Sunday, March 28, 2021

Mysteries of Trees

 

I had a marvelosity in nature last autumn and my teacher was a ginko tree, wrote David from Ancaster.

Ginko trees are actually living fossils and they are what botanists call 'dioecious'. That is to say, they come as either 'male or female' trees. So, imagine my surprise when my supposedly male tree started producing seeds last fall just like a female tree. I was a little annoyed because the seeds of the female tree can be very messy and smelly when they fall to the ground ~ and for that reason, nurseries only sell male trees.

Returning to the nursery, I mentioned to the owner that he had sold me a 'female tree' by mistake. His first question to me was, “How many ginko trees do you have on your property?”

Telling him that I had four in total, he stated: “I sold you a 'male tree' but ginko trees can change their sex depending on the population density of the sex of those around them. Your male tree just decided that it had to become a female. They can do that!”

So, that's what Nature had to teach me about diversity.

Now, about all those seeds on the ground ~ I still love my tree, even if 'he' is a 'she'!

Lots of trees are hermaphroditic ~ their flowers contain both male and female reproductive parts.

Other species, also may have male trees and female trees which you can tell apart by looking at their flowers. The male reproductive parts are the pollen-laden stamen; the female parts, their egg-holding pistils. Tree species are monoecious ~ saying they have 'female and male flowers' on the same plant.

Birch, oak, pine, horn beam, and fig trees all fall into this category. To have perfect flowers, they have both male and female parts in a single bloom ~ also common in hazelnut and apple trees.

A Place of Enchantment

In a pond of quiet waters, surrounded by dense green woodland, stands a lonely tree on a tiny isle.~ ever so proud of its existence. This scene I frequently view on screen ~ speaking to me of 'serenity'.

Or, perhaps this tree on a lonely woodland isle believes “Trees are Earth's Endless Effort to speak to the listening heaven,” suggested by Rabindranath Tagore...in an image of evergreen treetops with an erect rainbow stretching from forest to the heavens.

Mrs. Shapiro briefly described the 'Power of a Tree'

Towering high above us
Roots take up water
Evergreens stay green all year
Every day they keep us alive!

Perhaps you'll enjoy what Ulena Mohoney prosed:

If chestnuts came from walnut trees
And almonds came from almond trees,
Then how come acorns come from oaks?
Can
anyone explain this?

A redwood tree is not really red
And pine trees are green ~ not red.
So, why is the white birch aptly named?
And why's the white pine green instead?

Now, ash trees don't grow ashes. Right?
And beach trees aren't on beaches. Right?
And fir trees don't have furry trunks:
Although, that would be quite a sight!

These trees! These Trees!
I wish it would be less confusing in the word!
If trees had better chosen names ~
They might be better understood!

“The clearest way into the Universe,” stated John Muir, “is through a forest wilderness.”

Philosophies About Tree Mysteries

“Trees are sanctuaries.
Whoever knows how to speak to them ~
knows how to listen to them, can learn the truth.
They do not preach learning and concepts ~
they preach, undeterred by particulars:
the Ancient Law of Life.”
(Unknown Author)

Mokokoma's Philosophy

Plants are more courageous than almost all human beings: an orange tree would rather die,
than produce lemons ~ whereas, instead of dying, the average person would rather be someone, they are not.

Written by MBK...July 9, 2019
Your views, I appreciate

Wednesday, March 24, 2021

Impact of Arthritis

 

Arthritis is Canada’s most common chronic health condition ~ and there is no cure..6 million Canadians (1 in 5) live with arthritis. Without serious attention to this disease and its impacts, there will be a 50 % increase in the number of people affected by arthritis within 20 years ~ increasing to 1 in 4 Canadians.

Yearly the Arthritis Society forwards me a delightful yearly calendar. Its vision and purpose is to embrace and empower the resilient spirit of people, who with arthritis, tirelessly pursue a future without it. Monthly the calendar features exceptionally beautiful Canadian scenes. Addressing the photo is a dynamic philosophy for our daily lives.

