National Geographic: The Savage Garden
- Year:
- 1997
- 62 Views
God Almighty first planted a garden,
and indeed it is
the purest of human pleasures.
"Cultivators of the earth,"
according to Thomas Jefferson,
are the most valuable citizens.
They are the most vigorous,
the most independent,
the most virtuous.
Or, as my aunt Mildred said,
Never throw meat in the compost pile.
Hi, I'm Leslie Nielsen.
Welcome to my garden.
I'm sure it's a lot like yours
cool, serene, completely under control.
Time to wake up and smell the roses.
The backyard is a killing field.
It's a realm of stalkers...
serial killers...
aerial combat...
venom...
death.
So, if you're looking
for peace and quiet...
stay away from the...
savage garden.
A garden is a little slice of nature
where you get to call the shots.
You see:
A raked lawn.A well-skimmed lily pond.
Perfect rows of vegetables.
Voltaire once wrote,
or was it Martha Stewart?
We must cultivate our garden.
Well, they're both wrong.
Pruning, planting,
whacking your weeds?
It's all beside the point!
Because the place cannot be controlled
So give it up!
Ask not what you
can do for your garden.
Ask what your garden can do for you.
Because with the right approach,
your backyard can expand your mind.
But you need the
right tool for the job.
I like to watch.
Because when you're "gardening,"
you're too busy to see anything.
And you're missing
all the strange and wonderful
wildness of a place
that's close to home.
And I don't mean the mall.
Now this may come as a surprise,
but I wasn't always this wise.
But I came face-to-face
with the naked garden
and I was forced to open my eyes.
What I discovered wasn't always pretty
but it was always fascinating.
Let me tell how it happened.
I felt like a
I ran a tight ship.
Yeah, I thought I was in charge.
Still, the vegetable
patch held to its own pace...
always about a month
behind my appetite!
Every day, until my tomatoes were ripe
I'd be there, watchful and proud.
I felt like a maestro,
and the vegetables were my orchestra.
And we made beautiful
gazpacho together.
I never suspected that even among
my precious tomatoes,
a trespasser ran amok.
It was a shrew.
This ravenous pipsqueak needs to eat
For his size, he's one of the fiercest
predators in the world.
But a year ago,
I didn't even know he existed.
My mind was in the mulch.
I was too busy
savoring the fruits of my labor.
I don't like to brag,
but I thought I knew my onions.
Now all the while, this little fellow
he weighs no more than a wet tea bag
had the run of the place.
Like it or not, shrews are among the
garden's most common mammals.
They love to dig around for worms
and beetles, spiders, snails.
They work day and night,
hunting one hour,
then napping the next.
That's a schedule I could settle into.
Shrews operate at such a furious pace
that just missing a meal
could kill them.
When they're on the go,
they really live life in the fast lane.
Under stress, their hearts beat
up to 1, 300 times a minute
like mine during my last audit.
It's safe to say that no perfume maker
has ever been inspired by a shrew.
Glands on their bellies
put out a musky smell.
Only a predator with a
strong stomach will take one on.
tough enough for the job.
He's one of the backyard's
great hunters
at home in the water
as well as on land.
He tastes the air with his tongue
and picks up a whiff of a shrew.
Following the trail,
His weapon:
a steel-trap jaw.A fight is coming, but my little
shrew is no babe in the woods.
Predicting a winner might be hard.
The snake has no venom,
but his quarry does.
The short-tailed shrew is the only
North American mammal
with a poisonous bite,
except for my Aunt Mildred.
In this fight, the first bite wins.
The shrew strikes for the neck.
His cobralike venom quickly starts to
subdue the snake.
Muscles go slack, breathing slows.
Paralysis would soon set in
if the shrew weren't so hungry.
The snake has been vanquished
by the one creature in my yard
there is no taming of.
I'd reached for the suburbs
and ended up in the Serengeti!
Something awful seemed
to stir in every crevice.
This beetle is emerging
after three years underground.
She's an acorn weevil
a subversive devil about
the size of a grain of rice.
I felt like her goal in life
was to wreck my oak trees.
As soon as she dries off her wings
for her maiden flight,
off she'll go... gunning for my acorns.
But I didn't know
any of this back then.
I had other fish to fry,
like keeping my daisies from drooping.
Of course, now I know...
I didn't even have control
of my own flower patch.
Just below me,
an earwig was laying her eggs.
This forbidding insect seems
to have had a charisma bypass.
But don't sell her short.
protect it from deadly fungus.
Otherwise she might lose
the entire nest to athlete's egg.
Earwigs like to hang out in warm,
dark spaces.
But that bit about hiding
in people's ears?
Just a tired, old myth.
I hope.
A terrible threat approaches...
at its own pace.
The earwig nest is about to be slimed.
There's nothing a
caring mother can do.
A hungry thrush spots the snail.
Her next meal will be escargot.
Remove the snail
from its shell... delicately.
Then tenderize by pounding on a rock.
The footage you are about
to see contains scenes
that may be disturbing
to some viewers.
Now if you can't stand the heat,
get out of the garden!
Speaking of the heat,
I'd like you to meet a fire ant.
work in huge colonies.
They run an efficient operation.
A quarter-million ants
that's one extended family,
can get by on two meals a day.
Here's the appetizer.
And now for the main course.
An ant attacks.
Reinforcements are quick to arrive.
The dragonfly makes a desperate move.
It's too late.
Again and again,
the dragonfly is stung
with a caustic venom.
It's death by a thousand fiery jabs.
And I thought paparazzi were bad!
Piece by piece,
the ants dismantle their captive,
like a scene out of Gulliver's Travels
Make that Reservoir Dogs.
For the ants,
it's Tails I win... heads, you lose.
Decapitation is the final insult.
Some say the world
will end in fire ants.
For the dragonfly, it just did.
I thought the garden was mine,
but in fact, creatures
had claimed it all!
My yard was divided into warring camps!
Each shrew controls its own patch.
And being some of nature's crankiest
creatures, shrews do not like to share.
My little shrew's neighbor is sleeping
just over the scent marked border
that defines their territories.
But while these little fellows have
they have poor vision and can
sometimes bump right into each other.
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