The Internet has given us a lot of things, some of them horrible, but it has also supplied us access to an incredible wealth of information.
I can remember not so many years ago having family members get into intense discussions over many esoteric subjects. They/we would argue for hours and hours and even days and weeks over who was right about something of such utter triviality as to be meaningless. Sometimes we never found out.
Now, you can learn just about anything you want to, almost instantly, and if you are handy with search engine research, you can dig pretty darned deep into the topic of your choice.
A couple of cases in point...a good Facebook friend shared a meme comparing the relative sizes of polar vs black bears. It was a holy cow moment. I probably spent an hour, when I should have been hanging up laundry, delving into just how big bears are. I discovered that a polar bear could easily bump its head on our living room ceiling, which is ten feet above the ugly red shag rug. Dang! I am glad they live a heck of a long way from here. There was a black bear out in our woods a couple of weeks ago, at least according to the trail cams, and that is more than enough excitement for me.
Then there was the matter of the Buffleheads. We saw a little clutch of them during a bird count, energetically diving into the shallows of a nearby lake. It was downright awesome to find them on a CBC as open water is rare here this time of year. My friend and mentor opined that they eat vegetation and are highly popular with hunters as they taste really good. No question that fish ducks, such as mergansers are said to taste like a good dose of cod liver oil, but I thought diving duck=fish duck, and thus disagreed.
Thanks to modern technology, I now know, that although they occasionally dine on mini-minnows, their cuisine of choice consists of crustaceans, insects, and snail-type critters. (The former might explain their tastiness.) It all made sense after I thought about the matter a bit. Most fish ducks are streamlined for catching fast-moving prey, while Buffleheads are fluffy and fat and ridiculously cute. I don't suppose they have to essentially fly underwater like mergansers to catch snails after all.
However, I had to wait to get home to delve into that bit of trivia. No Internet in the 'Dacks. It was like flying blind!
I have to say that I in no way miss those prolonged and tedious discussions about minutia that often plagued our personal argumentative clan. (Montgomerys love to argue and Friers aren't far behind.) Nowadays when I hear one start to brew and bubble here in our normally peaceful living room, with a click of a mouse, clatter of a keyboard, or tap, tap, slide on a cellphone screen, I can shut them all up almost instantly.
Thanks for these needed smiles!
ReplyDeleteOh so many opinions on the internet! I just keep scrolling as I roll my eyes.
ReplyDeleteThe Buffleheads are cute... wonder who came up with that name.
I have seen a taxidermy Polar Bear and yup they are huge. It's grizzlies, however, who give me nightmares. Literally.
Cathy, hope all three of you are feeling much better. We've been worried. Hugs
ReplyDeleteShirley, I was stunned by the size difference! To me Black Bears are huge and the Polar Bears totally dwarf them. I was not at all thrilled to find the former on our trail cam. I get away with feeding birds all years, but if they find the feeders, that is done. I am with you on Grizzlies! Living nightmares. I do not get the people that think they are a wonderful symbol of the wilderness. If it wants to eat me, I don't find it wonderful.
Our daughter gave us an Alexis that sits on our supper table and solves many quandries before they reach argument level.
ReplyDeleteJacqueline, what a nice gift. I love having access to so much information, although it can be overwhelming at times.
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