Posts tagged: Insects

Things you can see when you take a walk

By Neil, 28 August 2008

So a few days ago when Kate was at class I decided to take a little walk to the San Diego River park by our house to see what I could see. On the way, before I could make it very far, I came across all these wonderful creatures. In fact when I finally made it to the San Diego River park the only thing I found was a littered bag Carol’s Jr. bag being eaten by ants. Anyway enjoy the pictures. 

And the shot of the day was this humming bird that was feeding in the bushes as I took pictures of the Black and Yellow Garden spider.

A Walk to the Park

A Sunny Afternoon with a Macro Lens

By Neil, 8 July 2007

Friday afternoon, just after work, I decided to take the office’s macro lens for a stroll around the compound. Actually I want to make a documentary about the bugs I find in the compound so went about collecting images. Shooting with a macro lens is hard stuff because if you move just a shake everything is out of focus, that and the ominous lens scares the bugs away. Here are some samples of the bugs in the compound to wet your appetite for the documentary will be coming out soon.

Encounters with Insects

By Neil, 12 June 2007

Giant bee we found on church steps in San Cristobal

There are an estimated 2 to 50 million insect species on the earth and I have come into contact with just about all of them. I must look like a plump tasty food source or an exterminator to most bugs, because to date I have been stung by 14 bees (alas I am allergic), bitten by a wolf spider or two, most recently kamikazed by hoards of falling hairy caterpillars, attacked by nests of fire, safari and countless other ants, been stung by wasps, slept with hobo spiders, been eaten alive by mosquitoes while others in the same tent received not a sting, attached by a soul sucking gargantuan flying devil while sleeping in Moab, Utah, and wake up now and again to notice a new giant blistering bug bite. For example the following is an excerpt from an email I sent to my friends and family while living in Bangladesh.

Bangladesh, 5 April 2005

Well Monday was buggy; when I woke up I had to kill a few 5″ roaches in my bathroom. They must have had a lot of practice because it took me a while get them all. Later while interviewing three farmers I had just moved my chair into the shade when I started to feel loads of pain on my right foot. I looked down to see my foot covered in red bitty ants. The Bengalis thought this was hilarious and the driver, Tazu, told me, “it is because these ants have never tasted the white flesh before and they just had to try it.” “These ants,” he said, “do not bite Bengali, they have already tasted us and do not like.” That evening while using my roach mausoleum of a bathroom, I encountered a 6″ spider. They are harmless, I was told, and so I left it to its exploring.

Even so, I love insects, they are great little creatures that move our planet along. Many insects are nature’s most powerful pollinators, others are wonderful decomposers, and still others are beautiful beyond compare. Without pollinating insects, plants would have never evolved the beautiful flowers to attract them. Most beetles help decompose dead matter, recycling elements back into the ecosystem. Let us no forget the honey, silk, and waxes we use from insects. While staying among the Masi on a school trip in Kenya, we learned how the Masi used safari ants in place of stitches for deep cuts. The ants would bite the two pieces of skin together, tightly sealing the cut, and when the body segment was removed the jaws remained tightly shut until removed.

I am always amazed by the diversity and abilities of insects, and I dedicate this entry to them. May you live long and prosper (except for the mosquito, flee, and tick of course).

Another article about bugs on my old blog.
Wikipedia article about insects.
Funny insect find on Google Earth.

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