Let's Talk About American Fireflies (Lightning Bugs)

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Lost in the Pond

Lost in the Pond

11 ай бұрын

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One of the most enduring sights during a Midwestern summer are lightning bugs (otherwise known as Fireflies). Here's the lowdown on this bioluminescent beetle.
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Пікірлер: 2 500
@shortlivedglory3314
@shortlivedglory3314 11 ай бұрын
People who haven't experienced a field full of fireflies on a dark night can never understand the experience. It's the closest thing to actual fantasy magic I have ever experienced. It's truly breathtaking and if we don't chill out on the pesticides nobody will experience it ever again.
@Novusod
@Novusod 11 ай бұрын
Lightning bugs are most active at dusk about 30 minutes after sunset. They don't do it in the middle of the night.
@InvdrDana
@InvdrDana 11 ай бұрын
As a kid, it would've been magical. There's an old video of me trying to capture them and I used to be into catching other bugs/creatures. These days, however, it would be absolutely traumatizing. Unless I was far enough away and not surrounded by them lol.
@grannyweatherwax8005
@grannyweatherwax8005 11 ай бұрын
We also need to chill out with the light pollution. That’s also lead to a much smaller population in my area than when I was a kid. The lights mess up their mating.
@moonbongyang6460
@moonbongyang6460 11 ай бұрын
I've heard that highly manicured lawns (and other habitat destruction) are also responsible for their decline. Growing up in suburban New England they were a common sight. By the time i was an adult they were gone completely
@habituallinestepper8839
@habituallinestepper8839 11 ай бұрын
Truth
@jennifermcclain4478
@jennifermcclain4478 11 ай бұрын
I'm approaching 70yo & I can testify that there is a drastic decrease in lightening bug numbers here in my part of the South. When I was a kid, they were everywhere, thick as thieves. Butterflies, too. It's sad, the decrease in numbers of each.
@linguaphile42
@linguaphile42 11 ай бұрын
I've been doing ecolandscaping, and adding more and more native plants, and I'm seeing lots more lightning bugs. (South Carolina) Recently read that seeing lots of them is a sign of a healthy yard.
@VeretenoVids
@VeretenoVids 11 ай бұрын
Very sad indeed. I'm a bit younger and in PA and hardly ever see them any more. I grew up in IL and remember the cornfields being alight with them.
@doofinator4285
@doofinator4285 11 ай бұрын
I’m not quite 40 and I can attest that they used to be everywhere and the decrease has been shocking. The saddest part is, from my understanding, the problem is basic light pollution disrupting their mating. People just have to turn the light off 😞 I realize this is impossible in big cities but I’ve since made it a point to turn the porch lights off at night.
@N0sf3r4tuR1s3n
@N0sf3r4tuR1s3n 11 ай бұрын
​@@linguaphile42I'm going to look up what kind of ecolandscaping is good for them, I'm honestly intrigued as to why some areas around where I live have a decent population of them and others just don't. Someone else mentioned light pollution messing with them, that makes sense because I don't see them around lots of artificial light.
@froggergypsy4596
@froggergypsy4596 11 ай бұрын
Im from kansas, seen millions as a kid, not so many last few years hardly see them anymore
@damdamfino
@damdamfino 11 ай бұрын
Running through backyards catching fireflies bare handed and putting them in jars to be a “nightlight” is a core memory of my childhood.
@free_live_free-511
@free_live_free-511 11 ай бұрын
we would pinch the glowing butts off and stick them to our shirts and round around in the dark playing tag.
@michaelgarrow3239
@michaelgarrow3239 10 ай бұрын
Torturing small animals is one of the signs of a budding serial killer… Just saying:
@kemp10
@kemp10 10 ай бұрын
​@@michaelgarrow3239it's entirely possible (and definitely what happened) that you don't really think about that stuff when you're a kid. Or whatever, you can be completely cynical if you really need to morally grandstand rn
@michaelgarrow3239
@michaelgarrow3239 10 ай бұрын
@@kemp10 - Bad attempt at humor…
@Bolero6879
@Bolero6879 10 ай бұрын
⁠@@michaelgarrow3239so I guess every single kid that caught fireflies as a child is a budding serial killer? Millions of serial killers?
@Exayevie
@Exayevie 11 ай бұрын
One of those things that even when you’ve grown up with it your whole life, you never totally take it for granted. Fireflies are magic.
@user-wh5ir4fo4r
@user-wh5ir4fo4r 9 ай бұрын
We didn't have them in California as far as I know. I moved to Wisconsin and the first time I saw one I realized they weren't a myth.
@theworldaccordingtokirsch
@theworldaccordingtokirsch 5 ай бұрын
Visiting a friend we watched a marvelous sundown. My friend said you get used to it. No, it will never stop to amaze me. I will also be forever excited to see the moon. I saw glowworms only twice in my life and will always keep it in fond memory. Today I made a screenshot of this video 01:55 to have a wonderful background picture for my computer.🍒
@marlenalinne
@marlenalinne 11 ай бұрын
To me, lightning bugs, cicadas, crickets and katydids at night are an essential part of summer.
@KatjeKat86
@KatjeKat86 11 ай бұрын
The only thing missing from this list is the little tree frogs. 🐸
@kkrolf2782
@kkrolf2782 11 ай бұрын
@@KatjeKat86O M G … I L O V E that sound, and soooo miss it living in AZ!!
@starling5188
@starling5188 11 ай бұрын
@@KatjeKat86 Oh I love the peeper frogs!!
@jodiebristow3210
@jodiebristow3210 11 ай бұрын
@@kkrolf2782I couldn't agree more. I move to Az from Indiana.
@irisblue2332
@irisblue2332 11 ай бұрын
In the same way that peepers are synonymous with spring!
@ginger1549
@ginger1549 11 ай бұрын
My husband's grandfather came to Pittsburgh from Germany - where they do not have lightening bugs. Soon his brother followed 7 after a day working on the farm - being feasted on by mosquitos all day long ( Germany also does not have mosquitos) they sat out on the porch in the evening having a beer and he saw his first lightening bug and screamed " Oh my God - now they are coming at me with lanterns".
@rtyria
@rtyria 11 ай бұрын
😆😆
@twinmama42
@twinmama42 11 ай бұрын
Oh, we do have glowworms and mosquitos in Germany and that's not a new phenomenon. The floodplain forests of the upper river Rhine Valley have always been full of mosquitos and until the short colder period in the 1810s a breeding ground for malaria. Nowadays the tiger mosquito has arrived and with it again the risk of malaria and (new) Dengue fever. Let's hope that BTI (a natural treatment against mosquito larvae in the water) also works against tiger mosquitos. As glowworms and mosquitos live in the same areas and are active at the same time as mosquitos (and you absolutely want to avoid mosquitos) I've only rarely seen them myself.
@margaretqueenofscots9450
@margaretqueenofscots9450 11 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@SouthernSera
@SouthernSera 11 ай бұрын
That is such a cute story! I have a friend from Switzerland. I'll have to ask him if he ever saw them as a kid and if not what his first impression of them were when he first saw one when he moved to America.
