Tuesday, December 29, 2009

zurich, nov 09

We travelled by an overnight bus to Zurich, Switzerland during our Thanksgiving break. We got to visit with out friends Barry and Sarah, and their son George, and they took us around the city.
We had a nice time: they showed us their new city, and we showed them an American Thanksgiving meal with sweet potatoes, mashed potatoes, stuffing, pumpkin pie...

More pics of Zurich here.



Tuesday, December 22, 2009

zoos

I'm reading Life of Pi. I find the writing compelling. The narrator talks on an on about topics in such fascinating ways. The plot hasn't really started, making it a slow read, but I'm enjoying it none-the-less.

Several chapters near the start of the book put forth an argument for zoos. The narrator, son of a zookeeper, discusses extensively the virtues of zoos, and I, for one, am convinced. I already love zoos and think the wonder of getting to see God's beautiful and varied creation is--hands down--the best argument for zoos that could trump any cons. Martel spends 14 pages of argument for zoos, and I don't know if any of it is true, but I believe it.

This bit on lion taming gives you a snippet of his writing style, and the part at the end is laugh-out-loud funny.
As an aside, that is why a circus trainer must always enter the lion ring first, and in full sight of the lions. In doing so, he establishes that the ring is his territory, not theirs, a notion that he reinforces by shouting, by stomping about, by snapping his whip. The lions are impressed. Their disadvantage weighs heavily on them. Notice how they come in: mighty predators though they are, "king of beasts", they crawl in with their tails low and they keep to the edges of the ring, which is always round so they have nowhere to hide. They are in the presence of a strong dominant male, a super-alpha male, and they must submit to his dominance rituals. So they open their jaws wide, they sit up, they jump through paper-covered hoops, they crawl through tubes, they walk backwards, they roll over. "He's a queer one," they think dimly. "Never seen a top lion like him. But he runs a good pride. The larder's always full and--let's be honest, mates--his antics keep us busy. Napping all the time does get a bit boring. At least we're not riding bicycles like the brown bears or catching flying plates like the chimps."