BROWDERBOOKS
Don't miss this:
MY INTERVIEW WITH COLLEEN
For my interview with Colleen Chesebro, novelist and word witch, go here and scroll down. But the link to this blog will get you only to post #417, "Kill," since that was the latest one when the interview was done months ago.
I'm now up tp my ears in SEO -- Search Engine Optimization. This involves a whole bunch of new terms. Do you know what any of these mean?
- SERP
- ROI
- CTR
- CPC
- PPC
- ARC
The answers are at the end of the post below. Once you see them, all will be clear. In principle, at least.
FIVE
WONDERS
I WILL NEVER SEE
I WILL NEVER SEE
1. a coral reef
2. a painted bunting
3. Lake Tear of the Clouds, Feldspar Brook, and the Opalescent River
4. the pounding fury of a herd of wild horses galloping
5. a huge mass of black ice rising from the polar sea and then sinking back
into the water, perhaps never to be seen again.
Commentary:
1. Oceanographer Jacques Cousteau has described
coral reefs as resembling dwarf skulls, petrified mauve bushes, witches’ heads, white walking canes by the hundreds, and frozen parasols. Coral reefs are inhabited by feather
bonnets that explode into the stinging spines of the lion fish, and moray eels
glowering from crevices and baring their savage teeth. Who wouldn’t want to see such wonders, even
at the risk of rapture of the depths, when the diver is tempted to explore mysterious
populations still deeper, and risks madness and death.
katyinthecalacademy |
2. Our most beautiful bird,
the male flaunting bold splotches of blue, green, and red. Though recently he was spotted in Manhattan, I
have never seen him, since normally he disdains the usual south-to-north spring
migration path of Eastern birds that brings them to the Ramble in Central Park
and to me. Instead, he winters in
southern Florida and points south, then migrates westward to the American
Southwest, or to coastal Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina. And to make matters worse for birdwatchers,
he is secretive and hard to observe.
DickDaniels
|
3. The lake is the source of the
Hudson River in the far north of the state, high in the Adirondacks. Water from
the lake pours into the brook and the river.
The very names of all three enchant me.
Lake Tear of the Clouds |
4.
I have seen such horses in the 1953 French film Crin blanc (White Mane), which shows them racing about the
Camargue, a region in southern France bounded by the Mediterranean on the
south, and on the other sides by the two arms of the Rhône delta. Unknown to tourists, the Camargue has lakes
and marshlands that are a haven for wild birds, but also, as seen in the film,
herds of wild horses, and the French cowboys that try to capture and tame them.
Though I have never seen them, wild horses also run free in the American West, grazing belly-deep in tall grasses, often dotting the hills as far as the eye can see. Having removed them from public land, where their grazing has depleted the grasses, the Bureau of Land Management stores 46,000 of them on some 60 private ranches at a cost that eats up much of the Bureau’s budget. The horses’ natural enemies, wolves and mountain lions, have been eradicated, allowing the horses to reproduce to the point that the grasslands are overgrazed and in danger. But for me, an Easterner who hasn't been on a horse since the summer camp of his childhood (and then unhappily), wild horses suggest a magnificent force of nature that we humans have yet to subdue.
Though I have never seen them, wild horses also run free in the American West, grazing belly-deep in tall grasses, often dotting the hills as far as the eye can see. Having removed them from public land, where their grazing has depleted the grasses, the Bureau of Land Management stores 46,000 of them on some 60 private ranches at a cost that eats up much of the Bureau’s budget. The horses’ natural enemies, wolves and mountain lions, have been eradicated, allowing the horses to reproduce to the point that the grasslands are overgrazed and in danger. But for me, an Easterner who hasn't been on a horse since the summer camp of his childhood (and then unhappily), wild horses suggest a magnificent force of nature that we humans have yet to subdue.
Not easy to find photos of them galloping. smerikal |
Ordinateur |
5. Such a phenomenon is described
in Robert Macfarlane’s recent bestseller, Underland:
A Deep Time Journey, of which I read a review. He witnessed it in the Arctic. (For more about him, see my post #416, "Descent into Darkness: Revelations, Fecundity, and Death.")
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