Monday, September 29, 2014

The Daily Apple™© Volume 3, Number 3


The Daily Apple™© Volume 3, Number3
September 29, 2014

PGY 42, Day # 91

On Dodging Bumblebees and Wildflowers

Now it does not matter much, since summer has come and gone and fall is here.  The grass is still green, but growth is slow and the flowers are almost gone.  Leaves are turning all shades of bright and some shout for attention, "Look here!", "Look at me!", "I am the brightest!" ... can you hear their colors screaming out against eternal blue skies?  The brilliant colors speak in a hushed amber glow, but some leaves shout out, before they fade and fall ... flutter and fall gently to the ground in still, sweet, warm air, kindled by the waning Autumn sun.  Calm ... silence, broken by laughter, pleasant conversation and birdsong is Heavenly.  Leaves weave and dance their final path to the ground ... soon to be frozen and covered with a wintry white blanket of snow.  A few grapes (17 to be exact), blueberries and two apples are yet to be harvested.  Yes, that's right, two apples.

The blueberry crop was good this year and I know why the grapes are sparse: severe pruning.  But the apples?  Two apples on a tree that gave me more than a bushel a few years ago?  Two apples?   That is my entire 2014 apple crop and I wonder why so few?  I want to blame it on spring rain.  Is it true?  Is it just a tired old tree? Is this why the many blossoms dropped unfulfilled to the ground?  Is it simple pollination failure, or part of a more global problem?  As my mind wanders through these questions wondering if this is part of colony collapse disorder (CCD)?

Winter was long, hard and brutally cold.  Spring was late, but explosive.  Green burst into view shortly after the mid May full moon and appeared to display faster early growth than I had ever seen.  Within two days, the scene was quickly transformed from drab brown and gray to a fluorescent glow as the buds on the trees burst rapidly into pale soft yellow-green leaves.  By the seventh day after the full moon, early flowers were popping, new growth was nearly fully formed and the grass was growing like wild.  It was time to get the lawnmower out.

When I cut the grass, my first focus is to make a paths to blueberries, grapes, apples and compost pile, and to cut a ring around the house and field, for tick abatement.  One more thing: avoid the wildflowers, bumblebees, honeybees and other hymenoptera.  Children laugh ... even my full grown children and many adults laugh at the sight of my "botched" lawn and missed patches of "weeds".  Yes, my lawn does not meet the normal suburban neighborhood standard, the standard fairway pattern, or any other standards of lawn care.  But, it does make sense.  This is why.

I have been doing it for years.  By dodging wildflowers, bumblebees, honeybees and other hymenoptera, I encourage growth of the wildflowers and give the bees a place to feed.  My hope is that the honeybees and bumblebees will flourish as do the wildflowers and that my "crops" will flourish with them.  This year, I saw one honeybee, many bumblebees, assorted hymenoptera and a single hummingbird.

We can only hope that "botched" lawns will become fashionable in the near future along with other more comprehensive efforts to reduce consumption, toxins, pollution and the ravaging of our planet.  My suspicion is that honeybees are sentinel animals and CCD is a reflection of environmental decline.  Autism rates are up as well, and recently published research suggests a link between autism and maternal exposure to insecticides during pregnancy.  Wild animal populations are down as well.  Can you see the dots?  Try connecting them.  Let's take care of need and boycott greed.  Time to wake up and grow the flowers.  There is NO NEED for arbitrary profit over people.  Let's try cooperation over competition.  And, slow down ... smell the flowers, while we still have flowers to smell.  Recycling plastic bottles is necessary, but not sufficient.

Have a sweet day.

Dr. Mike

References:
1. On Seasons: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Season
2. On Lawns: http://mda.maryland.gov/SiteAssets/Pages/fertilizer/MDAProLawnCareManual6.24.13.pdf
3. On Hymenoptera: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hymenoptera
4. On Colony Collapse Syndrome: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/29/us/the-head-scratching-case-of-the-vanishing-bees.html?emc=edit_th_20140929&nl=todaysheadlines&nlid=65359995

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

That Just Goes to Show You: Time Flies

The Daily Apple™© Volume 3, Number 2
June 4, 2014

PGY 41, Day #331

That Just Goes to Show You ... There is Always Something and Time Flies

When I use that common phrase and especially when I add "There is Always Something", Gilda Radner and her character Roseanne Roseannadanna from Saturday Night Live come to mind.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roseanne_Roseannadanna

Then, a smile comes over me and, given enough pause, a bit of out loud laughter erupts.  AKA LOL.  If you are over 40, you probably know of her and, if not, check her out.  Your heart and soul will be better for it.  Then on to serious business.  Yes, humor and laughter are useful healing tactics, but, eventually, we get back to action required.

My point?  As PGY #41 draws near to a close, I must apologize to my followers for the limited number of blogs posted here this year.  My excuses?  Patient Care, Teaching, Administration, Family Care and Veritas Health Care.  Yes, most of my "free time" has been spent working and writing for the nonprofit Veritas Health Care

http://www.veritashc.org.php53-9.dfw1-1.websitetestlink.com/

and the Veritas Health Care blog

http://www.veritashc.org/blog/

Please join us at Veritas Health Care.  We are the NONPROFIT Veritas Health Care and if you care about health care and want a platform and springboard to help Build Better Health and Health Care you might want to sign up.  We continue our efforts to Build Best Practices and to Optimize Quality and Performance Improvement through application of our available tools.  We are happy to show you how to use our tools to promote and optimize personal health, family health, community health and health care.  We are local and global.

Also, when time permits, I will add teaching points to both blogs.  This may create some overlap, but the spectrum of knowledge and skill required for optimal self care knows no boundaries.  In other words, I am willing and able to teach anyone who is motivated to learn.  So, with that in mind, please forward specific questions or comments on any Health and Health Care related subjects.

Thanks for caring.

Dr. Mike
Michael F. Mascia, MD, MPH

Monday, March 31, 2014

Busy at Our Nonprofit Veritas Health Care (VeritasHC.org)

The Daily Apple™© Volume 3, Number 1
April 1, 2014

Wow, PGY 41 is rapidly disappearing, but we have made considerable progress over the year.  What is it PGY 41, Day #275 in my medical career?

Veritas Health Care, our nonprofit, is now a little over one year old and we are moving along in the process of Building Better Health Care through Cooperation and Cooperatives.

Please Join us @ Veritas Health Care through

http://www.veritashc.org

Check our latest Veritas Health Care blog post "For the Health of It"

http://www.veritashc.org/for-the-health-of-it/health-volume-2-8-stuff-case-1-b2-lens/

For the Health Of It™©, Volume 2 #8: The Stuff We Do, Case #1, Through the B2 Lens - See more at: http://www.veritashc.org/for-the-health-of-it/health-volume-2-8-stuff-case-1-b2-lens/#sthash.GAwnuTao.dpufHelp us to build better health care.
Have a sweet day.

Dr. Mike

PS. The Daily Apple™© will continue to reflect our work at Infinity Health Solutions and Veritas Health Care