@RosieGrace2023
@RosieGrace2023 11 ай бұрын
That’s funny! 😂
@m_n_a_b
@m_n_a_b 11 ай бұрын
The sound of a thousand bull frogs, thousands of crickets and the sight of thousands of fireflies above a field of tall grass are my absolute favorite parts of summer nights in the US. No matter how tough my day has been or what struggles I'm facing, hearing and seeing this wondrous sight never ceases to stop me in my tracks as a smile spreads across my face.
@codiefitz3876
@codiefitz3876 11 ай бұрын
This nigga said ‘a thousand bullfrogs’
@stevenschnepp576
@stevenschnepp576 11 ай бұрын
@@codiefitz3876 You really ought to spend a night or two outside the city.
@christopherwellman2364
@christopherwellman2364 10 ай бұрын
I had none when I moved in my house 16 years ago. I let the grass grow high each year before I cut the first time in summer. About 5 years in, I saw them for the first time in my yard and even in the neighborhood. I don't know, but I kinda think I helped by giving them the high grass to grow in. (For the record, I just let my grass grow until the city sends me a letter telling me to cut it. Because I like to let it grow.)
@janedoe4316
@janedoe4316 10 ай бұрын
Christ, one cricket kept me up for a month. I'm a Californian, I would K myself if I had to hear that all night...
@m_n_a_b
@m_n_a_b 10 ай бұрын
@@codiefitz3876 where I live, there really are that many out on a nearby Marsh. Their sounds all kind of blend together like one giant symphony. It's beautiful.
@timlois
@timlois 11 ай бұрын
I was lucky enough to witness a lighting bug synchronization once in a national forest in Pennsylvania. It's a rare occurrence where all of them pulse and glow at the same time in a rhythmic pattern. Even though I've seen these little guys illuminate my backyard (i.e., garden) for all of my life, to see them all pulse and glow in rhythm was truly amazing. Much better than KZfaq.
@shawnadams1460
@shawnadams1460 10 ай бұрын
As have I, it is truly amazing when they do that. Only happens when you get really large groupings of them, but you cannot believe your eyes when they do!
@caroleh572
@caroleh572 10 ай бұрын
This happens in the Smoky Mountains for a few weeks each year.
@AndyDrake-FOOKYT
@AndyDrake-FOOKYT 10 ай бұрын
I used to live in an abandoned school building in alabama and they would come inside and put on shows for me. Sometimes groups in different areas synchronize...so a window will flash and then a whole building will respond. I also witnessed it in TN where it appeared one hill was talking to another hill and they seemed to be synchronized to the music as well. It's disorienting when they all flash individually at different times. Like thousands of moving strobe lights in the forest.
@timlois
@timlois 10 ай бұрын
@@AndyDrake-FOOKYT that’s wild!
@rssvss
@rssvss 6 ай бұрын
Or when they are just out of sync and make a wave!
@SCGMLB
@SCGMLB 11 ай бұрын
Back in the 1970s when some family was visiting the US northeast from Scotland, one older gentleman was sitting outside in the evening and he was asked if he'd like a refill on his drink. To everyone's surprise he turned it down, saying that he'd had too much to drink. When his daughter (who lived in the US) asked him what was wrong he told her he was seeing things because "the bugs are lightin' up". She explained to him that they're supposed to do that, after which he asked for some more whisky.
@amyhull754
@amyhull754 11 ай бұрын
That's DELIGHTFUL!!!
@freedomcat
@freedomcat 11 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@richerDiLefto
@richerDiLefto 11 ай бұрын
That’s cute^^
@adamzain6770
@adamzain6770 11 ай бұрын
He should have been familiar with glow worms, if he was an older man in the 1970s. They weren’t as common in Scotland, but they were a well known part of our nature - they were so common in Europe that British soldiers used them in WW1 to read maps and letters. Ours don’t fly though, and we’ve now virtually wiped them out with our rising population, light pollution, habitat destruction and pesticide use.
@josephfisher426
@josephfisher426 11 ай бұрын
@@adamzain6770 Are they the females of a similar species? The female lightning bugs of the US stay on the vegetation, at least during mating season.
@bjs301
@bjs301 11 ай бұрын
It is sad that lightning bug populations have plummeted in recent decades, primarily due to destruction of the habitat in which their larvae develop. As kids in the 1960's and 70's we saw them by the hundreds every summer night here in Ohio.. If you stood in a large field at night, you could see them by the thousands. Their numbers today are drastically reduced.
@cynthiajohnston424
@cynthiajohnston424 11 ай бұрын
True & here in rural east central Illinois , they appeared later than usual this Summer , perhaps due to our severe winter & summer storms .
@axmajpayne
@axmajpayne 11 ай бұрын
Even in the 90's they were everywhere. I've noticed since I was a kid in the 90 that bugs in general have severely declined. I guess we can thank the overuse of commercial pesticides for that.
@sandracox4341
@sandracox4341 11 ай бұрын
Come visit Southeast Missouri around this time of year. I see plenty of lightning bugs.
@VeganSemihCyprus33
@VeganSemihCyprus33 11 ай бұрын
Dominion (2018)
@kitefan1
@kitefan1 11 ай бұрын
@@axmajpayne I think it's actually loss of habitat. The pesticides are much reduced since the 60s. Ten years ago I was living next to a corn field in CT. Between me and the corn was a little brook (branch, river, creek, etc.) so it was damp, perfect mosquito land and you could watch the mist roll off it at sunset. It had less bugs than here in RI because everyday just before Sunset the birds went mad and flew all over about 10 ft above the ground eating bugs. After the sunset the bats went flying around overhead like mad, presumably eating any bugs left. I could hear the bats but rarely saw them.
@Lonesome__Dove
@Lonesome__Dove 11 ай бұрын
When i was a little girl, lightning bugs where EVERYWHERE we spent so much time chasing them. It became one of those things that is a core memory that makes you feel good. Its unfortunate they're not as numerous and noticeable these days.
@teresaharris-travelbybooks5564
@teresaharris-travelbybooks5564 11 ай бұрын
There were so many; during my childhood; that we'd gently catch them in our cupped palms, watch the light through our fingers, and then open our hands to release them. The little bugs never seemed in a hurry to escape and sometimes crawled along our fingers before taking flight.
@rredpenn2029
@rredpenn2029 11 ай бұрын
Lifelong Midwesterner here. My daughter, when she was very little, coined the phrase "star bugs" and we still call them that.
@VeganSemihCyprus33
@VeganSemihCyprus33 11 ай бұрын
The story of your hopeless enslavement 👉 The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 💖
@MacTechG4
@MacTechG4 11 ай бұрын
Of course, to a Brit, the term “Starbug” has a whole other smegging meaning… ;)
@ninalehman9054
@ninalehman9054 11 ай бұрын
All kids east of the Mississippi have caught lightning bugs in a glass jar as part of their childhood. We let them go, of course. But for a short time, we had a jar full of magic. 🥰
@SouthernSera
@SouthernSera 11 ай бұрын
Yep! I lived in Eastern KY as a kid and all the kids in my little neighborhood would get together with Mason jars with holes poked in the tops and run around catching them while our parents sat and talked. That will always be a core childhood memory. I once accidentally caught the light of one of the lightning bugs and it separated from the rest of the bug. It stayed lit on the side of the jar and I was so upset that I had accidentally hurt or killed one of those magical little beings.
