So who is this black beetle?
Most people call her Pinacate. She has a few other nicknames, but they aren't entirely positive, so we won't bring them up now. She's pretty well known in this desert
(and even in some of those desolate, empty ones, too) because she spends a lot
of time outside the burrow visiting with her neighbors. She gets along with
just about everyone. She is in pretty good shape because she walks
everywhere. She's not the most elegant of beetles, nor the most colorful, nor graceful, but she is very special nonetheless.
Monday, February 25, 2013
Monday, February 18, 2013
The Story begins...
Chapter 1
In which we meet the heroine of our story
magine yourself in the desert.
Not the desolate, empty type, but the other kind. The kind that has secrets and surprises tucked
under every rock and beyond each mountain.
Maybe some extra dust here and there to cover the secrets and surprises
and make them harder to see.
The sun seems to shine a bit brighter in this desert. You may have to squint a lot and shade your
eyes. It's harder to see things when you
are squinting. At night, when the moon
and stars rise high over the mountains, their shadows seem extra dark and deep.
You can't even see most of the rocks...
but you know they are there!
Imagine you are in this desert, and it is a warm, pleasant
afternoon. The sun is shining extra
bright. Most everyone should be
squinting. You look around and see all
the rocks and mountains. You look closer
and notice other things: twitchy grasses and grey-green bushes and tiny yellow
flowers peeking out. Now that you are
paying attention (and not squinting) you see lizards glaring and scaly-grey on
the rocks, birds flying towards the mountains, and in the dust (so much dust!)
you see zillions of tiny footprints...
You follow a set of footprints.
It meanders here and there, then back, then forward, then, what's
this? Is something moving over
there? It looks like a beetle -a common,
everyday, black beetle. But remember,
you are in the desert and there are surprises everywhere. Even common black beetles have a few surprises...
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