Lightning bugs

We didn’t call them fireflies when I was a child, though now I kind of prefer that name for the flittery flashers that decorate the summer nights. There are fewer this year, probably due to variances seasonally–that drought we’re still not completely recovered from, followed by some rain and hail, and slightly cooler June temperatures than usual thanks to the haze of smoke from wildfires to our north. Peak season for fireflies in my region has typically been right at the solstice. Looking out my window this evening, I remark on a paucity of flashes in the meadow and over the lawn. Fewer Lampyridae this June. Things can change from one year to the next.

Change equals living: no life without alterations of one kind or another. My current situation is one of those so-called Life Events: I have retired from my position at the university where I worked for about 17 years. I suppose it is A Big Deal (see how I’m capitalizing?), but I must admit that so far it doesn’t feel terribly fraught, major, or even bittersweet. It just feels appropriate. Part of the reason for that is that I’m not a person who has defined herself by her career. Thank goodness, since it was a fairly modest career. I enjoyed my work with students; and I was part of a terrific team of earnest, funny, and supportive folks. So yes, that’s something to miss. However, I have many interests beyond work at the college. Time to pursue those, methinks. Time to spend with my mother as she wanes. Time to travel with my husband and on my own and to visit our far-away offspring. Of course, there are all those things that will keep me unexpectedly busy…gardening, house maintenance, trying to get the metaphorical ducks to line up (as if they ever will). And then, poetry; I want to devote some serious brainpower to revising, reorganizing, drafting, reading, learning more about the art I love. Maybe even submitting more work, putting together another manuscript or two. Who knows what changes are ahead?

~

When I note the fewer numbers of fireflies, I do not mean there are none. It’s just that some years, by June 18th, the back of our yard simply dazzles; we don’t need fireworks! Because they pupate in dampness, such as in rotting logs or underground, and because they need moist earth in order to feed (on soft-bodied invertebrates, according to the Xerxes Society’s informative page here), a spring drought can limit their numbers. And I miss them, the way I miss the little brown bats and the green ash trees. Those types of changes may be more or less inevitable, but I can’t help thinking that such transitions feel less timely than my departure from running the university’s writing center. The ash and the bats are still around, but in vastly decreased numbers. I hope the lightning bugs bounce back.

~

Art from the Metropolitan Museum: Eishōsai Chōki ca. 1763

5 comments on “Lightning bugs

  1. wktucker53 says:

    When I was a kid, we called them lightening bugs. I love those little miracles.

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  2. Congratulations on your retirement, Ann! And wishing you fun and fulfilment in all your endeavours.

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  3. Dave says:

    There were *so many* glowworms in the grass back in April! Then the drought hit. I wait all year for the firefly display, so it’s sad to me, too.

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  4. Patti says:

    I was really disappointed when after being in southern Cal for a while, I realized there were NO lightning bugs ever. I guess once you get west of about Colorado, it’s just too dry for them. Something that had never occurred to me when I lived among them.
    As children we were brutal to the poor things – we pulled their lights off and stuck them on our fingers like glowing rings – gross and horrible, I know. And we’d put them in jars with a few sticks and leaves hoping they’d act like night lights – not realizing that they had no reason to flash if there was nobody for them to flirt with.

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    • We didn’t have entomologist (or environmentalist) adults around to tell us otherwise.
      Also, remember how our parents’ cars got so plastered with dead bugs in summer? Now there are many fewer bugs. We used to think that was a good thing, but now we realize (I hope?) that insect life is crucial to all other life, including ours.

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