I remember these from my youth - mobs of them used to beat themselves up crowding outside lights.
They are a native beetle about 50mm long (say 2 inches the biggest ones) with enormous antennae. In grub form they live in rotten logs.
Last night one astounded Mr B by banging repeatedly on the glass doors when we had interior lights on after dark. I managed to trick it with an outside light then get a couple of reasonable shots of its patterned carapace. (They fly by the way in case that wasn't obvious from the text above, and make a sound like a small furious helicopter.)
This morning, paddleboarding across the bay in mill-pond conditions, I could see ripples spreading from something small struggling in the water. It turned out to be a cicada. Duly I fetched it out with the paddle, plonked it on board and continued with it to the nearest land to complete the rescue only to have the ungrateful wee beastie fly back in the direction of open water just as disembarkation was imminent.
Obviously his girlfriend was on the other side of the bay - or she'd ditched him and he was determined to drown himself anyway.



There's just no helping some people / creatures!
ReplyDeleteHari OM
ReplyDeleteLove that Huhu, as if carved from wood itself... and golly, now I am feeling sad for a single cicada on the opposite side of this slice earth! YAM xx
Thanks for the close up!
ReplyDeleteI'd never heard of cicadas heading for water.
thanks for the laugh out loud closing comments... truly, I am still laughing. I have saved many things from our pool to have them dive in again, so I get it... I have an image in my mind of you on the paddle board taking him to shore.. love it. he is really quite handsome. we have big beetles but they are black and iridescent blue, when I dip them out of the pool, Bob says stop saying them, I want them dead. do I listen? what do you think? ha ha
ReplyDeleteAm always rescuing wee beasties too or moving them out of harm's way!
ReplyDeleteThat is one magnificent bug! Looks like an ample purse for an elf. The cicada not very bright, good thing he will not be breeding ,more idiot cicada babies not needed.
ReplyDeleteI feel a bit of foolish. I know all about the huhu grub but nothing about the beetle. I've never seen one before. At first I thought it was a weta. Had to Google then to remind myself what a weta looked like. Oh boy
ReplyDeleteThanks for the lesson.
The antennae are prodigious! Well done for saving a cicada, even if the ungrateful creature didn't appreciate it.
ReplyDeleteAs lovely as the huhu is. I don’t think I’d like having one near me.
ReplyDeleteAs for the cicada. I think he was being very rude indeed
I like cicadas but this bug just somehow gives me the creeps, always has.
ReplyDelete