Saturday, October 30, 2010

Science snob

This one's for me. No need to read it, nothing to see. Move along, move along....



Everywhere plants
Flourish among graves,

Sinking their roots
In all the dynasties
Of the dead.


Seamus Heaney, from "A Herbal"


I believe, truly believe, that if you pay attention, real attention, to anything, you cannot help but be smitten by Seamus Heaney, soil, or horseshoe crabs.

Or smitten by any number of the seemingly infinite variety of life and circumstance around us.

So call me a snob. A science snob.
***

Yesterday I found two new "wasps" in my roly-poly terrarium. Then I stumbled upon Seamus Heaney's latest book, Human Chain, while warming up in the Montclair Book Store Center. I bought it.

Last night I saw Michael Franti. Hugged him, even. He reminds me why this human thing rocks.




Stared at morning glories at noon, flared open in the dying October light. Our brains tell us that daylight is daylight. The morning glories say otherwise.



Today I got to kick leaves with my toes on the Green.

I chatted with a new security guard at school--turns out I was her doc way back when when the big blue bus visited her neighborhood.

Then I learned that my black wasps were really harmless soldier flies--I got this from The Dirt on Soil, one of my favorite blogs.

All in 24 hours. None of this expected, none of it earned.



The soldier fly on the finger photo from Rock Hill High School, via The Dirt on Soil blog.
The morning glory is mine.

Leslie babysat Seamus' kids over 30 years ago.
Funny how that goes.

2 comments:

The Dirt on Soil said...

I so love those bugs!! Thanks for the link ;-)

doyle said...

Dear The Dirt on Soil,

I now have several more! I cannot believe how much life erupts from a small tank with a cupful or two of soil/compost on the bottom.

If this keeps up I'm starting a neo-spontaneous generation movement.