k4 November 24, 2005 - December 4, 2005 (Cheyenne - Roots)

November is almost over.  Time to go underground, hibernate, stay warm, give thanks, remember our ancestors.  The plant world is shedding leaves and pushing its sugars down into the earth.  Into the roots.  Storage for the long cold winter nights ahead.                         

                                                                               
I am particularly interested in eating roots right now.  I have heard people complaining that they taste like dirt, and they do.  Dirt, exploding with life.  Sunshine stored underground.  There are so many roots. Especially comforting right now are the beets. Traditional beets, red as blood; golden beets glow when you cut them open. The Italian Chioggia beet is candy-striped with rings of white and pink.                
                                                                               
Of course there are also potatoes, sweet potatoes, carrots, and turnips.  But do not forget rutabagas, daikon, horseradish, parsnips, sun-chokes, yacon, burdock, and those big black radishes.  Try them all, and

Happy Thanksgiving from all of us at The Dirt! 

Where Spreading Roots Spring Forth.                                  

AUTUMN ISSUE OF "THE GEONOMIST" NOW AVAILABLE

Dear and curious friends;
Belated merry equinox. The world works in wondrous ways. Did you know …
Most terrorist attacks are not religious in nature but all are for land?
Warren Buffett said finance economists teach the earth is flat?
William F. Buckley praised Henry George, 19th c economist who urged taxing land?
FEMA, nealy bankrupt by hurricanes, recommended ending the subsidy to victims?
New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson urged sharing the state’s oil surplus with residents?
The Fed of Boston criticized the official US unemployment data as false?
That the reaction to allergens and asthma by over half of us is up 74% from 30 years ago?
Hawaii is capturing some sky-high site values for the public?
That China, who’s supposed to inherit this century, has 1000s of riots?
That worldwide, it seems the values of land under homes is leveling?
The medium income buys less than two-thirds of the median house?
That the saving rate, now headed negative, was there last during the Great Depression?
Read all about it and more in the autumn issue of The Geonomist
Tell a friend, even a list of them.
Let me know if you want a hard copy, complete with the popular cartoons.
Please forward. Sorry for any duplicate posts. To avoid this announcement in the future, please reply with the same heading but with the word “remove” prominently in the body. Thanks.
SMITH, Jeffery J., President, Forum on Geonomics
3604 SE Morrison St, Portland Oregon 97214 USA
503/234-0809; jjs@geonomics.org; www.geonomics.org
Share Earth's worth to prosper and conserve.

RADISH STRONGER THAN ASPHALT

Photo

TOKYO (Reuters) - A giant white radish that won the hearts of a Japanese town by valiantly growing through the urban asphalt was in intensive care at a town hall in western Japan on Thursday after being slashed by an unknown assailant.

The "daikon" radish, shaped like a giant carrot, first made the news months ago when it was noticed poking up through asphalt along a roadside in the town of Aioi, population 33,289.

This week local residents, who had nicknamed the vegetable "Gutsy Radish," were shocked -- and in some cases moved to tears -- when they found it had been decapitated.

TV talk shows seized on the attempted murder of the popular vegetable and a day later, the top half of the radish was found near the site where it had been growing.

A town official said Thursday the top of the severed radish had been placed in water to try to keep it alive and possibly get it to flower.

Asked why the radish -- more often found on Japanese dinner tables as a garnish, pickle or in "oden" stew -- had so many fans, town spokesman Jiro Matsuo said: "People discouraged by tough times were cheered by its tenacity and strong will to live."

 

Found: http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20051117/od_nm/japan_radish_dc

Submitted by: Paul

 

 

SNOWY OWL SIGHTED IN OREGON

From: fullertk                                               
Subject: snowy owl sighted in Oregon                                      
Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2005 14:43:09 -0800

A snowy owl is resting near the I-5N/205N split as you proceed on 205 it is on the right. It was first sighted this morning and students have gone and documented it. He/She is expected to rest there for the rest of the day. This is the only sighting in Oregon so far, there have been others in NY and Minnesota and BC.

Laura notes
Snowy owls' traditionally are found in the artic habitat. It is rare for them to be found so far south. The Conservation Centre mentions that "The Snowy owl being a polar species has a strictly circumpolar distribution, meaning that this species is found at the same polar latitudes right around the globe. During the short polar summer season this species remains confined to the high Arctic. It is only during winters when periodic ‘eruption years’ occur that the Snowy Owl is commonly seen south of the tree line. This phenomenon is mainly due to the cyclic ‘crash’ of the Snowy Owl’s main food source, namely the lemming,The image “http://www.xeye.org/1995-2000/Pictures/Lemmings/Real-Lemming.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors. and to a lesser degree to severity of winter weather conditions. During these ‘invasion’ years the Snowy Owl can be seen as far south as the northern states and is even considered a regular visitor to the great plains states. Being a species of open spaces, the Snowy Owl can be found, when south of it’s treeless tundra habitat, in almost any open expanse, be it grassland, over frozen bodies of water or even in farmer’s fields!" In Oregon, records show that a fine adult female was documented (and shot) by a hunter in Oregon back in November 30, 1909 close Sheridan, Douglas county.

 Other parts of  their food chain include:

Lemmings are small mammalian creatures, herbivorous in nature, famous for their extreme population explosions and subsequent crashes. Their diet includes grasses, sedges, bearberry, and cottongrass in summer; twigs and buds of willow in winter.  Willows are extremely abundant in northern habitats.  Scientists argue over the proper classification of the different types into species. When I visited Alaska about 8 years ago, a book I read on the subject divided them out into about 32 different types!!

 

We are wondering if anyone managed to get a photo of this wonderful visitor? If so, post it up on The Dirt!