Nothing to get bugged about
65Bugs
Cockroaches
|
|
Killing Cockroaches: And Other Scattered Musings on Leadership
Price: $10.65
List Price: $16.99 |
|
Martina the Beautiful Cockroach
Price: $12.60
List Price: $19.95 |
|
|
Cockroach: A Novel
Price: $7.44
List Price: $23.95 |
|
|
The Revolt of the Cockroach People
Price: $8.63
List Price: $14.95 |
|
Cockroach Cooties
Price: $2.00
List Price: $5.99 |
|
Crying with Cockroaches: Argentina to New York with Two Horses
Price: $6.90
List Price: $21.95 |
Bugs on Amazon
|
Everything Bug: What Kids Really Want to Know about Bugs (Kids' FAQs)
Price: $4.25
List Price: $7.95 |
|
Big Book of Bugs
Price: $8.76
List Price: $14.99 |
|
Snow Bugs: A Wintery Pop-up Book (Bugs in a Box Books)
Price: $6.90
List Price: $11.99 |
|
Jingle Bugs (Mini Edition): A Merry Pop-up Book with Lights and Music
Price: $4.86
List Price: $10.95 |
|
June Bug
Price: $8.10
List Price: $13.99 |
|
You're My Little Love Bug (Parent Love Letters)
Price: $5.20
List Price: $12.99 |
|
The 12 Bugs of Christmas: A Pop-up Christmas Counting Book by David A. Carter
Price: $6.40
List Price: $14.95 |
|
The Bugliest Bug
Price: $3.87
List Price: $7.99 |
Bugs on Ebay
|
|
35 pcs Tibetan Silver Bug Spacer Beads B-12
Current Bid: $.99
|
|
|
Volkswagen : Beetle - Classic 1976 Vw Beetle bug.
Current Bid: $3895.00
|
|
|
HOOTS: BUGS BUNNY LOST IN TIME NEW IN BOX
Current Bid: $.01
|
|
|
CASEY COLEMAN L/S Denim blouse Volkswagon Bug 1XL
Current Bid: $29.56
|
|
|
HOOTS: SCOOBY DOO GLOWING BUG MAN VISTA SEALED NEW
Current Bid: $3.48
|
|
|
HOOTS: BUG FRENZY WILD MAZE ACTION W98-VISTA SEALED NEW
Current Bid: $2.98
|
Bugged
Bugs are something that most people don't like. They are thought of as nasty "creepy crawlies" that ought to be destroyed. With insecticide or squashed underfoot perhaps? Even the word "bug" can mean to annoy you or something that causes things to go wrong.
Bug has become a word that can be readily applied to a wide variety of insect life, although technically it should only be used for the true bugs or hemiptera, of which there are thousands of different species. Amongst these there are shield bugs and water bugs.
Shield bugs often have brightly decorated wing cases on their backs and it was with great joy that I recently encountered a rather aptly named Harlequin Bug, whilst rambling on the hills above San Isidro. I spotted the creature resting on some leaves and was glad I had my camera with me. I was also glad I hadn't trodden on the little fellow. With its red colouration this dandy of the insect world would surely win any bug fashion show.
True bugs also have modified mouthparts that they use to pierce things and suck up the juices inside. Some feed on plant juices and are pests, while others like the Bed Bug feed on us and so we can definitely call them pests too.
Another group, known as the Homoptera, includes the aphids, whiteflies, leafhoppers, cicadas, and scale insects. These Homoptera have the rather dubious distinction of being probably some of the most destructive insects in the world. Certainly here in Tenerife, gardens are plagued with whitefly. Besides killing the plants the horrible little things fly up at you in a cloud like a mini snowstorm in reverse.
I may have a problem with whitefly but in general I like bugs. I will rescue them too. If I see a flying insect trapped in a room I will guide the poor creature to an open window. I take delight in thinking that they will find their way home, and in some strange sort of karma, that my good turn will be returned.
When I was little boy I delighted in popping beetles and caterpillars and other six-legged small creatures into a jar or matchbox and taking them home to keep as pets and to identify. Look what I've found I would tell my parents and my dad would help me find out the names from a book.
The excitement of discovering insects is still one of my pleasures in life. In a disused reservoir, also on my visit to San Isidro, I found more baby Water Boatmen than I had ever seen. The little backswimmers were everywhere I looked, rapidly rowing themselves through the brown stagnant water. I remember being fascinated by these creatures when, as a young lad, I used to see them in a pond in a local park.
The Water Boatman is a type of water bug and has the typical piercing mouthparts, which it uses to suck out the blood and vital juices of any aquatic creatures it can catch. If you catch hold of one, beware, because it can use its mini beak to bite you too. It moves from one pool to another by flying, and it is quite remarkable to think that such a creature manages to find suitable habitats in such a hot and dry place as the south of Tenerife.
Another species of water bug I have found on the island is the Pond-skater and I recently discovered these incredible insects gliding over the surface of an irrigation tank in the Masca gorge. There were also lots of Whirligig Beetles, shining and spinning around on the surface where water dripped from a pipe, and Red Darter Dragonflies perching on the side-wall or hawking around over it all.