@perry92964
@perry92964 11 ай бұрын
we used to catch them thinking we could make a flashlight......then we got older and used to kill them and wipe glow paste on our arms
@VeganSemihCyprus33
@VeganSemihCyprus33 11 ай бұрын
The story of your hopeless enslavement 👉 The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 💖
@anabhousen7159
@anabhousen7159 11 ай бұрын
All kids in Texas too
@hopefletcher7420
@hopefletcher7420 11 ай бұрын
Connecticut Yankee here, and yes we did!
@muaddib7685
@muaddib7685 10 ай бұрын
A few years ago, my son and I followed a group of lightning bugs late at night about a half mile into the middle of a golf course. Their destination was a massive tree covered in lightning bugs. It was an amzing sight seeing this huge tree filled with them constanly flashing
@jeweldenile8995
@jeweldenile8995 11 ай бұрын
It’s always pure joy seeing the first lightening bug of the season.
@grievousangelic
@grievousangelic 11 ай бұрын
I love watching lightning bugs in the summer! They don't bite or sting, and if one lands on you, a gentle shake will send it on its way. They also don't fly in your face, burrow into homes or destroy anything. In short, they, along with ladybugs and butterflies, are pretty much perfect insects. I love them!
@TimothyLafreniere
@TimothyLafreniere 11 ай бұрын
why shake it? i like let them land on my hand and take off from a fingertip
@axmajpayne
@axmajpayne 11 ай бұрын
The red seven-spotted ladybugs are chill. I hardly ever see them anymore though. The orange Asian ladybugs on the other hand, while great at controlling invasive aphids, are annoying as hell. Every fall they swarm buildings and find any way possible to get inside to stay warm for the winter. The red ones never did that.
@VeganSemihCyprus33
@VeganSemihCyprus33 11 ай бұрын
Dominion (2018)
@evil1by1
@evil1by1 10 ай бұрын
As a gardener...fuck butterflies. Their babies are insanely destructive
@frednone
@frednone 11 ай бұрын
I think one of the most beautiful things I have ever seen in my life was a fair-sized field just covered in lightning bugs, it was breathtaking.
@kkrolf2782
@kkrolf2782 11 ай бұрын
How fabulous you’ve collected and maintained that wonderful image!! ENJOY!
@devenscience8894
@devenscience8894 11 ай бұрын
a field of fireflies is on my bucket list. Almost 50 years old, lived and traveled all over most of the US, and I've never seen one, let alone a field of them.
@kkrolf2782
@kkrolf2782 11 ай бұрын
@@devenscience8894 Oh, you ARE missing one of Mother Nature’s coolest things! Find a grassy, bush- and tree-populated area that doesn’t lose all its humidity throughout the day, and, more than likely, you will find an environment conducive to lightening bug populations. If you’re out in the midwest somewhere, check out some farmhouse’s front yard that faces east or south. Good luck!!
@vandergrad
@vandergrad 11 ай бұрын
Yes!! I've experienced this and it is so amazing!!
@margaretqueenofscots9450
@margaretqueenofscots9450 11 ай бұрын
@@devenscience8894How is this possible??? Do you just stick to cities?
@kellybelk2874
@kellybelk2874 11 ай бұрын
My late husband loved lightening bugs. His birthday is this month and this video is like a little wink 😉 hello from him ❤❤ Thank you for appreciating this sweet little joyful bug. It made me so happy to see this video ❤
@victorjohnson7512
@victorjohnson7512 11 ай бұрын
Once I was parked quietly out on a remote road between cornfields at dusk. The corn stalks were blooming (around June) and as it got real dark, billions of fireflies danced over the stalks. It was one of those personal moments when nature just blows your mind.
@charismer100
@charismer100 11 ай бұрын
Growing up in Colorado, I didn't see fireflies until I was 18. I still remember my first midwest camping trip, seeing the fireflies across the fields and lighting up the edges of the forest. I turned to my friend and said, "Who needs Avatar? This world is magical!"
@cynthiajohnston424
@cynthiajohnston424 11 ай бұрын
Grew up in Illinois & remember as a teenager seeing aspen trees the first time in Colorado in the Fall while on a horseback riding vacation . For some reason , aspens fascinated me ! We have beautiful Fall colors here ( it's not all flat land w/ corn 'n bean fields ! 😀 ) but there's just something about aspens ... 💛
@VeganSemihCyprus33
@VeganSemihCyprus33 11 ай бұрын
Dominion (2018)
@NickatLateNite
@NickatLateNite 11 ай бұрын
@cremillard100... Same in reverse. Grew up in the northeast, lightning bugs everywhere... Moved to Colorado 20 years ago, can't remember seeing one.
@KiefsChingdom
@KiefsChingdom 11 ай бұрын
I had a friend come to visit and he thought fireflies were fictional like unicorns. Blew his mind.
@stevenschnepp576
@stevenschnepp576 11 ай бұрын
Give it time. The way things are going, they soon will be.
@JenKnee423
@JenKnee423 10 ай бұрын
I grew up in So Cal and the only time I’d seen lightening bugs or fireflies as they’re called there was in The Pirates of the Caribbean ride at Disneyland. Then I moved to PA (an hour outside of Philly) during the summer I graduated and was at this field on a hot, humid evening and as the sun set hundreds of lightening bugs lit up the field. I suddenly felt like I was 5 years old in a magical fairy land. I was running around, giggling and in awe. It was such a magical experience, one I got to experience again a few years ago when my bro, sis in law and young nephew came to visit and they were able to experience the magic of lightening bugs for the first time.
@EmilyJelassi
@EmilyJelassi 11 ай бұрын
I remember seeing loads of fireflies when I was a little girl, but it seems like there aren’t as many now. I’m always happy to see them light up at dusk😊
@justinnewberry3900
@justinnewberry3900 11 ай бұрын
“As if she’d witnessed this act of sheer sorcery so many times it had now become old hat.” Great line. Literally laughed out loud! 😂😂😂😂
@VeganSemihCyprus33
@VeganSemihCyprus33 11 ай бұрын
The story of your hopeless enslavement 👉 The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 💖
@SmallSpoonBrigade
@SmallSpoonBrigade 11 ай бұрын
It's totally true, we don't have any of those here, but when I visited the Midwest when I was a kid, there were a bunch of them.
@osmadchlo
@osmadchlo 11 ай бұрын
Lightning bugs are one of the greatest joys of summertime. ❤
@jLutraveling
@jLutraveling 11 ай бұрын
Excellent job as usual. You might be interested in learning about the Firefly event that takes place yearly in the Smokey Mountains.
@oliverbrownlow5615
@oliverbrownlow5615 11 ай бұрын
And one of the glories of the earth.
