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Show This column is full of bugs walking across our fe j floor in slow motion. W -j watched him for a mp , our son came with a bp Joyce mouse was caught and d-V- ; Our little granddau p. fascinated by bugs. eD':: plication walk we have to stop a--every single bug. W. ( and look at the bugs city they special interest, au.-' doing abundance, are ants -1 bugs. 'y They like to trytotff ..l and spiders look pre" ork mo We sawacw:la-oaclia;.;::'ii(ii"bul other day. We w'hin big apes and this c. , One oft. running out from kinj The kids hadn't seen openj so they were tryuigtgf-g been at this guy. ..R After living and hearing about W , United States I here in good old FieaJ our few bugs and i n blessed. Believe me U Thev say that San J... but I'm sure d j. Anyway, ltn v01ff Kuts, , proaching, keep windows shut or ' U. winter with a ew ' 5ib. or mice trying fg cold. f By MARCELLA WALKER I can tell it is getting to be winter because a sticky fly is trying to help me write my column right now and there are 10 million firebugs (Box Elder Bugs) trying to get inside for the winter. We have spent a lot of time at the University Hospital lately and as we sat in a waiting room this past week there was a zillion of them trying to get inside the building and a couple of them had made it. The snow on Timp Tuesday morning was a tale in and of itself and it finally rained in the valley, bringing (hopefully) all the muck out of the air so that we can see across the valley again and take a deep breath safely. Yes, winter is bound to come, although I have heard several people say they would chance low water next spring just to get out of having winter. Well, back to the bugs. I don't believe I had one mosquito bite this past summer. Of course I steered clear of the Uinta's and the lake. We saw few flies, except when we visited a pig farm in Arizona and when you have pigs you have flies, they go together like peanut butter and jelly. I only saw one lady bug this past summer. She sat on my lap as I drove somewhere, I forget where, and I let her sit there. Remember when we used to say, "Lady Bug, Lady Bug, fly away home. Your house is on fire and your children p.g. blab will burn?" I wonder why we said that? Anyway, Lady Bugs are nice and they eat aphids which are bad. I was in on two occasions when farmers far-mers took boxes and boxes of lady bugs that they had ordered and let them loose in their fields to eat the aphids. I like good bugs. I do not like gigantic beetles. Have you seen some of those big four-inchers four-inchers that they have in collections? collec-tions? I can't believe it. How would you like to run into one of those on your sidewalk? I do not like wasps, either. They like to build their little nests under the eaves of our house. A black wasp crawled up my pantleg once and stung me on the knee. It hurt like crazy and I got a firey red line up my leg from my knee and I had to take some medication for it. Have you seen a swarm of bees when they light on something as they are out looking for a new house? That is a sight and a very interesting one at that, as long as you do not get stung. I hate spiders, but, other than a Black Widow, I cannot bring myself to kill one. They are basically harmless and they eat bugs but I do not like them to come indoors to visit but they do. I can remember one time when I was a teenager and I was sitting in a chair in our frontroom. A spider walked across the coffee table and stopped on the edge which was about three inches from my leg. Suddenly I could read that spider's mind and I knew he was going to jump on me and he did. Clear across those three or four inches. I jumped straight into the air. Probably scared the poor guy to death. One of the prettiest sights in the world is the sun shining on the dew on a garden spider's web. It is so symmetrical and distinct and the shining dew looks like jewels. I haven't seen one of those for a long time. I wonder what has happened hap-pened to all of them? My neighbors and I were talking the other day about the mice and how they like to live under the evergreen shrubs. They are warm and cozy in there and even through the winter the branches of the plants keep the snow off and the mice can have a hey-day in there. They strip the bark from the evergreens sometimes and then the branch will die. The mice are well hidden from the cats in there, too. But my neighbor said he has solved the problem with a mouse poison that is in a block and you sit it under the bushes and it is not ruined by moisture and it'll get those little Mickeys and Minnies for sure. We have to keep Dcon around on our rafters and floor joists because we have mice get in the house occasionally. oc-casionally. Last winter one must have chowed down on a little too much of the Dcon and he was |