November 10, 2004

The Vampire Watermelon : fact or fiction?

Via Memepool.

  • 'Tis the vampire pumpkin I fear.
  • The person who wrote the last article is a bit high strung. Yes, it appears that wikipedia was manipulated, but I know that there have been factual errors in every publication and encyclopedia. Truth is often stranger than a lie, as has been pointed out enough to make a cliche about, so sometimes you go by the form rather than the substance, in the case of the Vampire Watermelon. However, that doesn't invalidate wikipedia. It just means that you can't turn off your brain when using that source of information, any more than you can with any other source.
  • Awesome. Just awesome. I <3 Vampire Watermelons. My next band will be called "Succelent Dracula".
  • Scary! But will they upset some people as much as "The Watermelon Woman"?
  • wikipedia makes me very, very nervous. there's no way to tell what's being made up whole-cloth. and i think there are folks out there who use it as a "factual" resource. scary.
  • Fact!
  • wikipedia makes me very, very nervous. i think there are folks out there who use it as a "factual" resource There are also people who swear by the protocols of the elders of zion, or by today's astrology column, or by comments in curious george posts, or by FOX news.
  • Ah, my childers, we have our tagline for today: Monkeyfilter: you can't turn off your brain Wise advice, indeed, Sandspider. Hmm, so do they need a new Wiki catagory besides stub? Perhaps flub? blub?
  • Hooray! I've made a Monkeyfilter: comment! I feel my cool points just skyrocketing.
  • The thing I always point out as the advantage of Wikipedia, despite the fact that I don't actually use the thing, is that you can check the references. Most other news or information outlets don't give you that option. Newspaper articles, encyclopedias, etc, rarely have complete bibliographies, so if you get it an argument, you really only have the say-so of the authors and editors to go by. With Wikipedia, you could at least look it up if you had the energy and desire.
  • In my experience, Wikipedia is generally about as accurate as your average newspaper, if not more so--which is to say, I wouldn't use it as my sole source in a controversial, obscure, or complex topic, but by its very nature, it's a great source of information on common-knowledge type questions. There was a recent experiment where somebody introduced 13 errors into Wikipedia to see how quickly they'd be caught; it took 2 1/2 hours. (He acknowledges it might have taken longer if he hadn't posted all the errors from the same IP address.)
  • Hmmm... Well, there are stranger folk-tales out there. And yet none of the commentators have managed to track down a copy of the book in question. I don't think they're taking this vampire watermelon controversy seriously. Wiki is a starting point, nothing more.
  • The person who wrote the last article is a bit high strung. No shit. I think he realizes that the entire entry exists to mock him and his Vampyr ilk. Facts: 1. Vampire watermelons are melons. 2. Vampire watermelons roll around on the ground ALL of the time. 3. The purpose of the vampire watermelon is to pester the living.
  • Hey, I got two outta three!
  • Does this mean that somewhere there's a Vampyrbashi who celebrates them with national holidays?
  • Vampirella has nice melons.
  • Now I got none outta two :(
  • Oh, don't be so down on yourself. Your melons are just as nice as hers, seriously. I mean it.
  • I use wikipedia for facts that won't be disputed (too much) like names, dates. When I need to find out who the Earl of Whatsit did, who was relatively famous, I can find out; I use it for regnal dates when I'm not at home (and thus don't have my handy Handbook of dates). Wikipedia is generally good at whats, wheres, whens, whos - the large number of people tend to work to make it more accurate, though, of course, you pay attention to dispute notices. But *everything* on the internet should be treated with a healthy dose of skepticism when it comes to the details or intepretation; for anything serious, I look for peer reviewed scholarly articles. I worry most about school age children (and their teachers) who think the internet can replace libraries.
  • You think this is funny? You think its a JOKE? My great grandmother was driven mad by a relentless vampire watermelon. Long after it had rotted she could feel it on her ankles. It was just...rolling at her! This horrifying apparition sapped my great grandmother's very essence until she was tired of living, and scared of dyin'. And now, my great grandmother is dead. I leave you to draw your own conclusions. ...it just keeeps rolling along...
  • PatB, that was beautiful. Layered, like an onion. *a vampire onion! 0[ (supposed to be a vampire melon emoticon, but really just looks like an unhappy cyclops with a cataract. Oh well)
  • Thank you, TenaciousPettle. (-_-)
  • Think the vampire melon is fact. But then again I get all my information from the weekly world news. jacobw, some argued the reason his changes didn't last long was because the wiki has a 'recently updated page' so people who use the wiki can look over any new changes. I use wikipedia (think it is a great resource) but not as the definitive source for information. Just like with everything else.
  • I know for a fact that vampire watermelons do in fact exist.
  • Well, hey. There you have it. Our resident expert, Nostrildamus, says there are vampire watermelons, and I certainly would trust that a man with a name like that would know his undead melons.
  • A woman for duty, a little boy for pleasure, & an undead vampyre watermelon for ecstacy.
  • Anyway I'm not your resident expert, I'm your resident ignorant asshole.
  • Same thing
  • a man with a name like that would know his undead melons. I'm still in shock that "undead melons" is such as miserable failure as a googlewhack phrase.