@Johnrich395
@Johnrich395 11 ай бұрын
One of the biggest joys of being a father was watching a 3 yr old see fireflies for the first time. Magical.
@zerdda
@zerdda 10 ай бұрын
Once I was staying in a small town in a small motel which was adjacent to a small pasture. 'Round midnight, I looked out of the bathroom and witnessed fog rising and hundreds of fireflies blinking about, It was breathtaking! I had often seen them in my neighborhood, never in mist and in such numbers. When I lived on the 4th floor, I was surprised to see them blinking that high up, in the tree canopy. Love them!
@arussianspy3114
@arussianspy3114 11 ай бұрын
I’ve never thought about Lightning bugs not being elsewhere. Must’ve been crazy for some colonists. You find signs of people in the woods, you hear people speaking a language you don’t understand, and then the sky starts glowing.
@micheledeetlefs6041
@micheledeetlefs6041 11 ай бұрын
No wonder the Puritans in Salem Massachusetts were convinced that the devil was walking around! 😂
@LauraEilers
@LauraEilers 11 ай бұрын
Apparently our falls were better, too. American painters sent landscapes back home and the folks in Europe thought they were stylized and exaggerated because nothing could be that colorful
@SamP0rterBridges
@SamP0rterBridges 11 ай бұрын
They're in the Philippines. My mom grew up with them and was really excited to see them when she visited me in the Midwest
@marklar7551
@marklar7551 11 ай бұрын
My wife is from Wyoming and never saw one, and actually thought they were made up like unicorns. Then she moved to Ohio and 😮
@auapplemac2441
@auapplemac2441 11 ай бұрын
Coming from the east coast to live in north TX, I dearly missed my lightening bug summers.
@introvertswag6494
@introvertswag6494 11 ай бұрын
Nothing says summer more than the fireflies coming out, and signaling a younger me that it's almost dark and time to head home. They're incredibly nostalgic for me everytime they appear at the beginning of summer.
@TweetyPAK7
@TweetyPAK7 11 ай бұрын
Only recently did I become aware that lightning bugs weren't everywhere. A friend in CA had never seen one! One of the first rites of summer is announcing your first lightning bug sighting! As kids we caught them and made lanterns with Mayo jars. And the icky boys squished them on their fingers to make their fingers glow. 😢 Lightning bugs are magical...watching them take off from the grass to rise high in the trees! It's magic!
@mirandaroney3751
@mirandaroney3751 11 ай бұрын
My absolute favorite memory growing up in Missouri is camping during the summer and swimming as night fell seeing all the lightning bugs dance on the surface of the water
@csp.9203
@csp.9203 11 ай бұрын
Californian in Kentucky a few years ago and it took me a very long time to realize the pleasant little fairy light strings people strangely had everywhere were in fact fireflies.
@tessat338
@tessat338 11 ай бұрын
I'm betting that fairy lights are an attempt to recreate the effect of fireflies.
@tiryaclearsong421
@tiryaclearsong421 11 ай бұрын
​@@tessat338I've only lived in places that have a high density of lightning bugs and I still love fairy lights. Magical looking lights are nice whether natural or store bought.
@dianeewoldt3035
@dianeewoldt3035 11 ай бұрын
My husband is a native Californian- I’m a Navy brat and have lived all over the USA. We took a vacation to the Eastern seaboard and on to Pennsylvania for the 150th year anniversary of the battle of Gettysburg. So he wanted to take a ghost tour… we’re out on the fields and the guide is telling his stories of ghost sightings- he’s all revved up and sees the glow of the fireflies… and yes- he thinks it’s ghosts. We still laugh about this!
@Maggies87
@Maggies87 11 ай бұрын
I’m from SoCal and as a child, I thought the fireflies in Pirates of theCaribbean at Disneyland were real. Naturally, during my first summer in Virginia I saw my first fireflies and heard the cacophony of crickets and cicadas and exclaimed “This is just like Disneyland!” (to which my new husband rolled his eyes). I’d said the same thing in New Orleans.
@hopefletcher7420
@hopefletcher7420 11 ай бұрын
LOL, I went on a double date to Disneyland one and while we were in line for Pirates the guy in the other couple was totally mystified by the little winking lights. He was visiting from England.
@gingerlancaster3033
@gingerlancaster3033 11 ай бұрын
I grew up on the west Coast where there were no fire flies except for the fake ones on pirates of the Caribbean, Disneyland. Coming to Virginia at the age of 63 and seeing them for the first time was magical
@maryeliason1504
@maryeliason1504 11 ай бұрын
I'm in California. Years ago I was visiting Texas & it was my pleasure to finally witness a firefly. It's still a fond memory. ❤️
@ericturner2477
@ericturner2477 11 ай бұрын
My first summer living in Maryland, I stepped out into my back yard under a full moon, crickets chirping, deer grazing in my yard, and lightning bugs glowing. It was downright magical! I had never seen them before moving here from Washington state.
@kkrolf2782
@kkrolf2782 11 ай бұрын
I can almost f e e l the thrill you experienced, just through your description! T H A T was a shock to me … Oh, my!!
@BewareTheLilyOfTheValley
@BewareTheLilyOfTheValley 11 ай бұрын
Interesting! I think of Washington and I think of all the nature trails there (of course, you won't see them that much in a city, though).
@kw5573
@kw5573 11 ай бұрын
I took a trip to NC from WA state about 12 years ago and saw my first fireflies. Magical!
@susanw8471
@susanw8471 11 ай бұрын
I live in Maryland as well and lightning bugs have been prominent throughout my life and I have lived in both the eastern shores of Maryland and Western Maryland.
@PerspectiveEngineer
@PerspectiveEngineer 11 ай бұрын
Oh we got plenty of deer in washin... oh Fireflies, never seen one
@lizryan7451
@lizryan7451 11 ай бұрын
It's good to be reminded every so often what a charming and magical thing fireflies are! It really is easy to take them for granted when you've been around them for most of your life. I remember as a kid my parents once took my sister and I out to a field that was full of fireflies and my sister just so happened to be wearing a bracelet with 3 gems that would light up and blink when you pressed it. The fireflies went crazy for it! I realize now that it was probably the equivalent of catfishing those poor bugs 😅
@judywright4241
@judywright4241 11 ай бұрын
💕✅😆😅😂🏆
@zoeye7095
@zoeye7095 11 ай бұрын
It's fun seeing it from someone's perspective that hasn't grown up with it. Makes me feel like a kid again because I had SO much fun playing with them.
@medusagorgo5146
@medusagorgo5146 11 ай бұрын
I’m originally from Illinois and my childhood was filled with memories of lightning bugs. Catching them, chasing them and watching them come out at dusk. I’ve lived all over the world and retired in the southern US and I don’t recall ever seeing them anywhere else. Thanks for reminding me about them, now I can go have a cry about how old I am now, lol.
@jacksonteller3973
@jacksonteller3973 25 күн бұрын
I was born in IL too and still live here, fortunately my yard still gets plenty of these critters every summer.
