The most wondrous call of an "Tsukutsuku-boshi Zemi" can be heard outside my room right now ... and likely will be heard by you during our upcoming Treeleaf Zazenkais from here in Japan the next few weeks.
Heralding the end of summer ... the song is the Chant of a Sutra .... and there is actually a Buddhist connection ...
Amazing what this little guy can do, worth really listening ...
This fellow too, a Min-Min Zemi ... frome the "min min" call ... just looking for love (nature's Match.Com on the side of a tree
) ...
Gassho, J
STLah
PS - Kakunen, please correct me if I have my cicada species confused!
Heralding the end of summer ... the song is the Chant of a Sutra .... and there is actually a Buddhist connection ...
The so-called “tsukutsuku Boshi (tsukutsuku Buddhist priest)” is the most musically-inclined out of all the cicadas, with the bug’s vocal range extending far beyond its namesake “tsukutsuku” sound. Most attempts at imitating its cry in Japanese have always felt like they fell short of the goal, but they produced some really interesting onomatopoeia like ooshiikkukku, utsukushon, or tsukushoshi.
This fellow too, a Min-Min Zemi ... frome the "min min" call ... just looking for love (nature's Match.Com on the side of a tree
![Tongue](https://forum.treeleaf.org/core/images/smilies/tongue.gif)
The “minmin cicadas” are found throughout all of Japan, even on the country’s northernmost island of Hokkaido. As such, they are the most symbolic of all the screaming bugs, as is their minmin cry, the written records of which go back hundreds of years.
STLah
PS - Kakunen, please correct me if I have my cicada species confused!
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