  • vampire carrots, a fearsome sight, grow in unholy soil where a vampire dumps earth from his coffin when remaking his bed and before retiring at daybreak rather than at night
  • What do these vampire vegetables really, really want? If the melons have no teeth they can only roll and perhaps haunt, and, poor things, being mouthless, cannot taunt the living -- do they prey on other vegetables? Do they fear the bright day? And what exactly do they do? What is it they keep craving? If it's blood (which I doubt) they must live in great vexation Because vegatables lack, not only mouths, but any sort of digestion.
  • I see dead watermelons
  • Fools flung or spat their black seeds everywhere, on the table, the chairs, the leaf-strewn lawn, and some are caught in the children's hair; half-gnawed rinds lie amid the other ruined viands.
  • What is it about these blood-suckers that compels our attention again and again? A vampire is a thing unreal, a lie, the marvel is such tales still mystify. I have to wonder why folks are so willing to be sucked -- or suckered -- and find 'em thrilling? O won't someone tell me why we're all such silly fuckers?
  • Evil dead, they roll like socks, Up your arse in lieu of cocks, Suck you dry of all your blood Back to the lino to chew the cud. Watermelon in Easter Hay, If its skin is bloody don't look away It'll jump right up and bite your ankle Moving like the rotary engine of Wankel. Speak the name not once but thrice Out of the kitchen on a host of mice Born atop the crowd of squeak The evil melon with a widow's peak. It'll bite your arse, your leg, your thigh Then you'll drop, but will not die You'll return to the counter top As the mixed-up undead melons rot.
  • )))!!! Writ by a man who knows his melons!
  • Poe, schmoe.
  • Nevermore, croaked the melon.
  • " 'Tis the song of the melon," We heard her declare, "With his shiny green rind Devoid of all hair!" "He's come, he's come, my melon dear, Nor left me forlorn and thirsting here" She whips out her blade and gives him a slice She then eats each half and declares, "Both were nice."
  • Thanks, all. It's been a bad week, and this gave me the giggles. ...watch out! It's the *shudder* vampire melon! ... vampire melon rolls around on the floor, hitting ankles with an eerie *ponk* ... *ponk* ... *ponk*
  • in candid truth although we tries and tries to bite them on their ankles or their juicy-looking thighs alas! we bounces with great caution lest we end up split and squashin' and what always rankles and over which we cries and cries -- we gots no tooth
  • If artfully carved, even pumpkins can have teeth, although death from pumpkin bites these days seems rare among the mortalities of rural bumpkins. Nor is it in the same class of fears as being pawed by grizzly bears.
  • They have no teeth, they have no lungs and yet...they still suck!
  • pops another grizzly beer
  • Hi, PatB! Grizzly beer sounds good.
  • come my dear with rush and tumble of goat-hooves over granite water purling below an icy rim flung leaves racing whirlaway along a row of vintage clusters come quick embrace these harvest hours weave like the wind past pumpkins lined atop the rubble wall dart through teepees made of cornstalks where racoons rummage shucks and paw for leftover ears come on I say past cottontails scuffling crisp leaves searching for green blades past all the shattered walnut hulls the chipmunks leave along the walk come home and linger long
  • Filthy, filthy, filthy, filthy, Filthy, filthy, filthy, filthy, Filthy, filthy, filthy, VILE Filthy, filthy, filthy, filthy Fucky shitty MELON of SATAN Ooh - er.
  • Vampires are nature's way of paying us back for seedless watermelons.
  • Soo..would werewolves be nature's way of paying us back for chihuahuas?
  • Life is full of marvels -- I have acquired a copy of The Vampire Encyclopedia by Matthew Bunson [Gramercy Press/Random House 1993] ISBN 0-517-16205-7. NOTE THE SEASONAL WARNING! In this book is the following: Watermelon Like pumpkins, these fruit can become vampires; they are not considered very dangerous, particularly because they have no teeth. Watermelon vampires are found among the Muslim Gypsies of Yugoslavia. Virtualy any kind of melon is susceptible; tranforming if kept for ten days or too long a period after Christmas. They make growling sounds, are stained with traces of blood, and roll around to pester the living. (page 278) That is the Watermelon reference in toto. Now, no man of mettle can read this and not delve further into this book, so I also gleaned this from page 218: Pumpkin Along with watermelon, a fruit ... deemed capable of becoming a vampire, albeit not a very dangerous one. The belief is found among the Gypsies of the Balkans, particularly those of the Muslim faith. According to their traditions, any pumpkin kept more than ten days or after Christmas will come alive, rolling around on the ground and growling. People naturally have little fear of the creatures. One of the main indications that a pumpkin is about to undergo a vampiric transformation (or has just completed it) is the appearance of a drop of blood on it. So, melon hoarding monkeys, 'tis the season to beware.
  • Oh dear. Will eating melons and pumpkins replace (in the US South) eating cornbread and black-eyed peas as the food you eat for luck on New Year's Eve?