@karyon1007
@karyon1007 11 ай бұрын
I'm trying to imagine childhood without lightning bugs, and I simply cannot!
@marybicanic8269
@marybicanic8269 11 ай бұрын
Growing up in the Chicago suburbs of Waukegan, catching lightning bugs was a great way to spend a summer evening. I noticed a hugh decline in the firefly population, and that is a thing to be missed. I'm so glad you paid tribute to the little glowworm. Thanks
@VeganSemihCyprus33
@VeganSemihCyprus33 11 ай бұрын
Dominion (2018)
@CarapaceClavicle
@CarapaceClavicle 11 ай бұрын
Did growing up in Waukegan feel like a Bradbury novel?
@Exayevie
@Exayevie 11 ай бұрын
Weird story, I grew up in the midwest as the oldest of five siblings. I use “firefly” and “lightning bug” interchangeably. Last year, I learned that all four of my younger siblings ONLY say lightning bug - no idea how that happened!
@walkerlocker6126
@walkerlocker6126 11 ай бұрын
They aren't just fantastic, they're a huge nostalgia factor for anyone who grew up around them. I remember playing in the hot midday sun, then as evening approached, the lightning bugs would show up in drives and my brother and I would catch them. We always released them right after. Did it so many times, it's like a core memory
@BookishDark
@BookishDark 11 ай бұрын
Poor little fireflies are endangered. As I type this, I’m outside in Connecticut watching that magical twinkling right now - my favorite part of summer 😊
@samanthab1923
@samanthab1923 11 ай бұрын
Oh no! Hate to hear that. Back a few years it was bumble bees.
@williamhardee8863
@williamhardee8863 11 ай бұрын
They’re endangered? I saw more of them than usual in my backyard this year. Also if he explains they’re endangered in the video forgive me, I ran to the comments first.
@EffortlessEthan
@EffortlessEthan 11 ай бұрын
@@samanthab1923 still is. There's way fewer insects in general even just since the 90s.
@doofinator4285
@doofinator4285 11 ай бұрын
@@williamhardee8863I used to be able to catch them with ease and fill up a mason jar. You could see them twinkle almost en masse like a cloud. Now my kids are ecstatic to see one or two. From what I understand, the problem is light pollution disrupting their mating.
@MissMeganBeckett
@MissMeganBeckett 11 ай бұрын
I think they’ve just moved north, I’ve never seen so many fireflies in Ottawa as I have for the past few years, and when I was little I don’t think we had any in Canada.
@TheTinkerersWife
@TheTinkerersWife 11 ай бұрын
Awe...your little friends flashed you a hello. Fireflies are such a delightful creature. We captured them in jars as children when we went to Iowa to visit family. So much wonder in this world.
@rosameryrojas-delcerro1059
@rosameryrojas-delcerro1059 11 ай бұрын
Maybe flirting?
@DREW8990
@DREW8990 10 ай бұрын
Naturally, you’ll see a concentration of lightning bugs in the rural areas. Growing up in town, they were all over the place and then they drastically decreased in numbers to where I could go a couple years not seeing one; but the moment I moved out into the country, lo and behold there’s a slew of them prancing around the air every year. They are great to gaze upon when you’re relaxing outside 🙂
@pearlofthedarkage
@pearlofthedarkage 10 ай бұрын
I've always wanted to see these bugs in person. They look so magical in tv shows and movies - particularly in animation.
@Average_Brad
@Average_Brad 11 ай бұрын
As a kid in the late 80's/early 90's I lived in Kentucky. At certain times of the year the lightning bugs were so abundant the trees that lined the creek in our backyard literally looked like they were decorated with thousands of chartreuse colored Christmas lights. It was magical.
@johnoverstreet4399
@johnoverstreet4399 11 ай бұрын
Back in the 1970s I grew up in the swamps and thick forests in Mississippi and seen fire flies all my youth growing up. They were always a delight to see at night in the woods. I still see them at night outside my window Lawrence. I loved them as a child and in my late 50s I still love seeing them. The whole forest is like the night sky with millions if not zillions of these lovely creatures dancing like stars in the heavens. Imagine that you are in a black dark forest and see millions of them.. it would make you have heaven mares....not nightmares.
@74artgrrl
@74artgrrl 11 ай бұрын
I cannot get over how he speaks! It’s so stiff, so dry, so British! I love it so much. These videos always brighten my day.
@HeartlandHunny
@HeartlandHunny 11 ай бұрын
I’ve experienced lightning bugs every summer of my 35 years, and they’ve never lost their magic to me. There’s just something about looking out over a field and seeing it light up with hundreds of them. Or going to Shakespeare in the Park and having the second act be periodically lit by real fairy lights (especially fitting during performances of A Midsummer Night’s Dream). Or catching them as a kid and watching them up close for a bit before watching them fly off. I always get excited when I see my first lightning bug of the season! Almost makes the overbearing heat and humidity of the south worth it. Almost. 😂
@laurenloertscher1319
@laurenloertscher1319 11 ай бұрын
One of my favorite teenage moments is associated with fireflies. I was walking in our backyard with my younger brother after dark one night in July when the fireflies came out. Our yard was at the top of a forest hill with a steep ravine surrounding it on three sides. We went silent and stared as we saw thousands and thousands of fireflies lit up around and beneath us in the ravine. It was like standing in the top of a golden galaxy! I've never seen that many, before or since. It was magical, and only lasted for about 5 minutes. I hope to experience something similar some day.
@neutrino78x
@neutrino78x 11 ай бұрын
lauren, Google search this because I can't put links, "The Great Smoky Mountains Firefly Viewing Lottery" I saw it on 60 Minutes. Apparently thousands of fireflies gather in the great smoking mountains for a few days every year. Too many people want to go watch, so you have to pay $1 and enter your name into a lottery to be allowed to go see 🙂It is in great smoky mountains national park 🙂
@AndyDrake-FOOKYT
@AndyDrake-FOOKYT 10 ай бұрын
I have similar experiences...people don't go sit in the dark in the forest enough anymore.
@timothy4664
@timothy4664 11 ай бұрын
I am from Southeastern New England. We have fireflies all summer long. If it wasn't for mosquitoes, sitting outside watching firefly mating routines would be far more common
@CatLoverX74
@CatLoverX74 11 ай бұрын
Was gonna say I love watching lightening bugs but not enough to put up with mosquitoes 😂
@jafquist27
@jafquist27 11 ай бұрын
You know it!! Especially this year, I'm finding.
@Cheezitnator
@Cheezitnator 11 ай бұрын
That's why I bought a house with a screen porch. Can still sit outside without being eaten alive.
@kathywiseley4382
@kathywiseley4382 11 ай бұрын
I wonder if the species in your area is different than in the Midwest. Lightning bugs here are just now starting to get romantic and it will only last for a couple of weeks in August. I always associate them with "going back to school soon."
@CatLoverX74
@CatLoverX74 11 ай бұрын
@@Killer.Queen74 called Asian Tiger mosquitoes came from Japan to Texas in a shipment of tires late 80s or 90s can’t remember. I remember looking it up awhile back because I remembered when we suddenly got more viscous mosquitoes 😂 They bite harder and are more aggressive.
