Friday, September 29, 2006

Relentless



Every year around nov/dec, millions of red crabs migrate to the beach where they hook up, breed, release their eggs into the ocean. Their migration can last up to 18 days. It's long, perilous, and spectacular. What impresses me the most, however, about their journey is the relentlessness. Along the way they get gobbled up by birds, squashed by cars, but they stay consistent on their path; i.e. after running across a road frogger-ing its way across, one of them will rest for a bit, collect its breath, and move on. Sure you can downplay all this by pointing at their frontal-loblessness, but even in the wild you'll see animals place their own survival above all; mothers will ditch their young (or even eat them) just to live on. But these guys will risk their own life & limb to extend their race, stopping at nothing.

2 comments:

Rishi Sidhu said...

So what about lemmings? Or women spiders and wild women scorpions that eat there lovers after or even during mating. Actually, that's not fair, the eating of your mate has some evolutionary explanations that I learned about in my animal behavior class, but what about lemmings and their relentless pursuit of...jumping into the sea before they've learned how to swim? Look that up for me would you please?

Rishi Sidhu said...

I don't believe your post about lemmings, and who drew your pic, it's awesome.