Monday, June 2, 2008

One thing I've learned in the South...

I have learned many things living in the South, but one of the most important subjects I've learned about is the bugs.
Growing up the first 12 years of my life in Anchorage, Alaska I was mostly only exposed to Mosquitoes. Mosquitoes that are so large people up there joke that it's the state bird (the state bird of Alaska is actually the Ptarmigan) and souvenir shops sell mosquito traps that look like smaller bear traps--the kind you see in cartoons with the giant saw-like metal teeth. There are a few spiders, a few ants, and a few other things that you only see about three months out of the year, but that's all.

So of course I wasn't prepared for the army that met me at the state line into Arkansas when I moved there. I learned very quickly that, in the South you don't:

1)Leave your porch light on--just trust me, don't do it. Your entire front door will be covered in June Bugs, Beetles and one year it was locusts.

2) I don't recommend getting gas in the evening when the overhang above the pumps is lit up...for the same reason stated above.

3) Do not leave any trace of sugar or food anywhere...a small dropping of cornbread on the floor will quickly become a mound of shuddering black as those tiny sugar ants conquer and destroy the mountain of sweet, Southern cornbread.

4) Shake out all clothing, towels and shoes before even thinking about putting them on your body.

5)NEVER, EVER put a bag of trash by the door to be taken out later. I had a roommate who didn't like to take out the trash so I piled the trash bags by the door to make a point (which fell on deaf ears) and when I finally went to remove them because she didn't there was a black, garbage-bag-shaped cloud on the wall behind with a trail leading out the door...ants on the move. They're quick little buggers.

6) Those tomato worms are the scariest things in the world. They look like a rolled-up leaf and I can't see their eyes or anything else. I'm sure they have a great purpose, but I don't grow tomatoes anymore.

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