The farmer sold his land and we watched the corn fields give away to wild prairies. One night we watched in awe as the field twinkled with the light of thousands, maybe millions, of fireflies. You may think watching one bug light up is pretty impressive, but you haven't seen anything until you look out on acres and acres of them firing up.
The developers moved in and the new houses are going up. The fireflies are still around but not in those huge numbers we saw that magical summer. It amazes me these little life forms lay dormant all winter, buried deep underground and snow, and then come summer, follow God's plan to light up and multiply.
I imagine for as long as children have roamed the summer grasses at night, fireflies have danced alongside.
http://iris.biosci.ohio-state.edu/projects/FFiles/
http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/bugs/firefly.html
5 comments:
That must have been a beautiful sight to see. I grew up catching them too. DS catches them too. They are neat.
must be a sight to see we see them but not by the hundreds :/
OMG last night my friend saw one and caught it on the first try and then let it go!
We love lightening bugs! We grew up catching them and Alex loves catching them too. :)
I grew up with lightening bugs and can still remember catching them. But it seems now we are too far north to see any.
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