January introduces us to a beautiful photo of Banff National Park’s majestic forest of evergreens. Below the snowy peak, stands this forest. In the sky, Andrea Bain affirms: Pay attention to yourself. Build on who you are. Become a whole person. Enjoy life.

Against a dark blue midnight sky, stands Fairmont Le Chateau in Quebec City.

February advises: BE ACTIVE.
Frederic M. Perrin stated: May your footsteps leave only friends behind.
Everything we do and every movement we make, involves our joints.
Ta
king care of our joints and getting them moving properly is the top priority
of any arthritis treatment plan.
Visit Arthritis.ca/staying active.

March advises: Visit guidelines and arthritis.ca/flourish for healthy recipes. Empower yourself to get moving this month! Against a sunset sky at early morn, Rosemary Brown states We must open the doors and we must see to it that they remain open, so that others can pass through.

Purple lupines and white ones too line the shoreline of a wavy lake. You never know when a moment and few sincere words can have an impact on a life. (Zig Ziglar) as stated in April.

After ensuring your loved ones are taken care of, you can choose among one million Canadians who have included a charity among the beneficiaries in their will. Ralph Waldo Emerson states, Patience and fortitude conquer all things...illustrated by Barry Head Sea in Newfoundland.

Understanding the link between your mind and body is an important step in developing
strategies that will help you live your best life.
Rosemary Brown states” We must open the doors and we must see to it they remain open so that others can pass through.
Pictured by a sunset at Niagara-on-the-lake.

May features Berry Head Sea Arch in Newfoundland. ~ so called due to gigantic boulders with a gap-view to ocean waters.

Ralph Waldo Emerson advises: PATIENCE and FORTITUDE conquer all things.

GET INVOLVED: The Arthritis Society offers many opportunities to help the 6 million Canadians living with arthritis. From community fundraising events to volunteering , there are lots of ways you can help give Canadians who live with arthritis a brighter future.

Above the best photo of Niagara Falls I’ve ever seem, Aristotle writes in the sky:
In all things of nature. .there is something of the marvellous.

Turning the page, a dramatic night photo of fireworks: “Celebration of Lights in English Bay, Vancouver , British Columbia. “ Living with arthritis, often means living with chronic pain. The Arthritis Society’s ’pain management resources provide helpful strategies and tips to help you minimize your pain symptoms and find relief.

Beside a firework’s burst, Alice Munro advises:
The constant happiness is curiosity.

Titled : Back to School, the photo is a Gravel Road & Fields, Regina, Saskatchewan. The Society provides a free, specially designed ergonomic backpack to children under 10 who have been recently diagnosed with arthritis. The backpacks are filled with information and tools families can use to help children with arthritis lead healthier lives.

Sometimes it’s the journey that teaches you a lot about your destination, advised Drake,

Wow! It’s a coastal view of a lighthouse attached to a brown frame house on a hill with other hillside habitats. The towering red lighthouse overlooks the sea to its horizon.: Pointe-à-la-Renommée Lighthouse is located at Gaspe, Quebec.

Eleanor Roosevelt declares: ”To handle yourself, use your head; to handle others, use your heart.

Repetitive motions or staying in one position long, can take a toll on joints Take regular breaks at work or school to rest, stretch...or get moving.

Viewing the massive moss-covered rock in the valley stream, Mother Teresa stated, Spread love everywhere you go. Let no one ever come to you without leaving happier.

Did you know? The Arthritis Society is Canada’s largest charitable funder-of-arthritis research, investing more than $200 million dollars in research projects since our founding that have led to breakthroughs in the diagnosis treatment and care of people with arthritis.

Submitted by Harriet Tubman, in her dramatic photo of “Sunset over Yukon River near Dawson City, Yukon Territory cites “Every great dream begins with a dreamer. Always remember, you have within you the strength, the patience and the passion to reach for the stars to change the world, as stated by Harriet Tubman.

December features a shipyard at Inner Harbour, Victoria, British Columbia. We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give, stated by Winston Churchill.

Assembled by MBK: March 2021
Comments always welcome.