@carolavant3778
@carolavant3778 11 ай бұрын
Hi, Lawrence! I was born and raised in Northern Virginia, and when I was young, it seemed like lightning bugs were everywhere! However, the more construction and urban sprawl that happened, the less we saw of them. I moved to Central Florida in 1979 (yes, I'm old), didn't seen another one for years. When I moved to the North Florida Panhandle in 2021, I was delighted to see them once again. They are amazing little creatures!
@candyerwin5828
@candyerwin5828 11 ай бұрын
I was born in Ohio but have lived in the south most of my life. So I’ve enjoyed seeing lightning bugs all my life. I still get the same thrill seeing them light up as I did when I was a child. It feels so magical!
@marcblur9055
@marcblur9055 11 ай бұрын
There's a third bug of Midwest summer you didn't mention, but it made a cameo in the video. The trees are not screaming in a pageant of botanical Lovecraftian horror, but are populated by cicadas, one species sometimes called the "17 year locust". Fear not! You can enjoy the jubilant keening of the cicada every summer, not just every 17 summers, at an average noise level of 90+ decibels.
@rebeccamartin2399
@rebeccamartin2399 11 ай бұрын
I have seen 2 17yr cycles. The last one I was at a building with a parking lot with woods on 2 sides. It was so loud reverberating off the hard surfaces it sounded like a in person photon torpedo from Star Trek. Very wild.
@123bbryant
@123bbryant 11 ай бұрын
Ah, yes, the katydids, as we called them. It sounded like the night was shivering
@rachelkitelinger4931
@rachelkitelinger4931 11 ай бұрын
We have cicadas in Oklahoma at the hottest part of summer. We always know the heat is on the way out when they leave and the crickets move in.
@strngenchantedgirl
@strngenchantedgirl 11 ай бұрын
It’s so important to create habitat for them in your yard. You need a grassy shady area. The ones in my yard like daylillies and ferns and things like that to hide out in the day. Did you know they feed off of slugs and stuff? They also spend the first part of their life underground so please don’t poison your soil with pesticides to kill grubs and stuff.
@LindaC616
@LindaC616 11 ай бұрын
I did not know that they ate slugs! Legs are so much bigger than they are!
@jennacided6502
@jennacided6502 11 ай бұрын
Pretty much the number one piece of advice for someone wanting to see cool bugs is, for the love of God, DO NOT USE PESTICIDES!!! it kills any bug it comes into contact with and seep into soil and generally is just the worst thing you could do to insects. Also, I cannot stress enough how important reintroducing native plant species are. Lots of them are endangered (just like fireflies) and the important insects of your area desperately need them to thrive!!! I'm studying right now to be a wildlife ecologist and work in wildlife conservation and, honest to God if everyone got rid of their RoundUp and pesticides and planted native plants local to your area, our precious North American insect populations (which have decreased about 70% since 1980, if I remember correctly) would have a really great chance at rebounding!! We have gorgeous butterflies and dragonflies and fireflies that are in trouble, and even the ugly/scary insects are too, and they're all really important for healthy, stable ecosystems!!!!
@LydJaGillers
@LydJaGillers 11 ай бұрын
@@jennacided6502 Thank you!!! I'm in the process of turning my own stupid lawn into a meadow as it was originally before people messed it all up. We don't have lightnin' bugs in the PNW but in TN where I grew up I have noticed a sharp decline in them. I'm trying to encourage my dad to follow along with me in the native plant journey but he is almost 79 and is happy to have what is currently growing as it is very low maintenance for him (they are not natives sadly but I'm about to gorilla garden the crap out of his yard lol). I miss these little beetles but I"m doing my best to fix the habitat for the insects here in the PNW.
@jbwhetstone
@jbwhetstone 11 ай бұрын
I love listening to cicadas and watching the lightning bugs on summer nights here in Texas. Another great video, Laurence.
@adamb89
@adamb89 10 ай бұрын
What's really fun is to find a wide open field with fireflies (which is what I've always called them) and a camera on a tripod capable of long exposures. Do varying exposure lengths and see what it looks like. You'll see little streaks carved into the darkness like someone was waving a paint brush.
@ldcraig2006
@ldcraig2006 11 ай бұрын
I grew up in Ohio, and have lived the last nearly the last fifty years in Illinois. I can't remember ever hearing them called "fireflies" while I was growing up. They were always "lightning bugs" to us. We had a forty-acre field behind our house that the farmer didn't always plant. On the years he'd let it go fallow, you could look out south across that field at night, and it was a-glow with lightning bugs, twinkling like earth-bound stars.
@YamIa3gypsy
@YamIa3gypsy 11 ай бұрын
My immediate family moved to CA when I was a kid. We would drive across the country in the summers to visit family in Allentown, PA. We don’t have fireflies in So Cal, but they were mesmerizing and so much fun in PA!!! Thank you for invoking that beautiful and wonderful memory. The kid still in me is happily dancing with them! (I am 66)😊🌸V
@marvindoolin1340
@marvindoolin1340 11 ай бұрын
Like so many things, lightening bugs are much harder to find these days than they were in my youth and even in the seventies when I was in my thirties. Insecticides are probably much of the reason. I remember seeing them practically blanket huge hay fields and the grassy roadsides as late as the seventies, possibly even into the early eighties. I suspect that even in your urban yard you would have seen dozens forty or fifty years ago.
@stevenschnepp576
@stevenschnepp576 11 ай бұрын
Not even that far ago. I'm 35, and remember seeing dozens in my suburban yard. Nowadays, nary a one most nights. People like to say it's light pollution, and that may be part of it, but I'm really thinking it's just the knock-on effect of mowing lawns too much and overuse of pesticides and herbicides. Lawns used to be much more biodiverse than they are now, but after decades of marketing your average homeowner thinks anything but grass in his lawn needs immediate over-application of any chemicals he can find on the shelf.
@bobcarn
@bobcarn 11 ай бұрын
Childhood summers were spent running around at dusk trying to catch lightning bugs. Living in a small city now, it's still a treat at 63 to see lightning bugs flashing in the night as summer sets in.
@snettydebbie
@snettydebbie 11 ай бұрын
As someone born and raised and living in Alaska, the few times I've seen fireflies down south have been MAGICAL, and I experienced a little thrill when that fellow on the leaf blinked. :)
@irisblue2332
@irisblue2332 11 ай бұрын
To those in the lower parts of the lower 48, we feel the same way about your northern lights!
@graylor1
@graylor1 11 ай бұрын
Synchronized lightning bugs are a thing, in Asia and, for some reason, very dark portions of the Appalachian Mountains. You, too, can go sit in the dark (no lights allowed, it throws the bugs off their pattern), watch beetles, and hope bears don't eat your toes. Also, we have porcupines, which are like hedgehogs' punk siblings.
@killinglonliness88
@killinglonliness88 11 ай бұрын
That's the best and most hilarious description of porcupines that I've ever heard! Stealing that one lol.
