Next time you pick yourself some basil leaves for that nice vegan salad, you might choose to think about it differently...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-16916474
mark the compost elf wrote:As a vegan, this just makes me proud that i can terrorise a whole veg patch by eating a single radish, very......very.... sadistically slowly![]()
Remarkable though is it not?
Muddy Fox wrote:I saw a demonstration of this in the early 80s at psychic & mystic exhibition in Birmingham. They had put electrodes on some plants, and wired them up to speakers, some kind of bio feedback system, and the plants were making noises, then someone showed the difference between a happy plant noise and distressed plant by making a cut in the leaf or stalk of one of the plants.The screaming noise that came through the speaker was just horrible, it upset me at the time. I was about 16 or 17, and I had a spell where I tried not to walk on grass, in case I hurt the grass blades.I got more callous as I grew up and now I can strim and cut grass without the guilt.
mark the compost elf wrote:As a vegan, this just makes me proud that i can terrorise a whole veg patch by eating a single radish, very......very.... sadistically slowly
mark the compost elf wrote:But without guilt would we not only adgere to the first two of your list.
Muddy Fox wrote:I think so too Katie, however guilt has a purpose perhaps. Guilt is that little inner voice that nags and niggles when we know that we have not acted from love or compassion, but self interest. Maybe guilt teaches the lessons we need to learn,but sometimes guilt is a wasted emotion because the damage is irreversible to plant or being.
katie bridgewater wrote:I can't find it but I once saw a time-lapse short film of a clover's journey around a grassy lawn. I was gobsmacked at how much a small plant can wander at will, moving about to 'graze' the nutrients in the soil. It made me think about plants in a completely different way. It looked like a little creature, wandering about. I think we often forget that time is some thing that limits our perception of the universe. A day is like the blink of an eye to a mountain range, and a lifetime to a damsel fly...
Return to All Creatures Great and Small
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests