I was lying in bed last night listening to the crickets who finally got a chance to chirp since Raccoon Fight Club has relocated and I remembered this:
https://www.facebook.com/soulseekers.worldwide/videos/1810889285894025/
This is something you have to listen to! In 1992 Jim Wilson got the idea to slow down a recording of chirping crickets. He referred to the revealed sound as “Gods cricket chorus”. They sing in perfect harmony to each other. How does that happen?
It’s gorgeous and mind-blowing and better than…a frog chorus.
Quick cricket story (of course). Back in the day, in one of my apartments, during the summer the crickets would find their way inside and chirp all night long. It wasn’t slowed down to an angelic sounding chorus—it was simply annoying. I couldn’t escort them back outside like I did with the spiders and daddy-long-legs because they hid from me. As hard as I tried I just couldn’t find them.
So like the bitch says above—my idleness, laziness and the desire to save myself the trouble of moving necessitated being inventive.
Bleary-eyed from lack of sleep, I got a bright idea. For three nights in a row, I decided to have a chat with them, a cricket “Come to Jesus” so to speak. I walked around and politely asked them to be quiet, explaining my need to sleep at night and giving them permission to chirp their little hearts out during the day while I was at work.
Night one: A full chorus. Nobody felt like not chirping. As a matter of fact, I think they invited friends.
Night two: A little better. They must have started after I went to sleep because when I got up to pee—it was full Woodstock.
Night three: Silence. Nothing. Crickets. (I just cracked myself up.)
The things that nature hides from us are astonishing.
Carry on,
xox