Hi Everybody:
A weird journey for you tonight: Looking for the Easter Bunny.
Easter is a Christian Holy Day coming up on Sunday. I realize not everybody celebrates Easter. However, tonight we are focusing on the preparations for the Easter Party; rather than the Religious significance of the Holiday. So I thought you all might enjoy the Hunt for the Easter Bunny!
The Easter Bunny Tradition is not in the Bible. Briefly, the Easter Bunny brings an Easter Basket of Colored Eggs and Candies to the Children on Easter Sunday. The rabbit and the egg are both symbols of fertility in Spring. Also, flowers, especially lilies are part of the celebration of Spring. I suspect the 'Easter Tradition' was encouraged by people that sell bunnies, baskets and things. As a child, I was told about this wonderful Easter Bunny who was 5 feet tall and bought gifts to all children on Easter Sunday. When I did not believe he could be 5 feet tall, Daddy showed me a photo of a Jack-a-Lope (which I also thought was real). They were both lies just like Santa Claus. I was heart broken to discover all were not real. Yet when I had my own little babies, I, too, told them about the big, wonderful Easter Bunny. My children now have their own children. The lie has stopped. They told their children the Easter Bunny is not real. I am quite sure there is psychological damage either way!!
Tonight we are going to go on our own hunt for the essence of the Easter Bunny. I believe it is the Joy of Spring and a Celebration of the new life all around us. I bring you some Texas Rabbits and a Jack-a-Lope so you can see what I was exposed to in this Texas Environment! Happy Hunting!
Easter Bunny
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Easter Bunny or Easter Rabbit (sometimes Spring Bunny in the U.S.[1][2][3]) is a character depicted as a rabbit bringing Easter eggs, who sometimes is depicted with clothes. In legend, the creature brings baskets filled with colored eggs, candy and sometimes also toys to the homes of children, and as such shows similarities to Father Christmas, as they both bring gifts to children on the night before their respective holiday. It was first mentioned in Georg Franck von Frankenau's De ovis paschalibus[4] (About Easter Eggs) referring to an Alsace tradition of an Easter Hare bringing Easter Eggs.
JUST PUSH PLAY
This next image is a 'Jack-a-Lope' at the Jackalope Restaurant in Austin, Texas:
http://www.njflyfishing.com/vBulletin/f5-north-eastern-general-discussion-forum/t22844-jack-lope-austin-texas.html
These photos are from the internet link below last photo:
(These were out when I was a kid!)
http://www.ebay.com/itm/2-Texas-TX-Cowboy-Exaggerations-JACK-LOPE-Vtg-/350373142642
http://www.chuckstoyland.com/potpourri/jackalope%20postcards/
The next photo is a real Texas Jack Rabbit:
http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/huntwild/wild/species/rabbit/
JUST PUSH PLAY TO SEE JACKRABBIT
The next article is on the Eastern Cottontail Rabbit:
http://www.rainbowwildlife.com/baby-rabbit.htm
Rabbit or Hare?
The most common rabbit species in Texas is the Eastern cottontail. It can be identified by its 2-3 lbs body, brown or gray coat, white belly, and distinctive white tail. They are common in brushy areas from southern Canada to South America.
Cottontails are an important part of the food chain, preyed on by more species than almost any other animal. Their amazing fertility is Mother Nature’s way of compensating to ensure their survival as a species.
Cottontails feed in the evenings or at night. Their diet consists of a variety of green plants, barks, buds, and grasses. Unlike the jackrabbit, which is actually a member of the hare family, cottontails are true rabbits. |
This distinction is important, as hares are born virtually self-sufficient meaning they have their eyes open, body fully furred, and they have the ability to hop around only moments after birth, whereas rabbits are born hairless, blind, and helpless.
In addition, hares tend to be larger and more muscular than rabbits. It's hard to distinguish which is which when looking at live animals. However, try searching for their pictures using your home broadband connection-equipped computers and you will be able to tell the difference when you closely compare these images.
The eastern cottontail's nest is a saucer-like depression three or four inches deep and about eight inches across. It is lined with mouthfuls of soft, dead grass mixed with hair from the mother's breast. A covering of grass and hair is used to hide the nest and keep the young warm and dry.
Rabbit mothers nurse their babies for approximately 5 minutes a day. The milk is very rich and the babies fill up to capacity within minutes. Mother rabbits do not sit on the babies to keep them warm as do some mammals and birds. They will be in the nest early in the morning and then again in the evening, which gives the impression that the babies have been abandoned.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_cottontail
JUST PUSH PLAY
Your photostudy is of my Real Easter Bunny! These were taken at Kates Cabin Bird Sanctuary in Texas, front yard. This is Mr. Whiskers, the cottontail rabbit who lives in the woods across the road. He will be here on Easter Sunday with Cardinals instead of Eggs!!!!
Happy Easter from Big Dad, the Cardinal
We have come to the end of the trail. Here we find the 'prized' Easter Bunny:
I found the whole ceramic family at Easterland,whatever.
Now for the Grand Finale!
The winning entry for Easter Bunny 2012 is:
SPACE BUNNY
HOPPY EASTER
Back to my Garden and Gifts for You:
Goodnight Everybody, see you next time.
On my Hunt for the next Bonus Video for You, I discovered something better than the Golden Egg: James Onohan.
Enjoy the Loving Feeling of the Easter Weekend. Love is with Us.
http://jamesonohan.webs.com/My%20Life%20Homepage.html
JUST PUSH PLAY
Thank You James
Bonus Image:
Astronomy Picture of the Day
Image Credit & Copyright: Miloslav Druckmüller (UM FSI, Brno Univ. of Technology), Shadia Habbal (IfA, Univ. of Hawaii)
......this is brendasue signing off from Rainbow Creek
o+o
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