name of bug
- Norma
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name of bug
A while back there was a thread about a large bug that only appears every 17 years...What was it called (my daughter wants to research...she's into bugs)?
- Redwolf
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It's a cicada. It isn't that they only APPEAR every 17 years (there are cicadas in the South every summer), but that their life cycle keeps them underground as larvae for years before they emerge as adults. This particular group of adults is a particularly large one, and emerges in a 17-year-cycle...so this year there are considerably more cicadas than there are in normal years...huge numbers of them, really.
Redwolf
Redwolf
...agus déanfaidh mé do mholadh ar an gcruit a Dhia, a Dhia liom!
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They were cicadas. I did a search -- the link to that topic on C&F is:
http://chiffboard.mati.ca/viewtopic.php ... sc&start=0
There's even diagrams for making an origame cicada later in the topic.
Debbie
http://chiffboard.mati.ca/viewtopic.php ... sc&start=0
There's even diagrams for making an origame cicada later in the topic.
Debbie
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Re: name of bug
Although I probably wasn't here for that thread, I think it's the Cicada.Norma wrote:A while back there was a thread about a large bug that only appears every 17 years...What was it called (my daughter wants to research...she's into bugs)?
Today is the Tomorrow you worried about Yesterday....Was it worth it?
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Music is the traveller crossing our world, reaching so many people, bridging the seas.
---The Moody Blues
- missy
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here's a link for you from right in the heart of "brood X"
http://www.cincinnati.com/freetime/cicadas/
you CANNOT carry on a conversation outside right now. Luckily, they stop at night!
We have about 3 weeks more of this to go. One of our boxers eats them, the other stamps on them.
Since I have a 17 year old son, I have a real handy "reminder" of when these things come back.
http://www.cincinnati.com/freetime/cicadas/
you CANNOT carry on a conversation outside right now. Luckily, they stop at night!
We have about 3 weeks more of this to go. One of our boxers eats them, the other stamps on them.
Since I have a 17 year old son, I have a real handy "reminder" of when these things come back.
- Chuck_Clark
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I'm beginning to feel ignored by Mother Nature.
In another thread, Jane talked about the flooding in the Chicago subbies. Forty miles south of here, to the West in Iowa and East in Indiana, more flooding. Here we're about normal to a little low on annual rainfall.
Tornados struck Tuesday night in all directions - we never even hear a single peal of thunder.
Cicadas are a scourge everywhere. here I'm seeing even less cicada shells than usual (none to be exact).
I guess being the forgotten child isn't that bad after all.
In another thread, Jane talked about the flooding in the Chicago subbies. Forty miles south of here, to the West in Iowa and East in Indiana, more flooding. Here we're about normal to a little low on annual rainfall.
Tornados struck Tuesday night in all directions - we never even hear a single peal of thunder.
Cicadas are a scourge everywhere. here I'm seeing even less cicada shells than usual (none to be exact).
I guess being the forgotten child isn't that bad after all.
- missy
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awww, Chuck, I'll be nice to ya and send you, oh, a few thousand or so. I know I can find THAT many just in my back yard!!!
We've gone to having "cicada checks" whenever we enter the house or the building at work. The little buggers hitch a ride in on your clothing. When you go to get them off, the males start yelling at you.
We've gone to having "cicada checks" whenever we enter the house or the building at work. The little buggers hitch a ride in on your clothing. When you go to get them off, the males start yelling at you.
- chas
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Cicadas aren't a scourge at all unless you're an orchard owner or have other small trees. So, the grub shells (leftovers from molting) have been stinking for about a week, I get a few splats on my windshield every day, and it sounds like someone has a slipping fan belt about a block away. Constantly.Chuck_Clark wrote:Cicadas are a scourge everywhere.
I would call a scourge the summers in New England when the gypsy moths are going nuts. Entire hillsides defoliated, trains stuck in valleys and cars not able to get up driveways because of the slippery biomass of the caterpillars -- that's a scourge.
I look on the positive side. As a result of the cicadas, my yard got a free aeration. My 3-year-old has a new hobby.
Charlie
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- tommyk
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There are many different kinds of cidadae; we get them every year 'round "these" parts. It's the "Cicada Magi" genus species which are the 17 year variety.
- Tommy Kochel
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