Different strokes, I guess. I think it’s extremely cool! (Sorry) I admit it’s a little bizarre to think of the bottom of your local pond littered with little frogcicles in the middle of winter. But, how much more ingenious could anything be? They can’t migrate, and they can’t remain active when it’s cold, being ectothermic. So, Ma Nature puts them in cold storage for the Winter.
If it makes you feel any better about it, they don’t actually die. Dead is dead, and you don’t wake up from it. It’s an extremely deep hibernation; almost suspended animation. But, not death.
On the other hand, for anyone who has a pet frog, and thinks this is cool, too…Don’t do it!! The frogs you buy at the pet shop are almost universally tropical, and do NOT have this ability!
Frogs are nasty, slimy, vile disgusting creatures. Except for the little poisonous colorful ones, I can deal with those.
When I was about 15 I was digging around in the backyard, preparing to plant some flower seeds. I dug up a frog. That was, in itself, disgusting, but after it lay there in the sun for a few minutes, it opened it’s eyes and then hopped away. Yuck.
Rumor has it that there is a huge dinner plate size frog under the house. The SO has seen it, but I refuse to go look.
I think frogs are interesting critters. We get little green tree frogs on our patio door all the time. It’s a frog’s dining delight when we have the lights on in the house. All kinds of bugs are attracted to the window, and the frogs snack away.
Unfortunately, sometimes when we open the door to let the dog out, a frog may happen to get into the house. I’m not quick enough to catch them, and I’ve had to get my daughter a few times to remove them. Them and lizards. I’m afraid I’ll squish 'em, but she has the touch.
Anyway, I think critters are neat! Just not in my house, thanks. The wild kingdom belongs in the yard.
We have see-through lizards that do the same thing (Really, you can see their innards through their skin). It’s funny to watch a lizard eat a moth bigger than it’s own head. I have to catch them quickly if they get in the house or the cats do, and they’re not big on the whole catch-and-release thing. It’s more of a catch-and-leave-blood-all-over-the-house thing.
This is what I was watching when I came to the conclusion that frogs are horrible zombie beings. The frogs do not go into hibernation, they are frozen solid. Their hearts stop beating. They stop breathing. For months!
AAAAIIIIEEEEEaaaaiiiieee
I can recall seeing them frozen in our big skating pond as a kid. If the ice froze just so and was clear enough, you could see straight in and sometimes you could see a frog or a fish frozen solid.
So…you’re okay with the potentially deadly, colorful, little frogs? But, not the bigger, harmless, bug-eating frogs? :dubious:
Frogs may be slimy, but there’s nothing nasty about them, unless you like flies and bugs. Most people consider them kind of cute. And, if you look closely enough, you’ll discover that many frogs and toads have the most beautiful irises in their eyes.
BTW, if you dug it up, it was a toad, not a frog. Not that you probably care. But, toads eat slugs so, as a gardener, you should be more tolerant of them.
Somehow, I don’t think that’s what they mean, when they say “Jesus saves” (or Jeebus, whoever that is). But, it would make a better bumper sticker; I’ve been saved…from a frog!
Somehow I’m reminded of that Third Rock from the Sun episode wherein Tommy brings a frog back from death, a la Dr. Frankenstein. This sounds somewhat close. Except in the episode, the frog developed a taste for human flesh.
Watch out for those reanimated frogs, or they’ll getcha.
ok, so I’m googling “blue electric monkey day” because I’m trying to figure out if that’s actually my sister’s birthday in the Mayan calendar. Because she’s definitely the blue electric monkey type, and I’m sensing an oportunity for a birthday present she will cherish forever (snort).