Open Thread: August Edition

Master Po: [after easily defeating the boy in combat] Ha, ha, never assume because a man has no eyes he cannot see. Close your eyes. What do you hear?
Young Caine: I hear the water, I hear the birds.
Master Po: Do you hear your own heartbeat?
Young Caine: No.
Master Po: Do you hear the grasshopper that is at your feet?
Young Caine: [looking down and seeing the insect] Old man, how is it that you hear these things?
Master Po: Young man, how is it that you do not?


Comments (7)
I saw a grasshopper this morning in the driveway with my kids. Amazing little creatures. I've been spending some time lately listening to what makes me tick. We too our amazing creatures.
Smiling and breathing in Ojai.
Comment #1 Posted by: Kenley | August 1, 2007 11:37 AM
Beautiful Tyler. Yes, awareness is freedom, connectedness. Intention and choice are the gateways into the heart.
Comment #2 Posted by: Raymond | August 1, 2007 11:38 AM
Great pic Ty, perfect dialogue. Made my day.
Comment #3 Posted by: mike DiDj | August 1, 2007 11:44 AM
Reminds me of the book I'm reading: Last Child in the Woods: Saving our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder by Richard Louv
Comment #4 Posted by: Leslie Davis | August 1, 2007 12:43 PM
It is good to still yourself from time to time, and let the senses soak up all that is around, particularly outside.
Thanks Leslie for the book title, sounds like the topic I deal with daily about here.
Comment #5 Posted by: Dana and Alyeska | August 1, 2007 03:59 PM
The Great Locust Mystery
Grasshoppers that ate the West became extinct
By Lisa Levitt Ryckman
They devoured saddles, gnawed on ax handles, ate laundry flapping on the line and chewed the wool right off sheep.
When it came to swarms, the Rocky Mountain locust - scourge of the 1870s - still stands today as the undisputed champion of the world. Between 1873 and 1877, Melanophus spretus caused $200 million in crop damage in Colorado, Nebraska and other states, chowing down on everything green and plenty else.
Its sky-blackening swarms hold a place in The Guinness Book of World Records under the heading ``greatest concentration of animals.''
``A swarm of Rocky Mountain locusts that flew over Nebraska on July 20-30, 1874, covered an area estimated at 198,000 square miles (almost twice the size of Colorado),'' the entry reads. ``The swarm must have contained at least 12.5 trillion insects with a total weight of 27.5 million tons.''
And then, in the space of 20 years, it disappeared - the first pest ever driven to extinction.
``I've called this the greatest ecological mystery of all time,'' said Jeffrey Lockwood, a University of Wyoming entomologist who believes he has pretty much solved the case of the disappearing locust. ``Extinction's like a murder. So we've got this 100-year-old murder. And there are no witnesses left.''
But in the 1870s, these swarming grasshoppers appeared in endless supply. The federal government declared the Rocky Mountain locust the ``most serious impediment to the settlement of the West,'' and no wonder. The pest actually brought trains to a halt: Squished bug bodies made the tracks too slick for the cars to move.
Control efforts became desperate. Some areas offered bounties of as much as $5 per bushel of grasshoppers, and there were calls to bring in the Army to fight them. Settlers flooded them, trampled them and drowned them in oil. They even used dynamite, making the locust the only pest ever battled with explosives.
The word ``hopperdozer'' became a catchall term for dozens of contraptions designed to collect or crush the pests.
A government farm report of the time describes a device consisting of a long wire wrapped with burning, oil-soaked rags that could be carried across a field to burn the hoppers. ``The effect is that of a miniature prairie fire,'' the report said. ``This method has been quite satisfactorily used in Colorado.''
Some settlers were more interested in determining the size of the swarm than in stopping it. A Nebraska physician telegraphed points east and west to determine the outer edges of the mass of locusts passing overhead. He calculated their rate of movement and the depth of the swarm to arrive at the figures recorded today in the Guinness Book.
The doctor seemed stunned by his own calculations.
``This is utterly incredible,'' he wrote. ``Yet how can we put it aside?''
The locusts were described in a Report of the Commissioner of Agriculture as a ``terrible engine of destruction'' that reduced acres of crops to stubble like a ``lot of young famished pigs let out to their trough.''
``The day breaks with a smiling sun that sends his ripening rays through laden orchards and promising fields,'' the report said. ``Suddenly, the sun's face is darkened, and clouds obscure the sky. The joy of the morn gives way to ominous fear.
``The day closes and ravenous locust-swarms have fallen upon the land. The morrow comes, and ah! what a change it brings! The fertile land of promise and plenty has become a desolate waste . . . alive with myriads of glittering insects.''
One farmer estimated the number of pests on his acres in the ``billion millions.'' Another said his limited education made accurate calculation impossible, but predicted that when the hoppers hatched, ``they will be right smart, they will be powerful hungry and they will do a heap of damage.''
H. McAllister of Colorado Springs told the commissioner what it was like to be caught in a swarm: `` . . . They circle in myriads about you, beating against everything animate or inanimate, driving into open doors and windows, heaping about your feet . . . their jaws constantly at work.
`` . . . In face of the unavoidable destruction everywhere going on, one is bewildered and awed at the collective power of the ravaging host, which calls to mind so forcibly the plagues of Egypt,'' McAllister said.
One decade, the Rocky Mountain locust was terrorizing the West in swarms that blackened the sky from California to Missouri. But by the turn of the century, it was gone forever - destroyed, many people of the time believed, by their own fervent prayer.
``The last living Rocky Mountain locust was found in 1902,'' Lockwood said. ``It's never been seen since.''
For years, entomologists assumed that such a prolific species could have been wiped out only by some powerful environmental force. But now another theory has taken wing, one that regards the locust's extinction as something akin to a freak farm accident.
The beginning of the end for the Rocky Mountain locust can be traced to its pattern of swarming for a period, then retreating to sandy river beds to breed.
It was at that moment, when its population had collapsed back into its habitat, that farmers began digging up that same ground to plant crops. There are stories of plows bringing up thousands of eggs.
``Western agriculture and the Rocky Mountain locust collided in time and space,'' Lockwood said. ``Through one of the most spectacular coincidences in agricultural history, early agriculture basically destroyed the permanent breeding ground of the locusts.''
Lockwood said that plowing and irrigation, along with the decimation of Indian, bison and beaver populations, all contributed to the ultimate obliteration of the Rocky Mountain locust, a bug only an entomologist could love.
Today, North America is the only continent in the world without a locust.
And because no one expected such a ubiquitous creature to become extinct, very few samples were ever collected. There are fewer than 300 left.
But entomologists know where to find more: frozen in western glaciers - many of which are actually called ``Grasshopper Glacier'' because bug bodies are preserved in them.
And their cousins, such as the Mormon cricket, can give modern Coloradans a sense of the kind of horror the first European settlers faced. The ecological stage is set for another major grasshopper outbreak in the western United States.
``This year, there are going to be 100 grasshoppers per square yard out on the prairie,'' Lockwood said. ``It's pretty amazing to feel them boiling up under your feet.''
Comment #6 Posted by: Brian | August 3, 2007 11:44 PM
From the NY Times:
California Restricts Voting Machines
By CHRISTOPHER DREW
California’s top election official on Friday decertified three voting systems widely used in the state but said she would let counties use the machines in February’s presidential primary if extra security precautions were taken.
The official, Debra Bowen, the secretary of state, said she made the decision in response to studies showing that the machines could be hacked.
For the full story go to:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/05/us/05vote.html?_r=1&hp=&oref=slogin&pagewanted=print
Comment #7 Posted by: FCR | August 4, 2007 09:34 AM