  • ...Then again, this is not prime season for melons or pumpkins, so we're posed with a conundrum: eating squishy, over-ripe potential vampires (ew), or allowing squishy, over-ripe growly vampires to roll all over our kitchens getting everything kinda sticky (double ew). Both options are scary.
  • It is now possible in North America to find out-of-season fruits and vegetables from South America and elesewhere, so that the possibility of encountering vampire cantelope etc is much increased.
  • oooh, I hadn't thought of that. I keep forgetting that not everyone has to deal with the lame produce sections offered by my local (small town) groceries.
  • Monkeyfilter: I don't think they're taking this vampire watermelon controversy seriously. Oh, you'll RUE the day. Indeed.
  • My first tagline. And by G'ma herself. /basks
  • Two thousand and five has now engulfed us, znd today's the nineth day after Christmas -- so eat those watermelons quickly lest they begin to roll bruising ankles, while they seek blood -- and possibly your soul.
  • These kids clearly don't understand the danger they are in!! Taht watermleon is ready to strike!!1!!11!
  • Nostril, how hideous! Lumpy and mishapen, with scary green patterns on its rind. *shudders Who will save us? We need a hero.
  • This is a job for Captain Asparagus.
  • Good grief! Wot is that fruity smell? That hollow rumble from the hob of hell? Out of the darkness and down the length of the hall A melon moves fast as a slung bowling ball; Our ankles are sore, quite hideouly bruised because the wretched melon seems doomed to be confused -- It whizzes along at a tremendous speed Because it is driven by fell vampiric need. So along the hall it comes speeding through Intent on knocking the feet out from under you. But we have become cunning, yes, we have turned sly, We now put on our heavy boots before it comes by.
  • Heavy boots! Pisshaw. We need silver bullets, man.
  • remember, friends, the sleek cucumber is also a curcubit -- and is therefore unfit to keep in your midst ten days after Christmas eat! ere a cuke comes thrusting out of the vegetable drawer and starts chasing your dachshund across the kitchen floor
  • Just had to google on "curcubit" and up popped this, regarding bees in tubes among the curcubit crops, down under.
  • Interesting article, islander Though I did not much care for the term 'disposable bees'.
  • Oh, dear.
  • Arrgh! Don't ye come moanin' and skulkin' 'round here! Begone! Amscray! -- vile pumpkin, get lost, for all I care, ye can dangle your tangled vines in the winter frost till ye turn to useful compost. I'm out of patience with ye altogether, so roll back down the steps into the cellar! If the children didn't treat ye like a pet ye'd've been turned to pie weeks ago -- and et!
  • Watermelons Green Buddhas on the fruit stand. We eat the smile and spit out the teeth. -- Charles Simic
  • Laugh if you must till one still night thumps hollow on your chest a vegetable moan and a dripping moon
  • Hi, Nickdanger! Glad you're back! now strikes the hour when the banana's pealed a welcome to the Green Hen who, insigne of fresh beginning, rekindles hope in mortal men
  • In the crisper draw-or there will be found such horr-or A leperous, pepperous mush of green Putrid, nasty, turning mean A hairy cantaloupe-garou Looking for human flesh to chew The vicious, delicious arti-choke a thistle as vindictive as poison oak But worst of all the watermelon A vile vampire vegetable hellion
  • O the horror! The horror!
  • *makes mental note not to open GramMa's fridge*
  • Before he'd time to bolt his salad raw he was attacked by radishes, then slaughtered by the slaw.
  • O the horror! The horror! Geez, Bees! I didn't think my poetry was THAT bad. Now I'm so upset I'll just have to create another tagline to sooth myself. MonkeyFilter: O the horror! The horror!
  • Melon sculpture.
  • vile growths of whitish blue and dirty green -- not on the cheese -- but on the aged contents of the soup tureen, forming a heaving warty skin to frighten anxious men determined to clean the fridge out once again and what, dear gods, is that speckled gunk atop the crock of baked beans and the Unknown Substance rearmost on the shelf that's reekling like a skunk?
  • =reeking *sigh*
  • Would a reekling be a baby bad smell? runs away giggling...
  • Ah! karma.
  • Ah! chameleon ... bird thou never wert. I'm thinking reekling is more like the aftermath of being tickled = squirming, meredithea, but I am not wanting to tickle a skunk to test this hypothesis. Live and let live. And honour the skunk...from a safe distance.
  • Honor the skunk from a distance, or the skunk will honor you from up close, eh? Good rule.
  • Thanks Bee! Glad to be back! never really meant to be gone, but time does get eaten up.
  • the root vegetables started the war last spring laying seige to us in our beds every morning they would form a circle about each inhabited bed and bounce so excitedly up and down some split themselves before wilting and finally falling dead our mornings became a protracted confusion of startled cries and peciliar thumpings and bruises that ran from ankles up to the smaller children's thighs
  • So, do we take turns welcoming each other back now? :) Seriously, there were dangerously low levels of both bees and wack during your absence. Glad to see your metered mania once again gracing our pages.
  • Don't know what you may have experienced while gone, Nickdanger, but I found being away was not a good idea. Both my antennae wilted and if ye look closely ye will see even now they are upright only because the pipecleaners keep them from flopping back into my face.
