Re: more buggy questions

2003-01-02 Thread Merla Barberie
We always have two kinds of small bark beetles in the winter--longish
brown creatures with beautiful markings.  They don't eat in their adult
phase.  I don't know their life cycle.  They walk and fly around the
loft of our cabin.  They are under the metal roof and must come in
through small cracks in the structure of the building.  The other
related one is round, flat and black in the unheated greenhouse.  They
both give off the same odor if you disturb them--like a skunk, but not
the same smell.  Their spray is actually sweet, but offensive.  I can
pick them off without threatening them when I'm reading in bed in the
dark in the loft with a reading light which attracts them. They only
spray if you hurt them.

Moen Creek wrote:

 Hate to be rude folks but these ain't lady Bugs but a Japanese/
 Oriental beetle that the USDA brought over a number of years ago to
 eat a Pine Bore that had migrated to the US with-out it. We here in WI
 have had huge numbers in late Sept for years. They are not hatching
 but looking for wintering ground ie in your barn, house etc.
 In remodeling a cabin this summer I wondered as to their wind blocking
 and insulating properties as they had filled ever crack  crevasse
 under the siding but had not survived the desiccation of the winter.
 We have had several commitments to mental wards around here of
 housewives unable to keep up with vacuuming every one of them out of
 their homes as they (the bugs), waken and become active inside abodes
 at every warm spell till hightailing it back to work in the spring.

 We had fewer this year so they must be migrating to warmer climes as
 they figure out this confusing country.

 The pesticide man that had the audacity to show up with an offer to
 eliminate them one orange colored fall day was very hasty in backing
 out the drive when I told him I dealt with pest with my 20guage and it
 was just here in the closet.

 I guess my neck scarf must have slipped wide that week.

 Blessed 03
 L*L
 Markess


  From: The Korrows [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Date: Tue, 31 Dec 2002 00:02:30 -0600
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Subject: Re: more buggy questions


   But why now? there isn't anything for them to eat, and
  it's too cold
   for them to be very active, yet year after year, they
  always do it.

  The ladybugs have been coming out around here also. Insects
  are very much
  connected to the temp, though to understand this
  relationship we have to
  expand our concept a bit. It's not just the temp from a
  maximum temp point
  of view but also from the duration of sustained average temp
  plus an
  internal mechanism that has been bound to their preys temp
  tolerance and
  cycles for a millennium.
  If it's happening inside your house it could be a false
  signal their getting
  since the temps in the walls are obviously higher than the
  ones in say a
  barn or a trees bark.Consequentially there are allot of dead
  ladybugs in the
  house from about now till spring. They don't have any food.
  If it's
  happening outside, all one has to do is look close enough 
  you'll find that
  there is something there to sustain them. Insects are
  incredibly 2
  dimensional, food and sex is virtually what they live for.
  (sounds a little
  too much like much humanity for my comfort).

  In Love and Light,
  (Mr.) Chris






Re: more buggy questions

2003-01-01 Thread Moen Creek
Title: Re: more buggy questions



Hate to be rude folks but these ain't lady Bugs but a Japanese/ Oriental beetle that the USDA brought over a number of years ago to eat a Pine Bore that had migrated to the US with-out it. We here in WI have had huge numbers in late Sept for years. They are not hatching but looking for wintering ground ie in your barn, house etc.
In remodeling a cabin this summer I wondered as to their wind blocking and insulating properties as they had filled ever crack  crevasse under the siding but had not survived the desiccation of the winter.
We have had several commitments to mental wards around here of housewives unable to keep up with vacuuming every one of them out of their homes as they (the bugs), waken and become active inside abodes at every warm spell till hightailing it back to work in the spring.

We had fewer this year so they must be migrating to warmer climes as they figure out this confusing country.

The pesticide man that had the audacity to show up with an offer to eliminate them one orange colored fall day was very hasty in backing out the drive when I told him I dealt with pest with my 20guage and it was just here in the closet.

I guess my neck scarf must have slipped wide that week.

Blessed 03
L*L
Markess

From: The Korrows [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Tue, 31 Dec 2002 00:02:30 -0600
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: more buggy questions


 But why now? there isn't anything for them to eat, and it's too cold
 for them to be very active, yet year after year, they always do it.

The ladybugs have been coming out around here also. Insects are very much
connected to the temp, though to understand this relationship we have to
expand our concept a bit. It's not just the temp from a maximum temp point
of view but also from the duration of sustained average temp plus an
internal mechanism that has been bound to their preys temp tolerance and
cycles for a millennium.
If it's happening inside your house it could be a false signal their getting
since the temps in the walls are obviously higher than the ones in say a
barn or a trees bark.Consequentially there are allot of dead ladybugs in the
house from about now till spring. They don't have any food. If it's
happening outside, all one has to do is look close enough  you'll find that
there is something there to sustain them. Insects are incredibly 2
dimensional, food and sex is virtually what they live for. (sounds a little
too much like much humanity for my comfort).

In Love and Light,
(Mr.) Chris








Re: more buggy questions

2002-12-30 Thread Allan Balliett
But why now? there isn't anything for them to eat, and it's too cold
for them to be very active, yet year after year, they always do it.


Martha - I don't know texas, but our piles of winter lady bugs only 
started a couple of years ago. Have they been happening there for 
longer? I actually saw piles of Boxelder bugs on a the side of the 
barn last week...



Re: more buggy questions

2002-12-30 Thread The Korrows
 But why now? there isn't anything for them to eat, and it's too cold
 for them to be very active, yet year after year, they always do it.

The ladybugs have been coming out around here also. Insects are very much
connected to the temp, though to understand this relationship we have to
expand our concept a bit. It's not just the temp from a maximum temp point
of view but also from the duration of sustained average temp plus an
internal mechanism that has been bound to their preys temp tolerance and
cycles for a millennium.
If it's happening inside your house it could be a false signal their getting
since the temps in the walls are obviously higher than the ones in say a
barn or a trees bark.Consequentially there are allot of dead ladybugs in the
house from about now till spring. They don't have any food. If it's
happening outside, all one has to do is look close enough  you'll find that
there is something there to sustain them. Insects are incredibly 2
dimensional, food and sex is virtually what they live for. (sounds a little
too much like much humanity for my comfort).

In Love and Light,
(Mr.) Chris