Dream of Toona sinensis forest _ Dream of Toona sinensis

Comments on wolves and lambs.

Reflection on Wolf and Lamb (I)

The story that impressed me the most in this book is the Golden Monkey and the argali.

Golden monkey and argali are completely different animals, but it is strange that where there is golden monkey, there is argali, and where there is argali, there is golden monkey. It is really strange! The argali likes to eat Ailanthus altissima leaves, and the golden monkey also likes to eat Ailanthus altissima leaves, but the argali can't eat Ailanthus altissima leaves by himself, only with the help of the golden monkey. Some people wonder if the golden monkey ate the leaves too fast and many of them fell to the ground, so argali picked up a bargain below.

One day, a village chief named Pafa took a group of hunters and hounds to the forest to hunt. The hunters found more than a dozen argali in a cedar forest. There were monkeys barking in the tree before they shot. It turns out that they are calling the argali to run, and the hunter is coming! The argali ran away, leaving only a mother and daughter, because the lamb could not run. The scene was discovered by the monkeys, so they built a monkey ladder and saved the lamb! Hunters think these monkeys are too nosy! Thinking of killing them, he set fire to the forest, leaving the monkeys with no escape. At the critical moment, the argali appeared and saved the monkey. It is because of the mutual help of the golden monkey and the argali that they finally escaped from the hunters and survived.

The truth I learned from it is that people should help each other and understand each other in order to overcome difficulties and get out of the predicament.

Reflection on Wolf and Lamb (Part Two)

The stories told in this book are all related to sheep at the low end of the biological chain.

There is a story in the book, The Golden Monkey and the argali, which tells the story of animals helping each other. These stupid creatures, you saved my lamb, and I will help you escape; You stand guard for me and I stand guard for you; This spirit of unity and cooperation is worth learning from us human beings.

Another story in the book, The Impala Moved Twice, tells the importance of ecological balance. For the first time, impala lived on the grass only about 30 meters away from the leopard cage, for fear that the leopard would keep barking every day. The second time was in a place where there were no leopards. Red impala are all fat and big ears, and they have no flexibility in the mountains. The third impala lived about 0/00 meters away from the leopard cage/kloc-. One by one, the flexibility of the mountain was restored. "In order to live, the pressure can't be too great, and the pressure can't be too great" is a complete description of this natural meaning.

This book creates a vivid world that belongs only to animals. It lets us know the animal world, a magical world!