  • a crash of thunder follows hard upon an eerie white that strobes and flickers in the dead of a storm-plagued night and five fullgrown folk frozen in midstride as we came down the back stairs so overwrought by then were we we almost heard long quavering howls of thirsting watermelons on the prowl "I thought ye'd locked the cellar door!" one cried while another squawked about no keys and all of us were hearing sounds like bowling balls down some wooden alley hurled and then a slam and bang as Something heavy hit the kitchen door and shook it in the frame "Wot if they've let the radishes loose again?" demanded, in a failing voice, one of the men and that is when we almost cried for vampire radishes can always contrive to roll slyly under foot so down ye go, and then the heavy melons pass over ye, to and fro
  • NOT THE MELONS! Save us from the melons!
  • Take, m'dear, those melons away for now they're split and look war-torn. Bury the rinds but not the seeds lest more vampiric fruit be born.
  • Oh, will the melons thread never die!
  • The thread is as undead As our melon felons.
  • In the midst of hemotropic vegatables we dwell; such edibles are spawned in hell and do not wish a fellow well.
  • Into the tomato vines last year they bore the catapult to make it easier to pelt one anotther witn ripe fruit.
  • Worse than ever, the infection spreada! Everything from our garden's beds keeps trying to touch us as we work outdoors and, once picked, keeps chasing us across the floors. Vampire vegetables, vampire fruit, rolling and thumping, and getting underfoot! We daren't sell any of our produce this year not even to the tourists who drive by here.
  • I've got so I feel sorry for them -- if they had teeth I'd let them bite me for a melon's life must be a dull one sipping water and dirt and lying in the sun no wonder they yearn to beome vampire vegetables -- romance and questing enter their small orbits and they live thereafter as purposeful curcubits
  • Though cucurbits they may be SacroSanctioned by The Bee These bloodthirsty melon of yore - When out walking the roads Keep an eye on your toes Rolling melons can make your foot sore
  • We try not to talk about our melons to strangers since they're inclined to think we're mad and we don't mention the pumpkins to the neighbours, though the neighbours guess there's something odd going on over here, they're not really sure we're any weirder than our grandparents were
  • "I went to a doctor - all he did was suck blood from my neck. Don't go see Doctor Acula!" --Mitch Hedberg .
  • Marge Piercy Attack of the squash people And thus the people every year in the valley of humid July did sacrifice themselves to the long green phallic god and eat and eat and eat. They're coming, they're on us, the long striped gourds, the silky babies, the hairy adolescents, the lumpy vast adults like the trunks of green elephants. Recite fifty zucchini recipes! Zucchini tempura; creamed soup; sauté with olive oil and cumin, tomatoes, onion; frittata; casserole of lamb; baked topped with cheese; marinated; stuffed; stewed; driven through the heart like a stake. Get rid of old friends: they too have gardens and full trunks. Look for newcomers: befriend them in the post office, unload on them and run. Stop tourists in the street. Take truckloads to Boston. Give to your Red Cross. Beg on the highway: please take my zucchini, I have a crippled mother at home with heartburn. Sneak out before dawn to drop them in other people's gardens, in baby buggies at churchdoors. Shot, smuggling zucchini into mailboxes, a federal offense. With a suave reptilian glitter you bask among your raspy fronds sudden and huge as alligators. You give and give too much, like summer days limp with heat, thunderstorms bursting their bags on our heads, as we salt and freeze and pickle for the too little to come.
  • Delightful, BlueHorse!
  • This is the only thread that matters. < / passesoutonbar>
  • Somebody hustle that bum out the door before he gives this thread a bad name. Watermelons Charles Simic Green Buddhas On the fruit stand. We eat the smile And spit out the teeth.
  • Pssstt!!!
  • *blushes imitation is the sincerest form of monkey-love Dear Bees: Forgive me. I slept since then. but it's so good, it bears repeating twice, and after all, this is a thread about vegibles THAT RISE AGAIN!
  • *hands plate care for some spuds? Potato Speculates on Popularity Michelle Boisseau I don't want trouble, but the rutabagas and the turnips—especially the turnips— are muttering Ingrate, Upstart, and throwing me looks. Sheez, Louise. I'm hardly escarole. So I got lots of friends? I'm adaptable, a hard worker, and I don't ask favors. Put them in a basket and they're bitter. Put them in a pan, better be copper. The butter's too pale, the pepper's too coarse. On and on. With me if I'm forgotten, I turn extra-spective and gregarious. I'm not called the Dirt Apple for nothing. I stick my necks out at any bright chink and light out for the garden on leafy legs. <\i>
  • Fine poem! Thankee for the 'taters, BlueHirse -- would ye care for some slightly bruised melon? A loaf of imported breadfruit? A jug of whine (made by the deep-lunged and disconsulate dachshund)?
