lydamorehouse: (Default)
[personal profile] lydamorehouse
 Yesterday,  when I was out driving around, I came across our neighborhood gang of wild turkeys. I sent a video to [personal profile] rachelmanija who failed to be suitably impressed with Minnesota's mega fauna (because APPARENTLY California *has* wild turkeys, because California has everything as it is nearly the length of the entire United States and has like a zillion biomes in it,) I started to think, okay, does Minnesota have something that is so truly unique that a jaded, world-traveling Californian* would be impressed?  

Do you know what I found?

The grey tree frog, whose salient feature is that it can survive being PARTIALLY FROZEN.

OMG, Minnesota. You're a walking stereotype!!










----
*I don't actually think of Rachel this way, I was just very grumpy that Minnesota doesn't appear to be as inherently (and easily photographed) unique the way that California certainly seems to be. 

Date: 2019-11-22 05:00 am (UTC)
minnehaha: (Default)
From: [personal profile] minnehaha
Californians do not have the skunk cabbage, the flowers of which generate enough heat to melt the snow through which they grow.

Personally, I like to tell people the [true] story of learning to drive on Spring Park Bay, Lake Minnetonka, in the depths of winter, in the boyfriend's '66 Charger. You want to learn to do a burnout? A few hundred acres of ice and muscle car is a nice place to start. We may not be unique in pizza delivery to ice (fishing) houses, but California doesn't have that, either.

I used to have a pinback that read, "We don't care how they do it in New York." The sentiment is broadly applicable.

K.

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