Health knowledge made personal
Join this community!
› Share page: Email Digg del.icio.us Reddit icon StumbleUpon Technorati
Go
Search posts:

Pattie B.'s Twitter Updates

How a city street became pedestrian friendly, and why it matters: http://www.ajc.com/news/atlanta/crowded-decatur-street-forced-231878.html 1 day ago
Every Dunwoody school with a garden by 3/15/10? http://www.sustainabledunwoody.com/2009/12/sunny-flat-and-possible-no-this-is-not.html 1 day ago
This went from "overwhelming" to "overwhelmingly fun" http://bit.ly/42hNmc 24 days ago
Swung by Oakhurst Garden on way to mushroom class at Gaia Gardens. Terrific community compost set-up! 24 days ago
 

Bless Her Heart

Posted Oct 21 2008 12:12am

"In the whole world, wherever the vault of heaven turns, Italy is the most beautiful of all lands, endowed with all that wins Nature's crown . . . No land is more distinguished in regard to what man may reasonably expect to enjoy--chiefly crops, wine, olive oil, fleeces, flax, clothes and young cattle."

Yes, my friends. Pliny the Elder was a locavore--and have you heard that the word "locavore" is the New Oxford American Dictionary's 2007 Word of the Year? (Frankly, I find that word a bit awkward, but I'm obviously all behind any movement that encourages eating close to home around the world.)

Interestingly, Pliny the Elder died when the volcano, Mount Vesuvius, erupted and covered the ancient city of Pompeii in 79 AD. Even more interesting, of course, is that his 37-book series, Natural History, survived.

My older daughter, bless her heart (that's a "Southernism" usually reserved for when you are going to insult someone, by the way, but here I mean it completely endearingly) actually sought out and purchased for me this amazing collection of selected works from Natural History. It is extraordinarily readable, with little paragraphs about a wide variety of topics: Near Eastern sea routes, comets, time, trees and plants, will power, cinnamon and cassia, milk and butter, purple dye, aqueducts, and on and on and on.

So there I was this week, with my new Pliny the Elder shopping tote (I chose the one about the conscience for me, and the one about new beginnings as gifts) and my Pliny book, looking like a Pliny groupie, when I fell upon another book that caught my eye, 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus. 1491! It felt almost contemporary!

And so I got it, and along with Pliny, it is my vacation reading for the next two weeks. I believe that the best way to prepare for moving forward is by looking back, and learning.

And I have much to learn.

(Same book, different cover)


Post a comment
Write a comment:

Related Searches