  • Well, dang! = BlueHorse
  • I jush wanna shample a lil' more o' tha whine. Com'on over'ear you schweet, schweet honey-chile. *BlueHirse hangs arm around Bees neck and gives him a drunken smooch
  • *uncomfortable.*
  • "Tis OK, Nick -- she's just teasin' me back. Monkeys flirt from time to time -- without much reason or -- usually -- rhyme. we have no choice but fool around on this so-shaky electronic ground
  • Which reminds me, Nick -- have ye got your browser problem worked out? I would help if I knew anything to the point, but all I really know is critters and poetry and a scattering of useless facts which most folks have had the sense to mothball long ago.
  • Nah, bees, you must have me confused with some no-good-nick. My problems were poetic in nature. Remedied, I suppose, in as much as I've decided to bite the bullet and send some stuff out.< /terror>
  • O excellent hearing, Nick!!! Editors are only people (and fools) like the rest of us -- fear not. Even if they have teeth, those are very likely dull. Either way, whether they like or are indifferent to some to some piece ye submeit, just send it out again somewherre else. However, if you do get any feedback -- such as a line or two scrawled somewhere on a manuscript page -- take it seriously and try to see where the person's coming from and if possible intuiot why s/he said that. (Other than an attack of dyspepsia, that is. :]) That an editor takes the time to respond at all these days is a very good sign, since poems are falling like snowflakes in a blissard into most poetry editors' ken.
  • I can't even spell blizzard today, dammit...
  • Monkeyfilter: like snowflakes in a blissard.
  • Bees, this intuiot? Is that like an Eskimo making an educated guess?
  • *sighs* bees doesn't type well neither can he spell his fingers so wide two keys will bestride which makes things worse than this sorry verse
  • *pssst*
  • bese, I love your noriginle speling
  • <3s BlueHorse.
  • Well, we'll see Bee's. Frankly, it's something of a victory that I'm even willing to send this out at all. Must have short-circuited my self criticism board somehow.
  • Er... please remove all extraneous apostraphes.
  • 'E puts 'em in the celestial punctuation jar.
  • Roy Blount, Jr. Song to Onions They improve everything, pork chops to soup, And not only that but each onion's a group. Peel back the skin, delve into tissue And see how an onion has been blessed with issue. Every layer produces an ovum: You think you've got three then you find you've got fovum. Onion on on— Ion on onion they run, Each but the smallest one some onion's mother: An onion comprises a half-dozen other. In sum then an onion you could say is less Than the sum of its parts. But then I like things that more are than profess— In food and the arts. Things pungent, not tony. I'll take Damon Runyon Over Antonioni— Who if an i wanders becomes Anti-onion. I'm anti-baloney. Although a baloney sandwich would Right now, with onions, be right good. And so would sliced onions, Chewed with cheese, Or onions chopped and sprinkled Over black-eyed peas: Black-eyed, grey-gravied, absorbent of essences, eaten on New Year's Eve peas.
  • How easily happiness begins by dicing onions. A lump of sweet butter slithers and swirls across the floor of the saute pan, especially if its errant path crossses a tiny slick of olive oil. Then a tumble of onions. This could mean soup or risotto, or chutney (from the Sanskrit chatri, to lick) Slowly the onions go limp and then nacreous and then what cookbooks call clear, though if they were eyes you could see clearly the cataracts in them. It's true it can make you weep to peel them, to unfurl and to tease from the taut ball first the brittle, caramel-colored and decrepit, papery outside layer, the least recent the reticent onion weapped around its growing body, for there's nothing to an onion but skin, and it's true you can go on weeping as you go on in, through the most middle skins, the sweetest and thickest, and you can go on into the core, to the bud-like, acrid, fibrous skins densely clustered there, stalky and in- complete, and there are the most pungent, like the nuggets of nightmare and rage and murmury animal comfort that infant humans secrete. This is the best domestic perfume. You sit down to eat with a rumor of onions still on your twice-washed hands and lift to your mouth a hint of a story of loam and usual endurance. It's there when you clean up and rinse the wine glasses and make a joke, and you leave the minutest whiff of it on the light switch, later, when you climb the stairs. -- William Matthews, "Onuon"
  • I'm almost doubled over and running for all I'm worth after ye, tiny orange pumpkin trying to escape your fate by zigzagging across the earth or dodging under leafy growth Ha! I laugh with ghoulish glee to see you flee at last from me into a paper bag I'll pop you and once you're baked with chocolate sprinkles we shall top you
  • Knives, or the Way to a Man's Heart Jay C. Davis It's been a great couple of weeks for staying home and sharpening my knives, and each one has a perfect edge now. All this honing has really whetted my appetite. I feel a keen hunger, for freshly chopped and diced and julienned and sliced and shoestringed and French cut and coarsely chopped and minced meat and vegetables, filets of fish and beef and chicken, carrots, celery, blanched broccoli and fresh onions, garlic, peppers—sweet and hot— strawberries, peaches, all the tropical fruits, parsley, thyme, rosemary and every variety of fresh herbs. Strop, strop, chop chop. If you open a box and drop in 100 mice with one piece of cheese and one small hole to escape, and wait for the scratching to stop, one mouse only will exit the hole, cleaning his claws against his glossy coat, grinning in the spotlight, mugging for the paparazzi and nibbling his cheese. Sociologists will call him alpha, and Psychologists will call him self-actualized, and Calvinists will call him resolute and pious. Dieticians say he's non-lactose-intolerant, and I suppose Political Scientists will call him the Voters' Mandate. Gamblers will call him Lucky, and what I'll call him is the Capitalist. The experiment will come to an end and the glorious multi-nominal mouse will have his head snipped off and disposed of by a blonde lab technician with sterile rubber coated fingers, who's interning for the summer and hates this part of her job the most and just looks forward to going home, where her boyfriend will be precisely now starting to prepare a special dinner for the two of them— vegetables and meat, knives flashing, water steaming, and oil searing in the pots and pans, in the kitchen that's every bit as hot as Hell.
