "and usually, nature has a good reason to come up with slight variations."

Article from LiveScience by Stephanie Pappas

Lawrence Anthony calls up a wild elephant heard
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F4nvQbfQAUg 

After Lawrence Anthony's untimely death, his elephants walk 12 hours to mourn him.

And just this week, poachers kill 11 elephants for their ivory tusks, carved into trinkets
mostly to sell to newly rich Chinese.



SPEAKING CHINA. I HIGHLY RECOMMEND THE DOCUMENTARY, WILD CHINA. The scenery is stunning, it's culturally fascinating, and in spite of the wild life poached to satisfy some tastes, it is ecologically hopeful.

Just How Unique are We? Part 1

I remember catching my first fish when I was six or seven, and getting upset when my father removed the hook with a pair of pliers and put my bass on a stringer. I was sure he was hurting the fish, but he assured me that fish don't feel pain. I don't know if he actually believed that or was only trying to comfort me, but, of course, it's not true. If animals--even fish--didn't feel pain, or experience fear, they would not survive long in the wild. And any one of us with a pet know that animals also have complex emotional lives. Some scientists still argue the finer points in spite of the growing evidence that we aren't all that special. According to http://www.livescience.com we have plenty in common with other animals. For the next few posts, I'm going to look at a few examples.
This baby gorilla reacts to a cold stethoscope

Facial expressions

I love this picture of a baby gorilla reacting to a cold stethoscope. I don't think there is any other way to interpret it, but, according to an article on Livescience.com, research at McGill University and the University of British Columbia in Canada, has found that mice, subjected to moderate pain "grimace," just like humans.

 
care2.com
  Researchers said the results could be used to eliminate unnecessary suffering for lab animals by letting researchers know when something hurts the rodents.

I don't mean to discount this study, but of all the thousands and thousands of animals sacrificed on the altar of 'for the good of mankind,' and hyper-allergenic mascara, only now did they notice a reaction to pain.

This cat is expressing my reaction to the news.


studentbeans.com


The Housing Crash--on a Planetary Scale


photos.360treasure.com

As far as I know, I've never had a secret admirer--until I started this blog. For every one of my 30 followers there are dozens more who check in after every post. You live in Brazil, China, Canada, Russia, Australia, Germany, Spain, Ukraine, France, India, Sweden, the United Arab Emirates, and the UK. I'm so curious about you all, and assume you care rather passionately about the welfare of animals. Are you adults--teachers, perhaps? Or are you who I wanted to reach when I launched this blog--kids, who, with a little exposure to the wonders of what's left of the natural world, may grow up to make a difference for the other species on this planet?

A lot of hideous things have happened this year, the two most despicable of which are the massacre of little children in Newtown, and the shooting of Malala Yousafzai by the Taliban. There are no words for the inexplicable. The grief I feel is cellular--forever part of who I am as a human being.

With the exception of innocent children, I've always cared about animals the way I should care about people. It's been a safer way to live. I learned this at my mother's knee. Not my birth mother, who gave me up for adoption, but the mother who raised me. She, too, loved animals more than people, and more than at least one of her children.

sydney-hime.deviantart.com
Most humans are kind, muddling through as best we can. But there lies innate cruelty in others. I've never had my heart broken by an animal, except by its dying. And not just pets. Earlier this week, there was this story about a Clemson University student, Nathan Weaver, who set out to determine how to help turtles cross the road. What he discovered reminded me of a bumper sticker I saw on a jacked-up, big-wheeled, mud-splattered truck.
That fur on my tire is your cat.

As a species, we have ruled this planet for a few minutes in the overall scheme of things, but it does not belong to us. The stage may be ours momentarily, but bad actors always get the hook.

A kind, gentle friend died unexpectedly a couple of days ago, and I've been trying to think how to sum up a life well-lived. It occurred to me that all the other species on earth--perhaps even kudzu--deserve to be here. Many of us don't. If in the end, I can look back and believe that, for the most part, I earned the privilege, and have helped more than I've harmed, I'll be satisfied.

In spite of mounting proof to the contrary, there are still naysayers--more in America than in other countries--who are rabid deniers of climate change. I'm not one of them. I think we are possibly on the brink of planetary foreclosure, so to my secret admirers, I'm grateful that you care. Making a difference starts with us.


I wish you all a moment like the one in this video. If there is joy to be had after tragedy, it is the ability to appreciate such a blip in time. And, in the coming year, please do your best to protect the innocent--be it a turtle crossing the road, an uncut forest, or your own hope for better world.



Baby Gorilla reacting to cold stethoscope
Goodbye, Jean

The Slug Return-ith

I've been living the high (seas) life for the last 3 weeks, aboard the Celebrity Constellation. We sailed from Southampton on November 30th and arrived in Miami on the 15th of December. For 3 weeks, I neither cooked a meal for myself, made a bed, did a load of laundry, fed a cat or a bird, raked leaves, built a fire in the woodstove, or started a car engine. I'm virtually a shell of the contributing member of society that I was prior to November 30th. I played bridge every morning, and reworte an old novel in the afternoons. In between I ate 3 meals a day, leaving my dirty dishes on the table for someone else to wash. I did not go unpunished and came down with the upper respiratory infection which is still hanging on.

cruisecritic.com

I've managed to get through most of the 986 emails that awaited, and most of my mail. In a few days I will fine some wonderful animal to talk about. In the meantime, here are a few pictures.

Lisbon, Portugal

Buses waiting to take people on excursions.
I didn't bother.

Food being loaded on the ship. I took this responsibility seriously,
and ate religiously--every chance I had.



Tenerife, Canary Islands
We met Joseph Sanchez in Tenerife, who took us on a wonderful tour of the island.
Thank you, Joseph.

Tenerife Opera house and Twin Towers

This is terrific, inspiring video, and a reminder of how children sometimes thrive
in spite of their circumstances. 

A nice review of Lost in the River of Grass

Soda-loving Shepherds


germanshepherdappreciation.tumblr
First a word from our sponsor. Fresno author, teacher, and creative writing guru, Bonnie Hearn Hill, chose Lost in the River of Grass as one of her top ten picks for Christmas giving. I'm honored and truly grateful. Here's the link.


I'm taking a few weeks off, so I thought I'd leave you with this video as a thank you for sticking with  me these last 18 months.
Since we had German Shepherds when I was growing up, I added two pictures of my sister with Karlo.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DZRIZ7PgDso

My sister, Kristin and Karlo
circa 1952
Kristin & Karlo
circa 1953