I often watch the aforementioned insects and note how picky they are. A bee will fly from flower to flower, apparently prodding each one with its proboscis (I think that’s what the feeding bit at the front is called) before settling on the sixth or seventh in line and then proceeding to feed.
But they all look the same to me, so how does the bee decide which one to use?
Meanwhile, the Shire continues to be a little precocious in the matter of signalling the onset of autumn. Many of the trees and hedgerow shrubs are now dotted with yellow, especially the lime trees which are usually the first to drop their leaves. This is normally the September look. The leaves on my favourite copper beech are no longer claret red, but a dirty and drying shade of brown/green. The wheat fields have been harvested this week and all that remains are a few straw bales which haven’t been taken back to the farms yet. And what particularly concerned recently me was seeing a flock of swallows lined up on a telegraph wire. That’s usually their preparation for the return to Africa, again about a month early.
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Meanwhile on the international front, the BBC headline on the Alaska meeting regarding Russia’s war on Ukraine runs: No Deal, No Ceasefire. There are pictures galore showing Trump and Putin smiling sweetly at one another, and Mr Trump is reported as saying that the day was a great success. So what success is he talking about? Maybe he’s right; I wouldn’t know because I couldn’t be bothered to read any further, being sick to the back teeth of a world dominated by American and Russian Presidents.
And while I’m on the subject of prominent personalities, I’m moved to wonder whether Mr Ben Gvir of Israel knows what a ‘cheap shot’ is. (Do they have that expression in Hebrew?) He certainly should. And that leads me further to wonder how the phrase ‘unbelievably obnoxious’ would translate into Hebrew, Aramaic, Arabic, or whatever language was dripping like stale vomit from Ben Gvir’s mouth down in the cells.