  • Quash that Squash! Bob Wombacher, Jr. Now comes that dreaded time of year: Sadistic neighbors reappear With squashes laden; how they flaunt them. I protest loudly, do not want them! They fathom not. (How can this meanie Fail to savor our zucchini? What motivates this ingrate neighbor To spurn the products of our labor?) Squash aren't eaten, sad to say; They're only grown to give away.
  • Some have taken to jerking the whole plant loose in the fields and the garden, stems, roots, and fruits -- most heed towards our house, but some simply vamoose squashed flat on the highways, or head for a neighbour's house. Which worries us, since word of their vampire ways could occupy the neighbourhood in talk for many days, till flocks of media appear on the local scene and rurasl peace comwe to an end with Attack of the Vampire Bean! The silly vegetables have killed no one, and are actually unable to avoid ending up in pies and on our dinner table. The children here find them rather charming, but some adults, we fear, will find them more alarming.
  • They have no eyes nor ears, yet somehow sense us, but veggies are nearly all but defenseless to protect themselves if humans should attack -- and they're too greatly handicapped to fight effectively back. The worst they can do is roll and rebound from your shins with a hollow, thumping sound. None of them can bite, and so far, none scratch, they're simply attive residents of our vegetable patch.
  • Mark Yakich Old Celery At the corner greengrocer I'd passed you many times before, always under the bright lights, water beading up on your tough skin. I picked up a tomato, a pair of kohlrabi, a handful of coriander; I had money this time. As I counted my change, a penny dropped down under your stand. On the way up, you, old celery, caught my eye. You'd been moved to a darker corner of the produce. I now felt guilt; I had missed you in your prime. I set down the other vegetables, took you, limp and barely green, and left a hollow yellow in the bed of shaved ice. When I held you up to get a fair look, there was not a silence in the world like the silence between us. Like so many things I've not wanted to see until they persisted in seeing me, I took you as if now I had a choice.
  • Old scraggly carrot, withered and rubbery, lurking in the bottom of the carrot sack with great long roots grown fish-belly pale and thick as a wig or a beard that's fake.
  • as a vampire it's not so great -- no teeth no mouth no digestivce tract only limited powers of mute animation -- only human imagination curiosity and desire can authenticate a vegatable vampire's extreme frustration
  • The melon had me cornered I stammered, and I gulped It moved ever closer still and shouted, "I vant to zuck your pulp!"
  • Good one, pete! These pulp-zickers, ye gotta watch 'em!
  • Carving Pumpkins by Matthew Gleckman One evening late in October we covered your kitchen floor with old newspapers and sat drinking wine with friends. Carving pumpkins like cadavers we loped off tops with steak knives removing pulp, seeds and spleen. When the guts had been pulled and spread across the paper you paused—slime covered— long enough to laugh at week-old funnies. Sitting on the sagging green couch across the room I drank faster than usual, out of nervousness, until you shot me a smile that slowed me down some and made me wonder which of my organs you are after.
  • hehe nice!
  • My heart leaps up when I behold pumpkins orange in a field, or gold. The children now resolve to carve the jack-o'-lanterns toothless for vampire pumpkins try to bite us and they're ruthless.
  • our valley's growing far more strange under its cloaks of morning fog with pumpkins tugging at their vines like tethered dogs of rotund orange each year our pumpklin patch gets bigger and our pumpkins display more than hybrid vigour all eager to roll after any passing soul -- there's something odd about our soil, we figure this year the green bean vines were wild to whip around your ankles when you passed -- we had to tear them up before they set their fruit lest they capture some stray child or errant old galoot
  • I'm getting nervous. As I look over the fence at my neighbor's garden, I can see that his pumpkins are ripening. *shudders
  • Luckily, I was away when the pumpkins got frisky, and massed in our valley regardless of risks. They jerked themselves suddenly free of their vines and started rolling from the garden plots behind the tranquil farmhouses and the painted barms;. Soon came the tooting of frantic car horns as orange globes whizzed across the gravelled roads and farmers, stunned and gaping, saw harvest loads swarm to the lake -- no one yet knows why. There, ducks and geese, alarmed, began to fly as down to the water chill and dank the pumpkins rolled like an armoured tank flattening the reeds along one shore as more pumpkins came, and more, and still more. And there they floated and bobbed all night until they were fished out at dawn's first light. Quickly, quietly, the valley folk hauled 'em, and drove to the city where they soon sold 'em. Pumpkins, gleaming and clean -- aye, the grocers were thrilled, but when I heard this, I felt a cold chill for I think it's part of a vampiric pumpkin plot to spread through the world, and do what they should not -- they plan to grow teeth, and they'll spread west and east all so their pumpkin descendents can have a blood feast.
