There I was, just a-rollin' up the road
Singin' doo wah diddy diddy dum diddy doo
Steerin' the wheel, calm in T-Hoe I rode
Singin' doo wah diddy diddy dum diddy doo
Before I knew it, he had landed next to me
Singin' doo wah diddy diddy dum diddy doo
I yanked my arm, and I wished that I could flee
Singin' doo wah didddy diddy dum diddy doo
We drove on (drove on) to my door (my door)
We drove on to my door, then I blanched a little more
Yeah. I had a strange (and not so musical) encounter on the last half mile home Friday. I was bumping up the poorly-Farmer-H-and-Buddy-blacktopped hill when it happened. A movement in my peripheral vision made me turn and look.
AN INTRUDER WAS HITCHING A RIDE!
Only the thin (okay, thick pane of safety) glass protected me from a deadly sting. Perhaps even death! I was sure of it. I yanked my arm off that ledge, repulsed.
A large stinging critter had settled on the door of T-Hoe. On the rubber weather-stripping on the outside of the window. I watched, mesmerized, as it began to patrol back and forth. Pacing! Waiting for a chance to get at me! If this had happened to Stephen King, we would not have had CUJO.
Sweet Gummi Mary! Had my time come? Was the Grim Reaper sending a surrogate out in the heat, what with his long black robes too steamy for Missouri in August? How could this be normal? Why would an insect (a giant insect) ride along on a T-Hoe for a half mile? No reason I could think of, rather than to STING ME. Again and again! Until I couldn't get away, and succumbed to the venom! It was going to be like The Birds! Only with a single attacker, not a flock.
I was actually getting concerned, as I rolled up the driveway with Copper Jack barking and running alongside, like a dolphin escorting a ship. How was I going to get out of this one? Wait until that beast flew away? He showed no signs of it. I was afraid it might be a yellowjacket. Or a hornet. An insect that means business!
Still it paced. Waiting me out. I took a picture, so show the size of it. And because I didn't have anything else to do while waiting outside the open garage door. But mainly so the coroner could check my phone and see the instrument of my destruction.
You can't see him very well here, because my phone camera decided to focus on the lush greenery rather than the merchant of death. I WAS able to get a closeup.
He wasn't furry, so I ruled out a bee. He's a husky fellow, no tiny waist, so I ruled out a wasp. I was thinking some kind of hornet, or yellowjacket, but the stripes are not as defined or bright yellow, and he doesn't have yellow legs.
The more I got to looking after the fact (oh, yeah, he flew off after about five minutes of pacing)... I have decided that this was most likely a deer fly. Due to the huge head and thick body and almost no antennae that I can see.
Here's a link, if you like trying to solve a mystery.
Don't be thinking that I was not in any danger! A deer fly or horsefly can give a very painful bite, and draw blood, and keep biting!
I am thankful to escape with my skin intact.
Yes, I was going to suggest that the bug didn't look like the stinging kind... but who am I to say?
ReplyDeleteWhen I was in Iceland, one of our guides said that in some areas, we might encounter flies, but not the biting kind. She said they just like to kiss people's faces.
Those Icelandic people--weird.
Sioux,
ReplyDeleteWhen he was pacing and I was driving, he looked more streamlined and stingy. When I got the pictures on New Delly, I noticed the big head and thick body.
Our across the road neighbors have always had horses. When we moved out here, the horseflies were terrible. They'd get on the vehicles, and ride down the driveway. They'd follow me in the garage, and BITE me when I got out of the vehicle. Right through my shirt. They really hurt!
I don't want any kissing flies!
Flies that big around here used to be called March Flies but I haven't heard that for a long time, nor seen any. Perhaps they've all moved to your country? I don't think he meant you any harm, probably just hitching a ride because his wings were tired.
ReplyDeleteRiver,
ReplyDeleteI wish you'd kept them! At least there was only ONE, and not a whole swarm. I think I would have driven around until I lost them!
I was thinking it was a horse fly and those HURT!
ReplyDeleteKathy,
ReplyDeleteOnce I had on my glasses, and saw the big picture on New Delly's screen, I was pretty sure it was a biting fly. It looked more stingery creeping along while I was driving.