Diversity: the things that creepeth under foot

The world is full of amazing creatures and when it comes to the order Coleoptera (Beetles) their number and diversity are astounding!

~ HINT ~

Underlined portions in today’s post will take you to more, and interesting information!

We all know the Ladybug as an old favorite of childhood.  We sang little poems about them,  played with them, collected them in critter cages, and, sorry to say it, often loved them to death…   Poor Ladybugs.

Recently, I read about a woman who uses Beetles as art expression and room decoration.  She does it by creating a three-dimensional “wallpaper” for her clients.  Honestly, from the distance the work looks lovely.

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Click either image to be taken to Fiberarts Magazine, and the photo’s source

03Thorny-female-detail

I keep imagining that they might get a bit ‘gamey’ in hot and/or humid weather.  Hm…

Yesterday, Bob came in all excited about a giant beetle he found outside.

“Its huge and has giant pincers!” he said.

I confess,  that I never did grow out of my bug loving phase from childhood, and so I made him take me to go and see it.

He was a handsome specimen too!  One and a half inches of burnished mahogany from the tip of its pincers to the anterior of its wing casings.  Carefully picking it up for a closer look, I then marveled at its ferocity and strength!  I took him inside and placed him into the bottom of a plastic container.

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He landed on his back and couldn’t move.  I made several attempts to assist, but the container was too slippery, and onto his back he’d return.

He was definitely out of his element, and for all his strength those grappling hooks on his legs couldn’t find a foothold to help him upright. Instead, they were getting hooked onto his legs and binding them to himself!

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I crumpled some paper and put him onto that.  Success!

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Watching him crawl around in circles became disheartening, so I took him outside and set him free.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAI think he is beautiful.

The sudden movement caused him to take a defensive stance.  I tried to move him off of the paper and onto the leaves, but he would not budge.  I picked him up and carefully removed the paper from his grip…

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At which point he grappled himself, again, and just lay there.  I left him to sort it out and went online to find out more about my visitor.

~ NOTES ~

He is a Stag beetle, Lucanus elaphus to be exact, and can be identified as a male by his larger pincers.  He uses them for establishing dominance (competing with other males), and taking a fierce stance to ward off predators.  They can pinch, but are not harmful.  The females have pincers as well, but they are much smaller by comparison.

The largest Stag beetle is about 11.938 centimeters (4.7 inches) while the smallest Stag beetle comes in at about 1 centimeter (or 0.39 inches)

Stag beetles are forest recyclers.  They lay their eggs on decaying wood and the larva help to return it to the forest floor.  The grubs, depending on the variety, can remain in the wood for up to seven years, however the beetle itself is short-lived at only one to two years.  The grubs for this variety take only one year to develop from grub to beetle.

In England, the Stag beetle is considered an endangered species.   Due to the loss of the beetle’s natural habitat, they have begun placing rotting logs in parks and backyards to help them regain their numbers.

~ MY THOUGHTS ~

We often find creatures in our environment that can look alarming to us, however, each animal or creeping thing on this earth has a niche to fill, and a job to perform.  Many such creatures are maligned and destroyed simply out of fear or ignorance.  I encourage you to find out more about what scares you in the wild of your own back yard.   For I am certain that you will be amazed at the jobs they perform, and at their efficiency in the performance of their jobs.

 

Late news and putting it all into perspective

It all began with a 5:00am phone call from my neighbor, but I’ll get to that in tomorrow’s post.

I said that over ten days ago and never followed through.  I’m sorry.  Here’s what happened immediately following that 5:00 AM call!

~~~~~

My neighbor called me and in a flat voice said,

“Lynda, if you look out your back window you’ll see the house on fire.”

Bleary-eyed, foggy headed, and half asleep I am jolted into the here and now.  I go to the dining room window to see her house, but it is not burning.  Then, to my left I see the flames…

They are directly behind the woods and shooting easily 100 feet into the predawn sky!  Dazed, I hear her continue;  something about being woke up, a cell phone, and more.  I thank her for calling and we hang up.

Still a bit dazed, I begin to wonder why she called me so early in the morning when clearly both she and I, her’s and mine, are not in any danger.  Then I get it.  She want’s me to pray for the family whose house is afire.  DUH!  We had no way at that time to know if the family was OK, or if they all got out in time.

We listened for the news on TV, heard that the road was blocked off for the fire crews, and saw a momentary shot of the house, fire trucks, and an ambulance.  Later in the day we drove by, on the way to the hospital for my eye injury, and would see the gutted wreckage.  There were at least twenty cars pulled up onto the front lawn.  Family and friends, folks from church, all there to sift through the mess and to collect anything salvageable for the family.   I doubt there was much.  Taking one look caused me to cry and exclaim, “It’s so sad!”  To which Bob replied, “They have a lot of friends.  They will be OK.”   Blessedly, that evening we would hear that although the house was a total loss,  the family had gotten out in time.

I tend to write about so many things.   I try to keep it fun and not complain too much, but sometimes it all gets the better of me.

However, events like this…

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put it all into perspective.

~~~~~

Article from WHNT Huntsville:  http://whnt.com/2013/02/03/house-fire-in-hazel-green/

Sunday Shorts (OK, I know it’s late!)

The Value of Family

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When Christine had shown up from Florida, I knew I wanted to take her everywhere and show her all the things that made SoCal special to me.  The Claremont Colleges having been my old stomping grounds in high school were on the list for sure.  Where else could you get that feeling of being back east in California?  Then there were the natural elements that made the area so wonderful.  The mountains that surrounded the valley I had grown up in, and just a couple of hours to the north or the east would bring you into the desert lands where the silence could swallow you up.   However, on that day it was the beach that was my priority.

