neverspent: vintage art of ferns (Default)
I'm eating my breakfast on the porch at the farm. Just over my left shoulder, the sun is about to peek over the hills. There's a pretty brown spider in an orb web silhouetted against the light. Also keeping me company are a flock of little striped sparrows who don't seem to realize, or care, that I'm here; they're hopping about mere inches from my feet. I just heard a crow answering another crow in the distance.
neverspent: art of red and white flower (flower)
This is the story of today:

Fog.

Geese, leaving noisily.

Mockingbird.

Hostas and pink azaleas, thinking it's spring.

Tree full of migrant grackles, creaking like rusty farm equipment.

Neoscona crucifera busily working at her beautiful craft, paying no mind to my wondering face three inches away.

Willow oak leaves, knowing it's fall.
neverspent: art of dragonfly (dragonfly)
Only a few inches from the black wasp I wrote about yesterday, I noticed with a start, inches from my face on a sunflower was a spectacular green spider with its fangs embedded just below the base of a carpenter bee's head. I've seen and even photographed spiders at their mealtimes before, but I've never seen a spider like this. Its body was a pretty, light green with some brown patterns on the abdomen. The legs were long, almost transparent, and dotted at intervals with black spots. Sprouting from each black spot was a long, thin black spine. Hairs, I suppose, but they looked particularly sharp and wicked. I have very friendly feelings about most spiders, but these black spines actually gave me a shivery thrill. If you like spiders, you should definitely have a look at this beauty.

Behind here )
neverspent: art of field, fence and tree (farm fence)
The first day of October was gorgeous and almost felt like Fall. In the evening, the humidity was low and it was cooler outdoors than indoors. That's a big moment in the warm climates!



The sun was still warm gold when it dipped below the trees at the farm and lit up the bearded grass. A couple of hours later, coyotes started yipping and got all the dogs going.
neverspent: Art of trees, icon by lj user anod (trees)
I'm at the farm, where we have an attic fan and the windows and doors open and cool air, but not mosquitoes, flowing through the screens. Last night was even more delicious than the day. In the morning, I took the dogs for their walk through the woods and I was a little surprised to see the clearings, which were low and brown two weeks ago, full of tall green weeds and saplings and revived flowers. The sun coming through the trees is always so pretty.



On one of the woodland sunflowers was a small brown butterfly. I stepped slowly closer to see if I could get a picture of it with the little camera I had in my pocket, and it didn't move. I thought I was awfully lucky to have found a sluggish butterfly, so I got closer and closer, until I saw, with a start, the eight green legs of the butterfly's killer, locked in the death embrace.

The embrace, linked for the squeamish
neverspent: art of bridge (rural bridge)
Enough of pretty stars and flowers and fascinating bugs for a moment. Let's talk about ticks. Not the brown dog ticks and the deer ticks you see in the pet care ads. Those pests are disgusting, physically uncomfortable, can carry diseases, and can even make a mammal sick by their sheer number if it comes down to that. But they're pretty easy to find and dispose of, if you're alert.

There's a much more insidious menace out there. It's almost invisible, and it comes not singly but by the dozens and hundreds. It can penetrate clothing, and it can't be removed by hand. If it's not discovered, it may infest its host for weeks. If it is discovered and quickly removed, it still leaves a maddeningly itchy blister tens of times its own size.

I'm talking about the SEED TICK. These are the hideous larvae in the tick life cycle. (Can you tell that my tolerance for all creatures doing what comes naturally is strained by this specimen?) Country-dwellers know them. People who walk through tall grass and through the woods, people who are outdoors in the lushness of summer. We know that if you brush against some grass, then later feel something crawling up your leg, that's a tick. Locate him, throw him away, that's it. But if you sit on the ground somewhere, then later have a vague sense that your skin is crawling, just... maybe... maybe not... are you imagining it? You can investigate, but if you don't have good vision, you probably won't see anything.

If you do have excellent vision, pale skin, and a good light source, you may find them: tiny, light-brown specks, one quarter the size of a poppy seed, moving like an impossibly distant army across your skin. Don't try to brush them off with your hands. If your skin is slightly damp from sweat, or you've used sunscreen recently, it won't work; or you'll just end up with seed ticks on your hands and soon your arms.

They need to be flushed off with water, lifted off with masking tape, or, if they've attached, which they do quite quickly, they need to be scraped away with fingernails or a blade or a good fine scrubber. Heaven help you if you're not near water, and they're all over your clothes. Wearing your socks tucked over your pants legs is good advice for dealing with adult ticks, but seed ticks can, and will, crawl right between the fibers of your socks and all over your feet and ankles and up your legs. You might as well just discard the socks in an outdoor waste receptacle as soon as you can, because you'll never be sure you've washed the seed ticks out.

This public service message is brought to you by my going for a hike without wearing insect repellent. I've never needed it at that location before, but still. I know so much better.

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neverspent: vintage art of ferns (Default)
neverspent

September 2014

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