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Forget Cricket Talk about anything [within Board Rules, of course :) ] |
July 31, 2007, 04:30 AM
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Banned
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Join Date: February 4, 2007
Location: Uganda..where the smell of ganda Bashar cannot reach me
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Texas areas battle invasion of Crickets
They congregate on patios, slip into stairwells and, if they're crunched under foot, oh do they stink. Crickets are here in force, annoying Texans earlier than usual — thanks to the year's wet weather in much of the state.
The problem is so bad at the University of Texas at Austin that school officials are taking the unusual step of darkening the 307-foot-tall bell tower for three nights the next two weekends in hopes of keeping the insects away. The bugs are attracted to lights.
Tower lights will be turned off early Friday evening through Sunday night, and again for three nights the following weekend, Aug. 3-5.
"The tower is one of their primary targets, of course, because we do have the lights on there," said Bill Lucas, associate director of facilities maintenance at UT-Austin. He said the crickets gather atop the tower on its observation deck.
"I don't know if they go up there for the view," he mused.
Crickets seem to like hanging out well above street level at other downtown buildings. Clusters of crickets have been gathering on the ninth-floor balcony outside the Austin office where Lisa Lucero works. She's not amused.
"It's just awful," she said. "They can jump so high. They're irritating and creepy."
Reports of cricket invasions also are coming from counties in the Hill Country and northeast Texas and from Dallas, said Mike Merchant, a Dallas-based entomologist with the Texas Cooperative Extension of the Texas A&M University System.
Typically, field crickets head into cities from their normal rural habitat in early fall for mating flights after rain, once the ground becomes soft enough for egg-laying, Merchant said. This year, after weeks of soaking summer rain, the ground is soft earlier than usual.
The result, Merchant said, is a "cricket rush."
Though some places are reporting more crickets than anyone can remember, others are simply experiencing them sooner.
Turning off outdoor lights is the best way to curb the cricket onslaught, he said. Once they land at urban buildings, grackles and pigeons eat some of the crickets.
The insects don't cause any serious damage, but they are an aesthetic pest with their droppings and odor, Merchant said. They can, however, pose a problem for museums because dead crickets in a museum attract other insects that feed on them — and on the artifacts, he said.
Cleaning up the crickets can become a huge, repetitive chore, according to those who do that nasty job.
"They're a general nuisance. There is the crunching under foot. They die and smell terrible. The smell gets sucked into the air conditioning system," said Lucas, adding that the odor creates an unpleasant work environment in the campus' main building where the tower is located.
University workers began noticing the problem about a week ago and have been gathering cricket information from a campus entomology expert and from the Texas Cooperative Extension.
"They didn't quite say it was of biblical proportions, but it sure seems that way at times," Lucas said.
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July 31, 2007, 05:00 AM
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Cricket Legend
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Join Date: June 12, 2007
Location: Yonder
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the only remedy for it is to teach texan's cricket
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'immerse your soul in love' - thom yorke
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July 31, 2007, 12:59 PM
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Cricket Legend
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Join Date: April 2, 2006
Location: Scarborough, Ontario (Canada)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Puck
the only remedy for it is to teach texan's cricket
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Nice idea but will the texans be successful in it??
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July 31, 2007, 08:52 PM
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Cricket Legend
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Join Date: June 12, 2007
Location: Yonder
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Nafis_BD
Nice idea but will the texans be successful in it??
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success should not be a prerequisite in this case. we just want them to be occupied with something or other so no more foreign invasion takes place
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'immerse your soul in love' - thom yorke
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July 31, 2007, 01:55 PM
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Cricket Savant
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Join Date: June 30, 2005
Location: Little Rock
Favorite Player: Viv Richards, Steve Waugh
Posts: 32,798
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Quote:
Originally Posted by djuice
...The bugs are attracted to lights.
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What type of attraction is this? Why don't the fly off to the Sun? Or at least try to? i thought the Sun was the biggest source of light around earth?
Keep your cricket within your country. Let it bug Babu bhai the hell out for deserting us. Don't send them towards north east.
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The Weak can never forgive. Forgiveness is an attribute of the Strong." - Gandhi.
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August 1, 2007, 12:57 AM
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Cricket Legend
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Join Date: May 28, 2004
Location: TN, USA
Posts: 3,299
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Tigers_eye
Keep your cricket within your country. Let it bug Babu bhai the hell out for deserting us. Don't send them towards north east.
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They will not get any chance to bug me.
I got myself out of there just on time.
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