Wednesday, March 17, 2021

Geological Discoveries

 

Earth is ancient now, but all knowledge is stored up in her. She keeps a record of everything that has happened since time began. Of tune before time, she says little ~ and in a language that no one has yet understood.

Through time, her secret codes have gradually been broken. Her mud and lava is a message from the past.

Fossils Record Day Dinosaurs Died

The following are excerpts from a writing by Ben Guarino, published in The Washington Post.

Scientists Find Clues to Extinction Event in Remains of Fish: “Sixty-six million years ago, a massive asteroid crashed into a shallow sea near Mexico. The impact carved out a 145-kilometre-wide crater and flung mountains of earth into space. Earthbound debris fell to the planet in droplets of molten rock and glass. Ancient fish caught glass blobs in their gills as they swam, gape-mouthed, beneath the strange rain. Large sloshing waves threw animals onto dry land ~ then more waves buried them in silt.

Scientists working in North Dakota recently dug up fossils of these fish: They died within the first minutes or hours after the asteroid hit (according to a paper published recently in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences), hence a discovery that has sparked tremendous excitement among paleontologists.

You're going back to the day that the dinosaurs died,” said Timothy Bralower, a Pennsylvania State University paleonceanographer who is studying the impact crater and was not involved with this work. That's what this is! This is the day the dinosaurs died!

Roughly 3 or 4 species perished. The killer asteroid most famously claimed the dinosaurs. But T.rex and Triceratops were joined by hoards of other living things.

Fresh water and marine creatures were victims, as were plants and micro-organisms, including 93 per cent of plankton. A lone branch of dinosaurs, the birds, lives on.

In the late 1970's, Luis and Walter Alvarez, a father and son scientist duo at California's Berkeley's University examined an unusual geologic layer between the Cretaceous and Paleogene periods. The boundary was full of the element iridium, which is rare in Earth's crust ~ but not in asteroids. Together with other paleontologists, they have found heaps of fossilized sturgeon and paddle-fish with glass spheres still in their gills. They found squid-like animals, shark teeth and the remains of predatory aquatic lizards called mosasaurs. They found dead mammals, insects, trees and a Triceratops. They found foot-long fossil feathers, dinosaur tracks and prehistoric mammal burrows. They found fossilized tree gunk called amber that had captured the glass spheres too.

In the geologic layer just above the fossil deposit, ferns now dominate the signs of a recovering ecosystem.

In the early 1990's researchers located the scar left by the asteroid ~ a crater in the Yucatan Peninsula.

About 3200 kilometres away, is Hell Creek where a hail of glass beads called tektites rained there within 15 minutes of the impact (stated by study author, Jan Smit, a paleontologist at Vrije University in Amsterdam), who also was an early discoverer of iridium.

The fish, pressed in the mud like flowers in a diary, are remarkably well preserved. It's the equivalent of finding people in life positions, buried by ash after Pompeii,” Bralower said.

Bal Gangadhar Tilak, in his expose 'The Arctic House in the Vedas) states, “The geologist takes up the history of the earth at the point where the archaeologist leaves it ~ and carries it further back into remote antiquity.”

Devon Island: Nunavut's Mars

Published in The Canadian Press, Hina Alam reports from Vancouver:

One of the most Mars-like environments on Earth, Devon Island in the Canadian High Arctic, is now on the map and can be explored on Google Street View.

This largest uninhabited island on Earth is a rocky polar desert that has a surface and conditions similar to the red planet,” said Pascal Lee, chair of the Mars Institute and director of the Haughton -Mars Project , a field research project on Devon Island that's funded by NASA.

There are not many places like this,” Lee said of the island roughly the size of Nova Scotia in Baffin Bay, Nunavut. “It's the biggest stretch of terrain that is barren...rocky...cold...and dry. So, right there, it's a big piece of real estate that has similar climate to Mars.

Since 1997, the remote land mass has been the site of field deployments by scientists and astronauts looking to learn more about the moon and Mars. Last summer, Lee and a team of researchers set out to generate a panorama of some sites most frequented by scientists. They used Go Pro cameras to get 360-degree 'photo spheres' and smart phones to capture video footage.

