Check out this great video of lightning strikes in Chicago. It appears to be one heck of a storm — according to the Vimeo page, it featured 80 mph gusts of wind, more than three inches of rain, and somewhere in the neighbourhood of 15,000 cloud-to-ground lightning strikes in a single hour.

When you’ve got that much lightning action, you’re bound to overlap a few times. And that’s exactly what’s captured on video here — lightning strikes all three of the tallest buildings in Chicago. Simultaneously.

(Via Coudal.)

 

I’ve just finished reading a wonderful essay that I think you should all go and check out here.

Half book review, half something more, Mark Dery riffs on a book by Gordon Grice, “Deadly Kingdom: The Book of Dangerous Animals”. It’s an entertaining and thoughtful essay on its own, but it also makes me really want to read the book, too.

Dery starts with a hint at the animal nature of mankind:

Do you, like me, rejoice in the knowledge that you could eat an adult mouse whole, if you wanted to? …. The rodent’s bones are “no more troublesome than those of a catfish.” In medieval England … “a mouse on toast was thought to cure colds.”

But he quickly segues into the corrolary: if humans are animals, then animals are not human — and investing animals with anthropomorphic desires and motivations doesn’t help anyone.

Grice does an end run around the Free Willy/Jaws binary, the culture/nature version of the virgin/whore dualism. “I often read accounts that point out what the human victim did ‘wrong’ before she was attacked by a bear or a shark,”  he writes. “Many writers depict virtually all animal attacks as ‘provoked’ by the victim.” (The blame-the-victim rape narrative, transposed into the key of When Animals Attack.) “On the other side, some writers are at pains to paint dangerous animals as monsters of cruelty.”

In truth, he suggests, nature isn’t so much malevolent as indifferent.

The indifference often lends itself to misinterpretation, but any “meaning” comes straight from human perception, both Dery and Grice suggest.

The essay is nice — but it’s filled with so many grace notes that are lifted straight from Grice’s book, that I’m desperate to read it, too. Dery seems in love with Grice’s writing, as well, saying it’s as if “Cormac McCarthy turned his hand to nature writing.” High praise, but it seems appropriate, with passages like these:

With grim relish, Grice tells of a toddler “whose mother smeared his hand with honey so that she could shoot video of him playing with a black bear. It ate his hand.” (That’s a Grice signature: the devastating punchline, a short, sharp , declarative sentence that serves as a kind of a black-comedy rimshot.)

We learn that a grizzly can fit a human head into its mouth: “If the person is lucky, the skull slides out like a pinched marble.” (Like his noir forebear, Raymond Chandler, Grice has a nice way with the simile.)

Sure, books like these can seem somewhat voyeuristic — mainly, we’re reading for the frisson of the macabre — but this one seems particularly well-done. And Dery’s essay is nicely done as well.

I particularly enjoyed the clever touch of ending with a mirror image of the beginning. Sure, it’s no trouble for a human to eat a mouse. So what kind of trouble does a human pose to a grizzly?

Octopus vs. sea lion

 Posted by Grant Hamilton on 11 April 2010  Modern Life
Apr 112010
 

Here’s a video you don’t see every day: a sea lion attacking and eating an octopus.

(From National Geographic.)

Nature is awesome

 Posted by Amy Breen on 9 November 2009  Modern Life
Nov 092009
 

I’ve seen images of water droplets before, but I had no idea this was happening too.

(via the Daily What)

May 252009
 

Here’s a daily moment of insight:

If it was for some reason hard to see clouds, can you imagine how much people would pay for the privilege? Like, if there was only one spot on Earth that had clouds, everyone would be going there and having these big spiritual experiences just from seeing the clouds.

Okay, I don’t truly buy it — although clouds can be fun and amazing and interesting, people don’t automatically pay big bucks to visit places that are natural and rare.

But it’s weird to think about: what would be our human response to gigantic floating puffy white things in the sky, if they were only visible from, say, south Asia? How would it change our feeling towards smokestacks?

May 202009
 

I have never seen the milky way like that before. Grant tells me that it’s because we’re too far north. I guess it’s kind of a trade-off, since those same people in Texas wouldn’t be able to see the beauty that is the Aurora Borealis.

Apr 082009
 

I don’t get the thrill of ATVs or snowmobiles. I think they show a lack of refinement and a disrespect for the out-of-doors. In their defense, I can understand them in some contexts: like long-distance travel for the Inuit. Or when people would rather take the snowmobile to the next town over instead of the truck.

But as simple recreation, I’m not convinced. And it’s especially difficult for me to buy into it when so many ATVers and snowmobilers are unabashed douchebags. Ever talked to one? Then you know what I mean.

So I’m never surprised when these adventure-seekers get themselves in trouble. Thighs clenched tight around their thrumming machines, they seem to think that they have power over nature. Thank goodness Mother Nature sometimes decides to wake up and swat away those annoying flies.

(PS. I don’t actually advocate death. Except, possibly, for ignorance. Which this clip borders on.)