@jaycee330
@jaycee330 11 ай бұрын
@@killinglonliness88 I would have said a cross between a porcupine and an echidna, but I'll go with that description above.
@SouthernSera
@SouthernSera 11 ай бұрын
Yes! You can see them in the Gatlinburg area. I lived in the Knoxville area for 20 years but was never able to get tickets to see them. I commented that Lawrence should take a road trip to see them. I've heard it's a truly magical site to behold.
@wickedmirage
@wickedmirage 11 ай бұрын
One of the reasons you see less fireflies is light pollution at night. Everyone has their backyard full of lights these days. My neighbors and I all went dark out back and the amount of fireflies we see after doing this for several years is amazing.
@ebybeehoney
@ebybeehoney 11 ай бұрын
Fireflies are a favorite. I loved them as a kid. But still watch them every summer. I love sitting on the back porch and hearing the cicadas and watching fireflies dance.
@Kevin.King71
@Kevin.King71 11 ай бұрын
Who else wanted to see Laurence go around his yard catching them in an empty mayonnaise jar?
@fidelogos7098
@fidelogos7098 11 ай бұрын
I live in the South and it seems like the lightning bugs only show off during a ten-day to two week period in the middle of July. The woods are filled with them for a time, then they go back to doing whatever it was they were doing before they felt the urge. It's a magical time for kids, or us big kids too.
@zuzuspetals9281
@zuzuspetals9281 11 ай бұрын
My mom grew up in Kentucky and knew them as lightning bugs. I now live in NC and they appear each spring around the time of her birthday at the end of May. The months after she died on Jan, 1, 2017 was really difficult for me due to family issues. One night in early May I was outside having a "talk with God" about how sad and angry I was, and ended asking Him to let mom know I was doing my best to take care of my family. While I was looking up at the dark sky I suddenly saw lightening bugs sparkling in the trees like Christmas lights, three weeks early. It was as if God and mom were letting me know I'd been heard. These little lights in the spring trees have always been my favorite, and always will.
@nnoh7363
@nnoh7363 11 ай бұрын
I still remember my first experience meeting these wonderful critters in 2003. I was just 8 and it was my first summer in Michigan after having moved to the States the year prior. There was a pine tree at our front porch and one day, there they were in clusters, about a dozen of them. Each lightning bug glowed and dimmed in a captivating way and it was so beautiful with the crickets chirping and the frogs croaking in the background. I spent almost an hour totally mesmerized by them, and had about 8 mosquito bites when I came back inside😂. Though I no longer live in the States, I will always fondly remember those soft, light green flashes.
@caseyleichter2309
@caseyleichter2309 11 ай бұрын
I lived in Philadelphia until age 12, and still very vividly recall seeing fireflies/lightning bugs all over the place whenever we got out of the city into the suburbs. I live on the West Coast now, and wish we had them here, because those little flying, flashing beetles are pure magic.
@DonMachado
@DonMachado 11 ай бұрын
I got my first look at lightning bugs at the ripe old age of 50 when I flew from San Diego to Philly to visit my company headquarters. The owner had a big get together at his house on the Delaware river. The lightning bugs were everywhere. At first I thought they had flickering ornamental lights in the yard before I realized what they were. Just amazing. Video doesn't do them justice.
@antinn7448
@antinn7448 2 ай бұрын
grew up in the midwest. My favorite part of this video was when we could hear the ee-ooh-ee-ooh cicadas. There r cicandas nearly everywhere but the midwestern ones r the most musica. Brings back great memories of warm summer evenings. Thank you
@shawnadams1460
@shawnadams1460 10 ай бұрын
I will forever remember my sister and I running around with butterfly nets snagging lightning bugs and fireflies. Yes we called them both growing up here in Southern Maryland, we used to call the ones flashing on the ground lightning bugs and the ones that were airborne fireflies. As we live pretty close to riverways where we grew up and there was a TON of farmland back then, running through huge fields of these was an absolutely magical experience.
@nancyparis9975
@nancyparis9975 11 ай бұрын
My family lives in Seattle and when they came to visit in Northeast Ohio the lighting bugs freaked them out!
@flyleelee5351
@flyleelee5351 11 ай бұрын
They don't have them in Seattle? I never thought about it 🤔
@nancyparis9975
@nancyparis9975 11 ай бұрын
@@flyleelee5351 I was told that they don’t go over the mountains!?
@thaisdantan2293
@thaisdantan2293 11 ай бұрын
Don't have them in Oregon. I grew up in the east & miss them.
@Beedo_Sookcool
@Beedo_Sookcool 11 ай бұрын
Love fireflies! We used to get galaxies of them when we lived in Ohio, from 1976 - 2000. Then we moved back to England, and really missed them. When I came back to the US in 2018, there were nowhere near as many as we used to get. I blame pesticides and HOAs demanding rigidly monoculture lawns, m'self. All we do is mow our lawn and let other plants grow amongst the grass, and we get the most fireflies in our neighbourhood, but it's still nowhere near the levels there used to be.
@hoosierpioneer
@hoosierpioneer 11 ай бұрын
Thank you for saying this.
@CptJistuce
@CptJistuce 11 ай бұрын
Light pollution's been devastating to them as well. It doesn't often get dark enough for them to start flirting anymore.
@AshlieJermaine
@AshlieJermaine 11 ай бұрын
There are certain times of year that, in my backyard, there are SO MANY fireflies/lightning bugs flashing their lights, that my yard looks sparkly. It’s so cool!!
@alvagoldbook2
@alvagoldbook2 11 ай бұрын
I’m in Virginia and they really do seem to be more concentrated on the east coast. We’ve always called them lightning bugs. In the summer I used to sit on a bench in my back yard in the middle of the night. The back of the yard pressed up against the woods. In the trees you’d see thousands of lightning bugs just flashing away. From the bench in my back yard I always thought it looked like there was a giant UFO floating in the sky behind those trees. The effect was stunning and beautiful.
@trishgift7959
@trishgift7959 11 ай бұрын
Growing up in Pennsylvania, watching/catching lightning bugs was a regular summer activity. Seeing them now as an adult sparks little joy in my heart.
@shawna620
@shawna620 11 ай бұрын
I've always lived on the west coast & thought the "fireflies" at Disneyland were like the real thing until I visited Kentucky, & saw them flashing on & off. I was enchanted! They were beautiful!
@stevethepocket
@stevethepocket 11 ай бұрын
Wait, what's this about Disneyland now?
@jaelynrae6045
@jaelynrae6045 11 ай бұрын
​@@stevethepocketthere are fake fireflies in the pirates ride at Disneyland. It's the only way most Californians will ever see them. 😬
@squirrelorama
@squirrelorama 11 ай бұрын
​@@jaelynrae6045Can confirm. My buddy grew up in CA, and he is a Type A Manly Man, but on a work trip to St. Louis we were walking near the Courthouse one evening when he stopped in his tracks and gasped. "Fireflies! I've never seen them in real life before! Oh my God, its like at Disneyland, but better!" 😂 He sounded like a little kid again for a moment.
