Big Bugs

My cat used to feast on those Cicadas up in NY.

Came across this weird thing in Lynchburg, Virginia. For about a week, a swarm of several hundred would meet me at dawn every morning, at the door to a construction trailer field office. They covered the outside wall, around the light sconce.

Walking into the trailer felt like a scene from Hitchcock's "The Birds".


There is a cure for that:

Bofors_firing_USS_Hornet.jpg
 
We are ready. Old timers called them June bugs around here. They live in the ground as a grub for several years. They don't bite or sting and actually pretty. They climb on to a tree as a grub and the shell splits on top and they crawl out with wings looking nothing like a grub. They make a noise loud as a horn. Here is one having sex with a hornet.:D
 

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Last year the 17 year or 21 year (I forget) cicada posse came out of the ground. They were EVERYWHERE, some places the ground was so full of cicada corpses you couldn't walk a foot without stepping on one. They'll buzz ya too, freaks me out. They use a straw like appendage to drink tree sap, that sometimes they'll stick into your skin if you let them sit on you for a while. Painful. I hate them dearly, but apparently some like to use them as food.

I'm from near Auburn and every tree on the place looked like it was moving. Aggravating little buggers, however at 77 years of age I probably have no worries of them ever bothering me again.

Also walk under any tree and get covered with cicada pee mist.
 
The biggest bug I ever saw was in the water bug/cockroach family. On a sweltering hot summer night in the 1970s I was was walking up the Bowery in NYC when it was still skid row. I thought I saw a brown wallet laying in the street, but as I got closer I saw it was moving. Uh oh. I stopped to watch it for a minute and I swear this bug was so big it had a face and by the time it got to the gutter it actually peaked over the top of the curb and looked both ways before it climbed up onto the sidewalk.
 
You could make 2-3 Japanese horror movies with those boys. The loudest I ever heard them was up on Black Rock Mountain, in Clayton, Ga. They would all get together and just make that old mountain hum. There was a big old lighted cross up there that I hear the PC's made them take down cause it was on public land...I'll bet them old boys ain't singin' like they used to if that's so.
 
This was our year for whatever brood it is here in WV. For 6 or 7 weeks we were entertained with their lovely mating call. I really don't mind them, and as BigWheel said, our cats love them. Not just the cats, either, but some wild animals eat them as well. And my youngest son when he was 4 or 5. They areate the soil. After they emerged this spring, and left millions of holes in the earth, we had some exceptionally heavy rains here. Most of that water was sucked into the holes in the earth, and everyone's lawns have stayed the greenest I have seen them for years.

Best Regards, Les
 
We are ready. Old timers called them June bugs. They live in the ground as a grub for several years. They don't bite or sting and actually pretty. They climb on to a tree as a grub and the shell splits on top and they crawl out with wings looking nothing like a grub. They make a noise loud as a horn. Here is one having sex with a hornet.:D

June bugs are different than the July flies. June bugs look like a large green beetle. At least in my neck of the woods.

Leon
 
saw about half dozen cicadas in the neighborhood...south side of chicago...this week.....

a few years ago the 17 year ones came out and were everywhere in abundance.....
 
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A few years ago here in SC Missouri, they were really plentiful. I live out in the boonies where I can shoot whatever, whenever. My son and I took to throwing ricks up into the trees out front of the house to flush out the cicadas the shoot them out of the sky with a pump 12 ga. I think we used 7 1/2 buckshot. You would be surprised how many we got. I am so blessed to live where I do. I will probably always live here.
Peace,
Gordon
 
Here ya go, enjoy, I don't know where to find a pound and a half of them,
I hear them all the time but rarely see one alive. Maybe there is some way to trap them:

Adult Cicada Recipe
Adult Cicadas can be eaten as well as Cicada Larvae. You should pick mature femalesyou’re your dish. Adult Cicada males have hollow abdomens and not much of a meat, but the female Cicadas are filled with lots of fat. Before you start your cooking you need to remove all the hard parts: wings, legs and head. These parts don’t contain much of the meat either but may be very sharp, so its best to get rid of them.
You will need: two tablespoons butter or peanut oil, one and a half pound of cicadas, two serrano chilies, raw, finely chopped, one tomato, finely chopped, one onion, finely chopped, one and a half table spoon ground pepper, one and a half table spoon cumin, three table spoon taco seasoning mix, one handful cilantro, chopped, Taco shells, Sour cream, Shredded cheddar cheese, Shredded lettuce.

All you need to do now is: 1. Heat the butter or oil in a frying pan and fry the cicadas for 10 minuts, or until cooked through.
2. Remove from pan and roughly chop into 1/4-inch cubes/ Place back in pan..
3. Add the chopped onions, chilies and tomato, season with salt, and fry for another 5 minutes on medium-low heat..
4. Sprinkle with ground pepper, cumin and oregano to taste..
5. Serve in taco shells and garnish with cilantro, sour cream, lettuce and cheddar cheese.

Steve W.
 
Here ya go, enjoy, I don't know where to find a pound and a half of them,
I hear them all the time but rarely see one alive. Maybe there is some way to trap them:

Adult Cicada Recipe
Adult Cicadas can be eaten as well as Cicada Larvae. You should pick mature femalesyou’re your dish. Adult Cicada males have hollow abdomens and not much of a meat, but the female Cicadas are filled with lots of fat. Before you start your cooking you need to remove all the hard parts: wings, legs and head. These parts don’t contain much of the meat either but may be very sharp, so its best to get rid of them.
You will need: two tablespoons butter or peanut oil, one and a half pound of cicadas, two serrano chilies, raw, finely chopped, one tomato, finely chopped, one onion, finely chopped, one and a half table spoon ground pepper, one and a half table spoon cumin, three table spoon taco seasoning mix, one handful cilantro, chopped, Taco shells, Sour cream, Shredded cheddar cheese, Shredded lettuce.

All you need to do now is: 1. Heat the butter or oil in a frying pan and fry the cicadas for 10 minuts, or until cooked through.
2. Remove from pan and roughly chop into 1/4-inch cubes/ Place back in pan..
3. Add the chopped onions, chilies and tomato, season with salt, and fry for another 5 minutes on medium-low heat..
4. Sprinkle with ground pepper, cumin and oregano to taste..
5. Serve in taco shells and garnish with cilantro, sour cream, lettuce and cheddar cheese.

Steve W.

Thanks for the yummy recipe, but I'd better write it down. They are gone now, and won't be back for 17 years. I can't remember what happened yesterday, and in 17 years I have a feeling I might forget some of those ingredients.

Thanks, though...

Best Regards, Les
 
BUGS

My cat used to feast on those Cicadas up in NY.

Came across this weird thing in Lynchburg, Virginia. For about a week, a swarm of several hundred would meet me at dawn every morning, at the door to a construction trailer field office. They covered the outside wall, around the light sconce.

Walking into the trailer felt like a scene from Hitchcock's "The Birds".


That is the OSHA inspector in "covert mode". Common disguise now days:D:D
 

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