Can you see him? I couldn't at first, and my sis couldn't either. Awesome camouflage for a two-inch [from head... er, cephalothorax to stinger] little arthropod hanging out in the water box. Our buddy D spotted him before any stingage occurred.
Posted from the San Bernardino National Forest, near Big Bear Lake, California, with my sister's pug Lily asleep on my lap.
Posted from the San Bernardino National Forest, near Big Bear Lake, California, with my sister's pug Lily asleep on my lap.
4 comments:
I eagerly await your "hello tick" and "hello mosquito" blogs.
I think you cheated by going with the coyote.
;-)
Emily, we're pretty in pink thanks to all the generic Caladryl. Dern skeeters. No ticks [knock wood]. I've never seen one up here. Course, I'd never seen a scorpion around here either, until yesterday.
Wait'll you see "Hello Female Black-headed Grosbeak." Riveting stuff!
I still have a vivid memory of the time I visited a really scummy bar in some tiny town in Nevada (the only kind travelling a geologist visits). After a beer or two I had to use the facilities - which were, I am sorry to say, even filthier than the bar. As I stood over a toilet that was filthier than Lenny Bruce's mouth, I saw something move near my foot.
Although my first thought was how odd it was to see a roach with claws - I quickly realized that this wasn't a cockroach and I was wearing sandals. Faced with the impossible choice between sitting on that filthy toilet seat or letting a scorpion crawl over my foot - I elected just to pee on my feet as I high-tailed it out of the stall.
Now when I go to scummy bars I always make sure I'm wearing sturdy - waterproof - footwear.
I just got back from a week in Big Bear. Sadly, we don't have our own cabin, but the dogs find it exciting to try out a new one each year. We saw lizards, chipmunks and squirrels, but nothing bigger than that. No doubt everyone else heard us coming and made good their escape.
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