They're a-coming!
On or about May 2004, Brood X of the 17-year periodical cicadas will emerge. If you are in this area, you will soon be swarmed.
I was a wee lad the last time this happened, and I remember the shells covering the trees and telephone poles, and the incredible sound. But most of all, I remember trying to walk to school without squishing them all. |
Re: They're a-coming!
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I'm on the UMMZ site...I thought that these cicadas were blind, but I don't see anything written about that. Not looking forward to seeing them again, especially not living here in PA, where I hear it's really bad. :( *feeling her bugphobia going up many notches...* |
I don't think they're blind, they're just not particularly agile, so they bump into stuff alot. Unlike most flying insects, they only fly for a few weeks every 17 years, and they do so in such numbers that predators don't make a dent. So agility wasn't a particularly important survival trait.
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Ewwww... Ewwwww... I hate bugs....:worried:
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I bet that would be a fun time to test out a flamethrower.
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You forgot smelly.
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Alas, my olfactory memory doesn't seem to reach back 17 years. I don't remember the odor.
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I voted for "tasty". I don't know what they taste like, but they must be pretty yummy because my cats bring about a dozen per year into the house.
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At work we have been known to take various insect carcasses (including cicaidas), tie black threads to them, and wave them at certain bug-senstive female crisis workers in an attempt to torture them.
If we are going to end up with a lot of them, I may have to discuss having one of the tall guys climb up and tape the threads to the ceiling fan, so they can whirl around. It will be just like they were actually alive and swarming again. Yes, I will take pictures if I make this happen. |
St. Louis had two or three varieties up and at 'em a couple of years ago. There were so many that there were piles of them under trees. You had to shovel them up an pitch them. Let me tell you they made an awful stink when they died.
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Well...
Philadelphia is in that area, but nobody, I mean NOBODY, not even the periodical cicaidas can take then territory away from a good old fashioned, pollution fed, garbage nurtured cockroach!
I think we'll see very few of them in the city! |
I suspect it depends on how much exposed soil there is in the area. DC has tons. I don't know about Philly.
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Just checked your link... I really could have lived without the recipies...
:vomit: :vomit: :vomit: BLECHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!! |
Well...
I don't personally fed the little bastards! Yet that is how they get so big I think....My personal staisfaction is from wasting the little bastards, if I'm fast enough that is....Later! :shotgun: :rattat:
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Mmm.. Cicadas and Diet Rite cola!
http://biology.clc.uc.edu/graphics/c.../Yum%20Yum.jpg |
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