Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Bug world

Being in the country means being close to nature and that ‘closeness’ is an undiscriminating place. As the day turns to dusk I rejoice at the sound of kookaburras, but curse the bugs which buzz, bite and generally interact with me without my consent.

But as visionary nature writer Rachel Carson explained exactly 50 years ago bugs are the food of birds, so no bugs = no birds. Given this equation I try to maintain my equilibrium as I am bothered by these flying, swarming and slithering pests. But there’s a limit to tolerance and my forbearance in the face of incessant creepy-crawlies has now come to an end.

The Country Mouse’s house is a breeding centre for Daddy Longlegs spiders. I muse…is this because the CM is a daddy with long legs? Their webs decorate every corner of every room and no matter how determinedly I vacuum them away a replacement spider in a replacement web quickly arrives mocking “We’re baaaack!” Is there some inexhaustible well of these creatures in the lower Hunter Valley?

Last weekend spread-eagled in the hallway was the Elle Macpherson of Daddy Longlegs, a creature with impossibly lengthy appendages. I made the CM come and inspect it, but the CM was his usual unflappable self, simply squashing the supermodel spider between two fingers (in unison: “Eeewww”) and depositing its dead body in the front garden.

At the Mouse House I’ve had mozzies the size of magpies land on me and watched in a kind of warped fascination as clouds of insects descend at dusk. “Why are there so many bugs?” I regularly squeal to which the Country Mouse replies with the self-evident “You’re in the country”.

In my relentless war on these pests I have armed myself with citronella anti-bug candles, plug-in mozzie zappers and an environmentally-friendly insect catching jar. I pleaded for the CM to buy a great bug system I found at Bunnings, but despite this device having two things going for it – one, that it was a practical present and two, that it was in the CM’s favourite shopping destination he balked at spending so much money purely on insect eradication.

All these encounters have now paled into nothingness after my recent insect encounter, my own horror Room 101 moment. (For those who are not Orwell fans Room 101 is a torture chamber in George Orwell’s novel 1984, a place where The Party subjects a prisoner to whatever is their own worst nightmare, fear or phobia)

Having a shower last weekend and I casually picked up an old shampoo bottle on the floor. To my horror a huge Huntsman spider had taken up residence on the other side and, being disturbed, quickly scuttled up the bottle, its eight thick black hairy legs and huge body speeding toward my hand and forearm. I was naked and vulnerable, trapped in a glass box and it was coming closer, soon it hideous legs would be in contact with my bare hand, then up my arm and heading toward my face. I was in Room 101.

I felt the scream start in my diaphragm and travel through my body. Ripping open the shower screen, I threw the shampoo bottle, as it flew through the air the spider held firm riding the spinning bottle like some kind of evil skateboarder. In a blur of movement the CM arrived just as I started a hyperventilating chant:

“SPIDER-SPIDER-SPIDER-KILL-IT-KILL-IT-KILL-IT!!”

From my glass cubicle I watched as the CM jumped around the room chasing the monster Huntsman (are there any other kind?) armed only with an empty shampoo bottle. My hero! Soon there was a satisfying thump, thump as the CM beat the Huntsman’s sorry arse into the tiled bathroom floor:
 
IS-IT-DEAD-IS-IT-DEAD-IS-IT-DEAD??”

“Yes” he replied “and deaf”.


1 comment:

  1. Oh dear, I thought you had worked past your phobia regarding spiders. They are so little & more scared of you than you think. Maybe it is time CM got in a pest treatment that will help get rid of your spiders & other bugs & will help CM's deafness from your screaming !! but unfortunaley won't help with the flying insects - that's Australia for you, good luck :)

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