John Kenney: Listen to Yourself and Trust Yourself
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John Kenney is the author of three novels and four books of poetry,
including Love Poems for Married People. His first novel, Truth in
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10 comments:
I saw some here in Michigan this year. Maybe the mosquitoes scared them away. Or cicadas carried them off like the flying monkeys carried off Toto and Dorothy. It could also be the weather.
The same question has occurred to us in Tuxedo Park, NY. I believe (and Caroline shares your concern) that your surmise is probably correct. Happy Thanksgiving to you and your family, Nin. Curtis
Funny, Laura. I would rather have the mosquitoes carried off . . .
And Happy Thanksgiving to your family, Curtis!
Well, with last year's droughts in the interior, the US Dept of Agriculture officially declared that a plague of grasshoppers and Mormon crickets was upon our house.
They allotted $5.6 million on bug abatement, but the money was all used up before the swarms could even be accurately counted.
On the other hand, there's a rather unpleasant nematomorphic organism called the hairworm (well, perhaps to another hairworm, not so unpleasant) which is parasitic in terrestrial arthropods like the grasshopper and the Mormon cricket. They are aquatic by nature and intent, these hairworms, and when they grow large within a host (which they tend to do), they manipulate its behaviour by causing it to seek out water. Pretty soon all the poor grasshopper or cricket wants to do is plop into the drink.
This is the phenomenon known as grasshopper suicide.
(That's a mighty good looking grasshopper, by the way... peering down like a Narcissus Grasshopper at its reflection in the water, before the fatal plunge?)
All the grasshoppers here have drowned in the rain, but the little air bubbles they have left behind are singing, "Happy Thanksgiving, Nin!"
They've gone the same way as the bees and the frogs ...
Oh, I know where they went. They all came here, all the brothers, sisters, cousins, aunts, uncles, and their friends feasted on my garden. They left us nothing, no squash, no spinach, no lettuce, no chard, only a radish or two. You can have them back if you'd like!?
I am from Long Island NY and this post was the first result when I googled "where did the grasshop". It auto filled in pers go. So I guess I am not the only person who noticed! I am almost fifty and as a kid I used to catch them and play with them. Big juicy brown ones. One day long ago they were gone. Scary.
As an Army Brat, I lived all over the world. Summers in the U.S. were filled with honeysuckles, fireflies and grasshoppers. I have noticed some neon green grasshoppers this year, but I know that we have destroyed whole species of things that may be important to our ecosystem. We have lost more than some crops & that is very sad.
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