Most visitors to Masca are amazed by the beauty of the mountains and the craggy rocks in this Shangri-la of the Canary Islands, but I find the insect life there just as wonderful. Giant lizards that were once believed to be extinct have recently been discovered on the cliffs but I am sure if these reptiles could hideaway in Masca, then there are probably some very rare insects living there too.
A very common type of insect that everyone seems to hate here in the Canary Islands is the cockroach. Personally I think they are fascinating creatures and I used to keep the Madagascan Hissing variety as pets. I was once featured in the South Wales Echo as "Bugman Steve Andrews" and I had one of these large insects crawling across my forehead.
There are a lot of people who collect and breed the many different types. In fact, if you search online you will find The Blattodea (Cockroaches) Culture Group and Allpet Roaches, "a site dedicated to all roach enthusiasts."
The Cockroach was also the inspiration for the popular song "La Cucuracha," and the dance of the same name. Just goes to show there's always a good side to everything. You don't have to let them bug you!
Footnote: First published in the Western Sun, July 2005.
PrintShare it! — Rate it: up down flag this hub
Comments
Thanks Chris! That picture was in the South Wales Echo and I can only assume I left the press cutting along with heaps of other archive stuff in a cupboard in my dad's house. There's loads of good stuff there including all the TV videos but then again a lot of it I have forgotten about. A lot of other things I gave away I can no longer remember who they went to. 30+ bags of books including expensive Scientology ones went to Troutmask Books in town and they gave me a measly 30 quid and told me their boss said a lot of what I'd brought in they couldn't sell so they were passing them to a charity shop! It was a weird experience getting rid of all my stuff. People would say I could sell a lot of it but that wasn't working of the prices I'd get were pitiful and I ended up giving tons of things away. Jess who lived next door said she'd be happy to take anything I didn't want so bags and bags and boxes and boxes went in their and even a huge sunbed that Isaac bought and failed to find a buyer for and was a hell of a lot of trouble to move in and out! I wondered for a while what they did with all these things. Plants and animals went to various people and all I know about what happened to those was that I heard that the stick insects I had been breeding for many years died but that the firebellied toads were OK. I hope the people who moved in didn't destroy my magic garden but no way of finding out what happened to any of it!
I like bugs too. I was picking green beans the other day and found the husk of a cicada on one of the plants--that was so bizarre, like finding a science fiction story under a leaf. Thanks for another great Hub, I always enjoy your writing.
Thanks, Pam! I have never seen a cicada in real life only in pictures.
bugs are great, as long as they are not walking on MY forehead!! LOL better thee, than me...LOL
great interesting work on nature, I'm glad the natural world has you and others for friends. I know parting with personal possessions is painful; I've lost my share of them.
Thanks again, Marisue! I have no problems at all with bugs and even now I have a mother Cellar Spider and her babies up in a corner of this room.
See here:
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v240/greenbeard/
I am lucky my landlady doesn't visit so I can leave spiders be and other bugs I put over the balcony if Tiggy doesn't catch them! lol
Almost studied to be an entymologist. I'm quite the nature freak and insects were a huge hobby of mine thru grade school. I hate cockroaches though...it's the way they scurry.
Most people do hate cockroaches! They seem to be as hated as spiders.
They are in actuality a wonder of creation that have been here longer than we have and can eat and survive on an incredible range of foods. I find it interesting to see that they have preferences though eg I found that a peach I had here was being eaten in the night over a course of days and a hole was getting bigger. It was a cockroach and I caught him and threw him out. He had clearly chosen to eat the peach rather than go after anything else here and he had decided to hide by day and go back to his selected meal under cover of darkness ignoring other fruit on the same table.
I watch caterpillars and they are not at all wasteful - they usually eat all the leaf and the stem before they go on to the next part. When they have eaten as much as they need they stop and change into a chrysalis. There is no damage done to the plant apart from what is taken as food.
See I love spiders. Cockroaches are fascinating, just creepy and very very fast. I am definitely a fan of most arthropods and hopefully one day will get a graduate degree in zoology so I can enjoy studying them with more knowledge than I do.
They need to be speedy to get away from all the humans who want to kill them! lol They have a lot of enemies. I have even seen Blackbirds eating them here!
now that's a spider!! yikes!!!
Hello again, Marisue! Thanks for the support!
BTW I have a hub all about spiders here:
Great interesting hub. It reminded me little of my late son who used to be fascinated by all sorts of creatures, bugs, spiders and snakes to name a few. He would sit for hours on his haunches watching "goggas" (South African for bugs). He also used to poke around in tidal pools for hours on end on his trademark haunches when we were on holiday at the coast. Thanks for sharing and bringing long lost memories to the fore.
As a child my mother used to joke that I lived in my Wellingtons because I spent so much time in ponds and streams looking for aquatic creatures!















CJStone says:
15 months ago
I love it when you write about nature Steve. You write with such eloquence and such obvious pleasure it's hard not to be affected by it. You almost make me want to keep bugs too. And I remember that picture with the cockroach on your forehead. What happened to it?