Hashem gave us a beautiful world to enjoy
and savor. Magnificence is all around us, we need only to open up our eyes.
Besides the inherent loveliness within nature, nature is also there for us to
learn from by examining different natural phenomena. The Mishnah says that we
can sometimes learn how to conduct ourselves by observing the behavioral
patterns in animals.
Let’s have a look at two types of mice, and
from these “mice-sers,” let’s see what we can learn .
The first is the Yaaron which is actually the little field mice we probably
all know. They are actually quite cute, that is if they don’t show up in your
kitchen cabinet. This type of mouse has prominent ears, a long tail, and two
long hind legs that allow him to jump.
These mice inhabit forests,
grasslands, and cultivated fields. Almost entirely nocturnal, they are
mainly active during the dark, and are very good climbers. They have extremely small but sharp claws which help them burrow extensively and build nests.
The Yaaron are primarily seedeaters,
and in winter in deciduous woodland,
they will eat acorns and sycamore seeds. They carry the seeds and
acorns back to their burrows for storage.
The acorns are heavy seeds and they usually fall near the mother tree
where they would not be able to grow into another “big” tree. The fact that the
Yaaron mouse takes the acorns to its nest and then discards them allows oak
trees to multiply.
The second kind of mouse is more of a rat, called Chuldah HaAliyah.
It eats pinecones. We find two types of gnawed upon pinecones. One that
has tidy-rings around it and the other is chewed in a number of different
places in a jumbled way.
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