@shawna620
@shawna620 11 ай бұрын
@@jaelynrae6045 Yes! Thanks for explaining! 😀
@jaelynrae6045
@jaelynrae6045 11 ай бұрын
@@squirrelorama that is so cute!!! We recently moved to Lake Erie from Cali (native born and didn't travel out of state much at all) and saw real fireflies the first night we were here. It was sooo magical! Even my manly 6'1" hubby squealed like a girl and we both still get excited about seeing them every single night....months later. 😂😬
@blackstone777
@blackstone777 11 ай бұрын
I lived in Nebraska and Ohio and let me tell you, nothing says summer like a night full of lightning bugs. I live in ohio now. Last year the wife and I went on one of our camping trips, and we sat in the camper while a thunderstorm blew through. It was early evening when it was done. I went outside and there were literally thousands of lightning bugs everywhere! I quickly went in and told the wife "you need to see this!". She stepped out and was as you say gobsmacked. It was magical. One of the best camping weekends we had.
@That_Crazy_Cat_Lady
@That_Crazy_Cat_Lady 10 ай бұрын
I live in a part of the US that sees quite a lot of lightning bugs during the summer. I've lived here all my life and I STILL love seeing them. It's just so mesmerizing!
@TriforceRay
@TriforceRay 11 ай бұрын
We have hedgehogs in the USA. They are just 50 times bigger and call them porcupines.
@Beedo_Sookcool
@Beedo_Sookcool 11 ай бұрын
No, because porcupines are herbivorous rodents and hedgehogs are insectivores. Completely different things.
@LindaC616
@LindaC616 11 ай бұрын
😅
@kimberlygabaldon3260
@kimberlygabaldon3260 11 ай бұрын
We had lightning bugs in the Midwest, when I was a kid, and I loved them. Sadly, Colorado seems to be too dry for them. I miss them.
@nobody8717
@nobody8717 11 ай бұрын
that's one difference between the midwest and the rockies. aint got em in wy either.
@route2070
@route2070 11 ай бұрын
I live in Illinois, and we got pretty wet weather recently, and we don't have as many as we used to.
@fs5775
@fs5775 11 ай бұрын
no insects in the rockies, it's bizarre!
@kaisercreb
@kaisercreb 11 ай бұрын
@@route2070 light pollution
@Beedo_Sookcool
@Beedo_Sookcool 11 ай бұрын
@@fs5775 There were loads when I visited in 1986 & 1988.
@andirandolph8830
@andirandolph8830 11 ай бұрын
I love lightning bugs. Seeing an open field just lit up with them is quite a wondrous sight. Like an outdoor disco.
@user-ob8yj7bf8x
@user-ob8yj7bf8x 11 ай бұрын
I remember there being so many when I was growing up in the 70s & 80s that my friends and I went out one night with 2 large Mason jars and filled them up. When we were done I stood in the middle and they placed the lighting bugs all over me and I walked around the neighbor blinking until one by one they flew off. The funny thing is, I know my mom has pictures of this event. lol, Thank you for doing this video because I haven't thought about that day in a long time. It really put a smile on my face.
@maryclark1049
@maryclark1049 11 ай бұрын
I live in MO and we always called them lightning bugs now I also call them fireflies. Used to catch them in mason jars when I was little.
@WondrousPurple
@WondrousPurple 11 ай бұрын
Thanks for this video, Laurence. Love fireflies here in west central Indiana. As a kid, I grew up in a house with a large, tree-filled front yard. It was soothing to just sit back at dusk, relax and watch fireflies twinkle. Just low-key, relaxing contentment.
@nickthompson2023
@nickthompson2023 11 ай бұрын
We used to go to the Ozarks in Arkansas to visit family during the end of summer and again during the cooler months. Being my family up there lived on a mountain, it was very sparsely populated so the yard was always so filled with lightning bugs. Brings back good memories thinking of me and my brother running around like madmen catching them. And we were teenagers.
@barbarahallowell2613
@barbarahallowell2613 11 ай бұрын
I live in Ireland now and honestly the only thing I truly miss are lightning bugs. I'm visiting back home for a month, and am loving watching them every night. 😊
@dianebossik5201
@dianebossik5201 11 ай бұрын
Fireflies are super easy to catch, too. If you can keep your eye on them in the dim light, they tend to hover 2-5 feet off the ground, well within reaching distance. And they fly slow, so you can just hold your hand in front of them and they may land on it. It's fun to gather a bunch in a jar, then take it into a room, turn off the light, and watch them all start flashing for a few minutes. You let them go afterward of course.
@texasflood1295
@texasflood1295 11 ай бұрын
It is truly magical when you see a large field full of fire flies (lightning bugs).
@teesiemom
@teesiemom 10 ай бұрын
I grew up in southwest Mississippi, and I can clearly remember one summer when a row of azaleas we had in our backyard was completely covered in fireflies. As soon as it got dark, the azaleas looked as if they were covered in glowing Christmas lights. It was an amazing sight!❤
@tanjuyiyitalp6580
@tanjuyiyitalp6580 6 ай бұрын
Fantastic..
@tangledthreadworks
@tangledthreadworks 11 ай бұрын
I was surprised as an adult to learn that "lightening bugs" weren't even found all over the US. They were so common and plentiful near us in the midwest.
@theansweris4229
@theansweris4229 11 ай бұрын
Fun fact: The Serenity is a Firefly class ship because of the shape, and the fact that it’s tail end glows.
@kkrolf2782
@kkrolf2782 11 ай бұрын
thx for that! i r e a l l y liked the series, and was bummed when it was cancelled!
@AspasiaB
@AspasiaB 11 ай бұрын
I aim to misbehave!
@stevethepocket
@stevethepocket 11 ай бұрын
I feel like the tail end glowing is a pretty common feature of rocketships of all sorts, or at least would be in a work of sci-fi that's remotely grounded in reality, but what the heck do I know.
@sheldongiles7408
@sheldongiles7408 11 ай бұрын
Well, if you're into lightening bugs consider putting a yucca plant in your yard, each of its many blossoms is a honey moon suite for lightening bugs when it is in full bloom
@kkrolf2782
@kkrolf2782 11 ай бұрын
Oh, how cool!!! Whoda thought?!?
@lynnmontgomery1229
@lynnmontgomery1229 11 ай бұрын
I have lived in Upstate New York as a child, moved to Florida at age 11 and now live in southeastern Indiana. New York and Indiana have lightning bugs... but Florida was so hot and humid most the time so we rarely saw them. No matter what age I've been, even at 60 now, I find lightning bugs to be rather enchanting. My grandchildren love them.
@violetvillard1347
@violetvillard1347 11 ай бұрын
One of my fav after dinner time activities as a kid was to catch lightening bugs. I'd take an old washed out jar with a lid (poking holes in the lid), and go outside & Julie and I would run around trying catch as many as we could in our jars. Then we'd count them. The one with the most got to choose that night's book or bedtime story. Of course we released them afterwards. 😉
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