Problem!  Mom was making me take my younger brother and sister with us.  I resented her for making me take them.  After all, Christine had come to see me and the sights, not help babysit my two youngest siblings!  Angrily, I loaded them both into the back of the station wagon with their things, and pulled out of the driveway.  About half the way there Christine looked over at me and noticing I was still pouting, she said, “It’s OK, they aren’t misbehaving and I really don’t mind.”

On hearing her say that my attitude brightened and I suddenly felt we would have a great day.

Now I had always found it odd that it could be sunny and hot in our inland valley and yet a drive to the beach could find you ten degrees cooler and facing a cloudy and overcast day.  Such was the case this day and I was disappointed.  Well, there was still the cave to be seen, and later in the after noon found us scrambling over the rocks to investigate!

As we rounded the last rocky outcropping I noticed that the little bay was a bit too small.  I realized that the tide was coming in and we needed to take a peek at the cave and then get out of there before it was too late.

I told Christine what was going on, and then yelled to the kids to stay close.  We walked into the cave, gave the requisite shouts to hear our echos, and then came out to go back.

We had only been there what seemed a few minutes and already the waves were crashing against the lower rocks.  Scrambling up the lower formations we were being sprayed with the fanning water as each wave broke.  We were screaming with each wave, and then laughing because the water was so cold.  We had become drenched!

Suddenly, a very big wave rolled in and instead of breaking like all the others it just continued to roll right over our pathway.  There was now about two feet of fast, churning water hitting our shins.  I froze.

Quickly scanning the outcropping for my brother and sister, I saw Alison and Christine bolt for the cliff face and grab on like crabs in their effort to not be washed away.  Clinging there their faces looked so pale against the wet and darkened rock.  The wave broke against them, and then began to retreat.  The force of the retreating water was causing me to me lose my footing.   When I looked back I was panicked to see Aaron being swept over the edge of the rocks and out to sea.

It is amazing what detail your mind can store in a situation where you face so much trauma.  I was once told by a doctor that the adrenaline in such situations will cause your brain to go into overdrive, and instead of getting just the general information from the situation, your brain records every single millisecond of detail and it plays in your mind like slow motion…

Aaron was floating over the rocks, his face white, looking terrified.  There was no screaming of “HELP!” like in the movies, it was just terror and scrabbling to find something to hold on to.  Breaking from my frozen state I tried to run to him and catch him if I could, but the four feet between us might just as well have been forty.  The ocean had garnered a prize that day and was not going to let it go!  I lunged for him but missed my grasp.  In my mind I was hearing myself explain to my parents how I had allowed my baby brother to be killed that day on the cliffs, and I knew they would never forgive me.  Never.

I see my brother dig his fingers into the holes on the rocks edge, the water is dragging his legs and body straight out behind him and then seems to let him go.  Straining, he pulls his body back to the rocks.  I see the muscles and tendons in high relief along his arms, his legs and feet are pistoning against the razor edges of the rock bluff, and then, he is free.   Laying there, his chest heaving, he begins to cry.

By this time Alison, and Christina are at my side.  We help Aaron up and quickly get off the rocks.  Safely on the sand we carefully check Aaron to assess the damage.  He has a few scratches on his arms and legs, his shorts are shredded and so is the end of his left big toe!  (I will spare you the details, but just know it was horrific looking!)  We took him to the first aid station where they patched him up, and then we left.  We’d had enough of the beach for one day.

That was forty years ago, and every time I remember that day, my selfishness shames me.   Remembering the terror on those rocks, when I thought we’d never come back from that one last wave,  is when I realized how much my brother and sister meant to me, and that it could have all ended so differently.

~*~*~*~

This is not my picture, but it is where the above events took place all those years ago.crystal_cove

Professor Tom Morris, who teaches Environmental Biology at Fullerton College, posts this photograph with the admonishment to “Go at low tide.”

Hm…  YA THINK?

NOTE:  Please kindly click the photograph to link back to its source and view the many other amazing photos Professor Morris has posted to his website.  Thank you!

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From The Daily Post  who gave us this line to use in our writing today:

“I thought we’d never come back from that one.”

This One is Over: welcome 2013

Daily Prompt:  Faithful

This One is Over:   welcome 2013

What a year this has been.  We worried, or not, in 2012 about the following:

  • Public shootings
  • War
  • The presidential election
  • Global climate change (Hurricanes, drought, flooding)
  • Our/world economy
  • Joblessness
  • Taxes
  • GMOs, pesticides, herbicides
  • Health care
  • Multitrillion dollar debt
  • The end of the world

Though not necessarily in that order, and of course, your worries may have varied depending on where you live and what personal adversities you are facing.

Did I miss one? 

As we remember the ugliness of last year and face the unknown events of this coming year I have to wonder…

What worries will you carry with you into 2013?

And I ask:

“Who of you by worrying can add a single hour to his life?”

~Mathew 6:27 NIV~

~*~*~*~

My Take?

We hear the news and ask:

“What is this world coming to?”

The answer?

“The end.”

We fear not.

We pray and have faith,

for that is our hope.

Rejoicing we lift up our hands and say:

“Hurry your soon coming!”

We live out our days. . .

know not,

yet are assured.

Selah

~*~

Sunrise over planet Earth

FreeImageWorks.com

“I’ve had plenty to worry about one time or other. I’m through worrying.”   Ernest Hemingway, The Sun Also Rises

(Your opinions may vary and are, of course, accepted.)