  • I try to be well-mannered, Richard, as a salad or a pewter tankard but I'll be jiggered if I staggered through the wildwood like a leopard after tasty sheep and shepherd Edward, you smile and are well-dentured which is cultured! Richard sniggered as he centred yet another collared lizard, looking sunward as he ventured past fifty cups of pumpkin custard and ham sandwiches with mustard
  • yes, but could a vampire watermelon face Bunnicula?????
  • Barking, barking, my shinbones from afar Darken, darken, all bruised where pumpkins are Bunnicula, bunniculee, bunnicula, bunniculee! Rabbits everywhere, too damn many for me!
  • You think bunnicula is terrifying? TenaciousPettle and I will be screening this archetypal terror tomorrow night!
  • well at least I don't have to be jealous. I was bunnicula for halloween a few years back...fun!
  • Immigration Search May Affect Asparagus Crop Ace Boggess Charleston Daily Mail, April 5, 1999 Shoots on sight, that's what I always say. Well, I don't always say it, but then, I didn't know we had such a problem with illegal asparagi. I can picture them now: their slick, lizard-skin leaves, their stems stretching out like groping fingers to touch virgin soil. Chills the blood, to think of it. Sure, they provide cheap resources. Doesn't mean we should let them overrun America. Certainly don't want them in my back yard, squatting next to squash like sixties liberals, ranting about free love, & living off the land. They're criminals anyway, stealing all that moisture from the air. While we're at it, why not do something about zucchini? Or pumpkins? They're everywhere, seedy eyes staring, tongues licking softly upon thick lips. I'm carving that dire image even as I speak. I've heard it said they frighten children. Shameless. How can we allow it? We must uproot them all & send them packing.
  • *cheers* I've missed me the vampire melon posts!
  • from the bins in the dark cellar blood-thirsting pumpkins moan we hear them though we wear out earplugs when we try to sleep at home
  • aye, I might come back as a vampire bee if only some hungry vampire had the good taste to bite me
  • in the fields the vines are rustling jade tendrils curl about our feet as still-tethered pumpkins thump against the ground; we can't de-feet them till they ripen - pumpkin pies are such a treat!
  • )))! This is my favorite thread ever.
  • Bees, how could you resurrect this thread! Now I'll have trouble sleeping tonight. This is the only way I'll be able to sleep. *knocks back a few, rolls eyes back in head, holds arms straight out MEEELLLOOOOOONSSSSS
  • I was trying to write a parody of "Southern Trees Bear Strange Fruit," but I just didn't have the heart. I guess there's a shred of decency left in me after all.
  • Up to now, this hasn't been a black/white centred thread, TUM. It's been more about what-ifs, about envisioning magical melons, and how do you co-exist with animate vegetables, and such similar absurdities. The sorry issues of the real world are shunted aside or ignored here, in the luminous land of human fancy/imagination. But if ye care to develop a racist/anti-racist theme, I'd be interested in watching what ye can do with it.
  • Nope, sorry. It was all about melons attacking people.
  • field work we find snow fence works well for caging them before stems dry and they snap themselves off the vine the green beans did this on us this summer but they aren't so noticable when glimpsed from the highway as to bring traffic to a complete halt once an orange pumpkin cuts loose and starts careening about on its own it's hard not to notice and of course we were scrambling desperately after it trying to grab it before it rolled onto the asphalt where an express deliveryman revved up his engine without warning and left the line of honking cars to roll very deliberately over the poor thing the children were upset even the adults were stunned none of us had suffered a vegetable loss of this magnitude before
  • *bows to the Bees
  • *shudders*
  • yes, we dash from the squash patch and we flee, knowing these pumpkins will not yield the field, but always roll to catch us round the ankles with their vines and entwine each still-resistant mind with I must be dreaming! and this can't be real! even as green tendrils writhe and we feel 'em wrap about our calves we cannot help ourselves - we laugh
  • *faints*
  • To destroy the vampire pumpkins and watermelons, 
    you plunge them into a pot of boiling water. 
    After pouring away the water, scrub the vegetables with a broom and throw them away. 
    Burn the broom. 
    Boil! Boil! Vegetable toil! Bubbling water and bubbling soil! A pumpkin is wrathful Begone to the trashful You demon gourd Hence shall ye spoil! *lightning, vague odours*
  • Pete, your poetry is fine--please control the vague odours
  • How do we compost thee? Lettuce count the ways.
  • *belatedly lets out a shriek at the VM photo* "turned brownish red when wet on my hands from cutting the melon shortly after photographing it." Holy hellacious honeydews, he cut the #@&! thing open?! We're all doomed! *builds shelter, gets hoe and rake to guard the entrance, stocks up on vodka*
  • *squeezes in, notes he "won't get caught out there," gulps vodka*
  • *hands pete a trowel and a rusty can of peaches*
  • Yes, the veritable Pandora's melon!! All fear the unleashing of the Poxyklips.
