derien: It's a cup of tea and a white mouse.  The mouse is offering to buy Arthur's brain and replace it with a simple computer. (Default)
([personal profile] derien May. 5th, 2010 10:35 am)
I was talking to my brother, Hawk, the other night and when I mentioned the Japanese knotweed he asked if that isn't the stuff that Japanese monks use to meditate on, because if you sit really still and concentrate you can literally watch it grow. And I'm thinking now he might be right. I pulled a double fistful yesterday and did the same again, today. And maybe I just missed them yesterday, but some of them today were nine inches high already. I wonder if it will continue like this forever?

From: [identity profile] kryptyd.livejournal.com


You'd think it would exhaust the resources of the earth at some point, but from casual observation it does seem to go on and on. We had a huge specimin of it out the back of the Edwardian-era building I used to work in, and it was in poor-looking, shallow soil, and I presume it was planted in the Edwardian era when it was some rich person's house (and not in its subsequent life as a tenement and then broken up into offices), and yet every year it came up equally strong and weirdly perfect looking, the perfectness being of course because no bugs will eat it outside of its natural range. Sorry, that was a very long sentence. I don't like knotweed.
ext_14419: the mouse that wants Arthur's brain (Default)

From: [identity profile] derien.livejournal.com


Did they plant this stuff in Edwardian times? Actually, they did a lot of stupid stuff then, so I guess it's probable! :)
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derien: It's a cup of tea and a white mouse.  The mouse is offering to buy Arthur's brain and replace it with a simple computer. (Default)
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