Late winter quotes:

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  • Known colloquially as 'winter,' 'golden needle,' and 'velvet foot' mushrooms, enoki mushrooms grow across much of the world, inhabiting dead conifer trees and stumps, and generally appearing throughout the late fall and winter months. -- Paul Stamets
  • I go out and take oysters, clams and mussels every 2 weeks or so during late fall, winter and early spring. I particularly like to go out when there is a below-average ebb tide because that exposes clamming grounds and oysters that are usually under water. -- Jim Himes
  • Something I'll always remember - when I was a kid, I shook hands with Orville Wright. Forty years later, I shook hands with Neil Armstrong. The guy that invented the airplane and the guy that walked on the moon. In a lifetime, that's kinda wild when you think about it. -- Jonathan Winters
  • The Christian Bible is a symbolic book, not a literal one. The one Christians know as Jesus was actually a symbol for the sun. Ancient sun worshippers believed the sun died at the end of the winter solstice and then three days later it would be reborn at the start of its cycle - December 25. -- David Icke
  • Mama grizzlies mate later than other bears. They have two cubs instead of four. They wait four years - about twice as long as other bears - between having cubs. And after they're pregnant, if winter is hard or their health is not good or the food supply is uncertain, they re-absorb the embryo into their body. -- Gloria Steinem
  • It turns out nudity is not a problem for me. It's one of those things you think about later and say, 'Yeah, I could do this for a living.' -- Winter Ave Zoli
  • Canada's climate is nine months winter and three months late in the fall. -- Evan Esar
  • You stupefied me. We waxed, Carnivores, late and alight In the beaded winter. All was ominous, luminous. -- John Ashbery
  • Late February days; and now, at last, Might you have thought that Winter's woe was past; So fair the sky was and so soft the air. -- William Morris
  • It's the place of the story, beginning here, in the meadow of late summer flowers, thriving before the Atlantic storms drive wet and winter upon them all. -- Gregory Maguire
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