Showing posts with label rabbit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rabbit. Show all posts

Thursday, June 2, 2011



Carrots are an excellent source of antioxidant compounds, and the richest vegetable source of the pro-vitamin A carotenes. Carrots' antioxidant compounds help protect against cardiovascular disease and cancer and also promote good vision, especially night vision.



Rabbits are an excellent source of garden fertilizer and cuteness.   They make lovely pets, can mow your garden to bare earth, and can get rid of any electrical cords and mattress linings you no longer want.



So if you want an electrical cord-free home brimming with vitamin A carotenes, this is the charm for you.



It is available here and here.

Monday, March 28, 2011

Don't You Want Some Bunny to Love?

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When the lettuce is super-size
And the carrots all up-rise

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Don't you want some bunny to love?
Don't you need some bunny to love?
Wouldn't you love some bunny to love?
You better find some bunny to love.

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When there are garden flowers to be fed
And the snow pea blooms are shed


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Don't you want some bunny to love?
Don't you need some bunny to love?
Wouldn't you love some bunny to love?
You better find some bunny to love.

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That nose, that bunny nose will twitch and twitch
Telling you to soil-enrich...

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Don't you want some bunny to love?
Don't you need some bunny to love?
Wouldn't you love some bunny to love?
You better find some bunny to love.

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Chomped greens filling flower beds
As Bunny eats all your cabbage heads.

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Don't you want some bunny to love?
Don't you need some bunny to love?
Wouldn't you love some bunny to love?
You better find some bunny to love.

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Bunnies who will not eat your garden can be found here.

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Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

The Hare and the Elixir of Immortality

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In both the Chinese and Japanese culture, the hare (Chinese, Tu; Japanese, Usagi) is sacred to the moon, where the Taoists believe it lives, mixing together the ingredients that form the elixir of life, or longevity.  

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In the Chinese culture, the greatest desire is long life, which prolongs  enjoyment of this world's goods, and ensures receiving the respect paid to old age in a country governed by the maxims of Confucius. Longevity is therefore the first and greatest of the Woo Fuh or " Five Blessings." 

 Legend tells us that the rabbit's fur turns white at the age of 100, and blue at the age of 500.  

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When the Chinese goddess Ch'ang-O drank too much of the magical elixir, she floated away to live on the moon, too light to return to earth.  

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Year of the Rabbit charm can be found here.  Ch'ang-O can be found on the moon.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

In a Rabbity Mood... or a Mabbity Rood

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Runny Babbit lent to wunch
And heard the saitress way,
"We have some lovely stabbit rew --
Our Special for today."
~ Shel Silverstein
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Here is a verse about rabbits
That doesn't mention their habits. 
Ogden Nash
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delivering eggs
wanted, more rabbits for job
this works for me - you?
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Do not rely upon a rabbit's foot for luck.  After all, it didn't work out too well for the rabbit.  Did it?

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 A sly rabbit will have three openings to its den.
~Chinese Proverb

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What can I say?  I was in a rabbity mood... or a mabbity rood.  More mabbits here.

Monday, May 17, 2010

Why Owl Has Big Eyes

Adapted from an Iroquois Tale

Long ago Raweno, the Everything-Maker, was busy creating various animals. He had been struggling with Rabbit for quite a while, and his patience was growing very short.  Rabbit kept making requests.  "I want long legs and long ears like a deer, and sharp fangs and claws like a panther."


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Raweno sighed, but he kept working.  "I do them the way they want to be," he grumbled.  "I give them what they ask for."  He started on Rabbit's hind legs, making them long, just like Rabbit wanted them to be.


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Owl, meanwhile, was sitting on a tree branch nearby, still unformed and not very patiently waiting his turn.  Raweno had been fiddling with various parts of Rabbit for a very long time.


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"Hoo!  Raweno!" he called.

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Raweno stopped stretching the legs and look up, clearly annoyed.  "Can it wait?" he asked.

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Owl ignored Raweno's sighs and grumbles, and spoke up.  "I want a beautiful long neck like Swan's.  And I want beautiful red feathers like Cardinal's."


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Raweno held up a hand to stop him,  but Owl was not to be deterred.  He continued.


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"I want a giant crown of plumes like heron's only bigger.  And I want you to make me the most beautiful and the fastest and the best of all birds."


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Raweno, who was behind schedule as it was and struggling with rabbit's long ears, didn't want to hear any more.  "Owl," he said.  "Turn around and look at something else for a while.  Better yet, close your eyes.  It makes me nervous when others watch me work and you're making me angry."


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He pulled at the ears some more, making them even longer, as Rabbit had requested, though he might have used a little unnecessary roughness at that point.


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But Owl wouldn't stop.  By then, he couldn't stop, so excited was he at the vision he had of his future self.  "Whoo, whoo," Owl said.  "You know what would be even better?  You could give me eyes that watch better than anyone's.  Better than Heron's or Crane's or Rabbit's.  I could have the best eyes that saw everything!"


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That did it.  Then Raweno blew up. He grabbed Owl right off the branch and shoved Owl's head deep into his body.  Then he shook Owl until Owl was afraid his eyes would be rattled right out of his head.  Owl's eyes were huge with fright.  Finally Raweno pulled at Owl's ears until they were sticking up at both sides of his head.


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"There!" said Raweno.  "That ought to teach you.  Now you won't be able to crane your neck and look at things you shouldn't be looking at.  And you have great big ears so you san listen and hear what I say when I tell you what to do.  And you have big eyes, too.  But you won't be able to watch me!"
"Why not?" asked Owl, in a very small voice.

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"Because from now on, Owl, you're on the night shift.  You'll only be awake at night and not during the day when I'm busy working."

"But, but..." said Owl.

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But Raweno wasn't finished.  "You know those red feathers you wanted?  The ones like Cardinal's?"
With that Raweno took a huge handful of mud and rubbed it all over Owl.  "You're going to have gray feathers as punishment for bothering me!"



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Owl started to speak, but he thought better of it.  The daylight was starting to hurt his eyes.  And so off he flew, looking for a nice dark home, muttering "Whoo, whoo, whoo" to himself.


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Finally Raweno turned back to finish Rabbit.  But Rabbit had heard enough.  He was terrified after Raweno's rant, and he took off, unfinished.


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And that is the reason that Rabbit's hind legs are long.  Those are the legs Raweno completed.  But Rabbit's front legs are short, because he was only half done.  That is why Rabbit hops instead of walking and running.


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Rabbit was quite traumatized by the whole experience, and never did get those claws and fangs he asked for, and as a result, he is quite incapable of defending himself.  Had he not run (or hopped) off prematurely, Rabbit would be quite a different animal.

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As for Owl, Raweno never relented and never worked his magic on Owl again.  Owl remains as he was made, with big eyes, a short neck, and ears that stick up on the sides of his head. And he sleeps all day and only ventures out at night, so that Raweno never has to look upon him again.


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While Owl can appear in many different shapes and sizes and colors, he still works the night shift.