Published by Google Street View, puts the team 'on the map and shares their experience with the rest of the world,” Lee said. “The unbelievable thing is that pretty much every step you take, as soon as you are away from our camp ~ you're probably the first person to ever walk there,” he said.

There is something amazing that still, to be able to do that ~ to see views and landscapes that from your particular perspective, no one has seen before. Nobody! The place is seeing effects of climate change,” he said.

In the quarter of a century that Lee has been visiting the area, he's seen places that previously were covered in ice but are now barren.”

Accompanying this article is an aerial view showing the Haughton-Mars Project Research Station (HMPRS) on Devon Island, Nunavut.

* * * * * *

John McPhee ~ in his writing of Annals of the Former World, wrote, When the climbers of 1953 planted their flags on the highest mountain, they set them in snow on skeletons of creatures that had lived in the clear, warm ocean that India, moving north, blanked out.

Possibly as much as 20,000 feet below the sea floor, the skeletal remains had turned into rock. If by some fiat I had to restrict all the writing to one sentence, this is the one I would choose: “The summit of Mt. Everest is marine life free!”

Author: MBK...written April 1, 2019
Comments appreciated

Friday, March 5, 2021

Trivia Significance

 

In a recent document sent from Tom, titled Trivia, I’ve retained it, enlightening our minds of lifestyles in days of yore. This is very prominent stuff!

In the 1400’s, a law was set forth in England that a man was allowed to beat his wife with a stick no thicker than his thumb. Hence, we have ‘the rule of thumb.

Many years ago in Scotland, a new game was invented. It was ruled: Gentlemen only...Ladies forbidden..and thus the word GOLF entered into the English language.

The first couple to be shown in bed together on prime time TV was Fred and Wilma Flintstone.

Every day, more money is printed for Monopoly than the U.S. Treasury.

Men can read smaller print than women can; women can hear better.
Coca-Cola was originally green.
It is impossible to lick your elbow.
The State with the highest percentage of people who walk to work is Alaska.

The percentage of Africa that is wilderness: 28%.
The percentage of North America that is wilderness: is 38%.

The cost of raising a medium-sized dog to the age of 11: $16.400.

The average number of people airborne over the U.S. in any given hour is 61,000.

Intelligent people have more zinc and copper in their hair.

The first novel ever written on a typewriter: Tom Sawyer.

Each King in a deck of playing cards represents a great king from history:
Spades: King David
Hearts: Charlemagne
Clubs: Alexander the Great
Diamonds: Julius Caesar.

For your manifestation, 111,111,111 X 111,111,111 = 12345, 678, 987,654,321.

If a statue in the park of a person on a horse, has both front legs in the air, the person died in battle.

If the horse has one front leg in the air, the person died because of wounds received in battle.

If the horse has all four legs on the ground...the person died of natural causes.

Half of all Americans live within 50 miles of what?
Their birthplace.

Most boat owners name boats. What is the most popular name?
Obsession.

If you were to spell out the numbers, how far would you have to go until you reached the letter A?
One thousand!

What do Bulletproof vests ...fire escapes...windshield wipers...and laser printers have in common?
All were invented by women.

What is the only food that doesn’t spoil?
Honey.

Which day are there more collect calls than any other day of the year?
Father’s Day.

In Shakespeare’s time, mattresses were secured on bed frames by ropes.
When you pulled on the ropes, the mattresses tightened
making the bed firmer to sleep on. Hence the phrase:
Good Night!

It was the accepted practice in Babylon, 4,000 years ago that for a month after the wedding, the bride’s father would supply his son-in-law with all the mead he could drink. Mead is a honey-beer...and because their calendar was lunar-based, this period was called the honey month which we know today as The Honeymoon!

In English pubs, ale is ordered by pints and quarts. So, in Old England, when customers got unruly, the bartender would yell at them: Mind your pints and quarts and settle down! It’s where we get the phrase: Mind Your P’s and Q’s!

At least 75% of people who read this: will try to lick their elbow.

Compiled by MBK...January 5, 2021
Comments always welcome.