| "Suddenly I'm having a strange feeling of being watched..." |
Looking out of my kitchen window in the middle of the day, I saw the two hares "from the cemetery" out on adventures in among our human habitations again. (More often I see them in the cemetery, which is why I think of them as living there.)
"The grass is always greener on the other side" originates from the ancient Roman poet Ovid (43 BC – 17 AD), who wrote in Ars Amatoria (1 BC), "Fertilior seges est alienis semper in agris"—meaning "the harvest is always more fruitful in another man's fields". It highlights the human tendency to envy others' situations, believing them to be better than one's own.
(Google AI)
(Google AI)
Apparently this does not apply only to humans, but to other creatures as well! ;)


What amazing pictures
ReplyDeleteAnd don’t those hares look incredibly healthy ?
In Sweden do you have the equivalent of our saying - mad as a March hare ?
Siobhan x