  • Melon, Melon, burning bright In the garden, late at night, What immortal hand or eye Could frame thy fearful symmetry? In what distant twisted mind Forged the terror of thy rind? On what wings dare he aspire, The juicy, sweet, o’erripe vampire? And what shoulder, and what mind, Could twist the sinews of thy vine? And when thy fruit began to flower, What dread hand, at what dread hour? Stab the heart and spill the juice Of vile Citrellus lanatus! What the anvil? What the root Of evil January’s fruit? When the stars threw down their spears And water'd heaven with their tears, Did he smile his work to see? Did he who made thee make kiwis? Melon, Melon, burning bright In the garden, late at night, What immortal hand or eye Could frame thy fearful symmetry?
  • )))!
  • heh! but the vampumpkin'll getcha if ye don't watch out, Monster!
  • This calls for the Popup book of Phobias
  • Woohoo! A TUMescent melon!
  • ye, jawless, hungerin' for a meal ye'll never win at this kreigspiel poor pumpkins, cravin', in your old orange peels, a nibble at my ankle or my well-bruised heel
  • Bees, watch out for the vampires!! All of the watermelons, the blueberries, strawberries, pecans and beans could disappear OH NO!
  • they strain at their vines and jerk to and fro quite soon they'll be tugging themselves loose we know we've fenced in their field we've laid out the nets so not one o' these pumpkins away from us gets
  • vampire pumpkin: the harvest we doped their water for three days and sent the ripest insensible to market we clapped the few into our root cellar and this year notice how loud they moan and even bellow and though we think they crave our blood they have no teeth no jaws and this is very good
  • *claps with glee and dances around like a little kid* Halloween+Vampires+Melons+Pumpkins+Poems=Joy
  • deep in the cellar sounds of thumping as of vampire pumpkins jumping we keep the cellar battened down so the pumpkins will not roll around if ye pick one up it tries to roll or bumps against ye like a starving ghoul
  • I believe! I believe! *crosses two melon ballers in front of her and backs slowly out of the thread.*
  • they're so excited that we're frighted from the basement hear the thunder as of boards being smashed asunder will vampire pumpkins roll us under? will they break the cellar door and roll across the kitchen floor? the young ones shiver in their shoes while adults gulp down all the booze
  • Tonight the cantelope will growl The honeydew will snarl the hollowed gourd will baleful howl And the pumpkin will bite them all!
  • Tonight the cantelope will growl The honeydew will snarl the hollowed gourd will baleful howl And the pumpkin will bite them all!
  • )>>)>>)>>)>>)>>)>> Somehow, those are vampire bananas.
  • Pat, why didn't anyone think of the ballers sooner?! There might be hope yet.
  • When the night wind blows o'er the garden rows, and the bat o'er the scarecrow flies, And inky clouds, like funeral shrouds, sail over the melon's vines When the weeders quail at the pumpkin's wail, and butternuts bay at the moon, Then is the Cucurbitaceae's holiday--then is the ghosts' high-noon! Ha! ha! Then is the melons' high-noon!
  • Yikes! I've been curcubitten!
  • scarecrow's song across the dead and dying vines a cold wind whines and far stars glitter corn stalks rustle dry leaves blow shy mice and skulking birds do twitter while in the field I'm left alone and growing curcubitter
  • Cucumbers, you say? Do they bite, too?
  • try to remember the kind of cucumber the children dropped under the table one night with all its might it tried to nibble each individual sitting round the table but was not due to the aforementioned lack of teeth able to do more than unwrinkle the socks about our ankles
  • Melonious! bees, I have no words for how much your poetry cheers me.
  • pumpkin pumpkin, plump and round don't sneak about without a sound don't crack the cellar door tonight nor softly gibber through our night you roll upstairs and down the hall to fangless whine and lipless call the children giggle adults grin as ye thump and bang to be let in
  • come all ye bold pumpkins and gather round to hear this winter's tale of pumpkins without bloody fear first they found a nail that jutted out each pumpkin rolled against it with a mighty clout the holes this left in pumpkin hide were deep and ragged the edges jagged for know, my dears the vampire blood thirst did abide within each rotund rascal's orange hide now they have mouths (of a sort) with which to bite the tim'rous humans scuttled out of sight (who, callous creatures, downed some port ... tell me, would ye like a snort?) the pumpkins clustered long behind the cellar door were most annoyed to hear their people roar with laughter and they swore (now they have mouths to utter oaths) that gaping pumpkins should not be the butt of future mirth or snickering jollity yea, pumpkins rolled into the hall and wider grinned to see the people trip and fall and round them gathered nipping (as best they could, for they were new at this) all the humans shrieked the humans roared they told the pumpkins you are horrid! we planted you and let you grow between the cornstalks row on row we watered you we pulled your weeds we catered to your pumpkin needs! (to be continued once the Muse lets me know what comes next)
  • MY WORD! Bees, that is fantastic. Can I send you another bottle of booze Muse?
  • Heh. Hope to get it finished by this weekend. But we'll see. These matters are not easily predictable.