#DeerFly
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
Today's DW ship of the day is...
Rudie x Flutter !
Ship names; FlyingDeer, DeerBug, DeerFly, SwoopingDeer
#ship post#wheel ship post#dandy world#dandy's world#dandys world#dw#Flutter#Flutter Dandy's World#Flutter Dandys World#Flutter Dandy World#Flutter DW#Rudie#Rudie Dandy World#Rudie Dandys World#Rudie Dandy's World#Rudie DW#FlyingDeer#DeerBug#DeerFly#SwoopingDeer#Rudie x Flutter#Flutter x Rudie
26 notes
¡
View notes
Text
So I've got a question. You might remember that story where Emmrich and Rook went to a ball (May I have this dance) and I've got the second chapter sitting in my wips and I'm wondering whether to finish it... the chapter is nothing but them sexing it up, Emmrich is being dominant and teasing Rook a lot and does anyone even want to read it?
Edit: so it seems there *are* people who want to read it. Here it is, then
And also I'm done with that horribly sad story (finally) and Emmrich and Rook will be leaving for their honeymoon and it's gonna be silly af. There's a druffalo encounter, skinny dipping and a dinner date. Here's a bit for your perusal, because I'm having fun and it'll be way too long before I finish it.
âOw! Fucking hell!â
Rook swatted at the deerfly that landed on his upper arm to take a bite out of him. He wondered if trekking through the woods to the waterfall was really worth it, as every damn insect in a fifty mile radius seemed to be out to get him. Not Emmrich, though. He was left entirely unbothered by the blasted creatures.
âLanguage, darling,â Emmrich said, and he was laughing at him!
âLanguage, languageâŚâ Rook grumbled. âYou try getting bit by one of these bastards. I'm getting mauled by wildlife and you only care about me being polite about it.â
âI am so sorry,â Emmrich said, but he was still laughing, shoulders shaking at Rookâs dramatics and Rook would be lying if he said that he didn't overreact just to get him to laugh like that. The sound was so carefree, so joyful, even though Rook was obviously dying from the injury.
(Guys, please help? @mercars-musings, @starfleetteddybear, @redheadsramblings, @sorrowsfallallaround)
#Veilguard#emmrook#emmrich volkarin#dragon age veilguard#dragon age the veilguard#emmrich x rook#Not me researching deerfly habitat for this damn fic#Like why do I care#But I just can't have them flying around where they don't belong#First I was researching lichens#And now this#Also thank you again redheadsramblings for getting me to find out that the lichen does in fact live on fucking PINE trees#Like what a fucking amazing coincidence#I've been laughing about it all day
34 notes
¡
View notes
Text
A twin-lobed deerfly (Chrysops relictus). Like mosquitoes, egg development in the adult female requires a blood meal from cattle, horses or deer. The males are often seen on flowers while feeding on nectar.
Photograph: Marc Brouwer/Royal Entomological Society
Insect Week Photography Awards
#marc brouwer#photographer#royal entomological society#insect week photography awards#twin-lobed deerfly#chrysops relictus#macro photography#insect#nature
17 notes
¡
View notes
Text
there was a giant fly in my bedroom and i Think i hit it with the flyswatter but i can't find the body so now i live in constant fear
#please i would rather not get bit#horseflies are the worst they're fucking horrifying#i don't Think this is a horsefly. but it might be a deerfly. or maybe a flesh fly
3 notes
¡
View notes
Text
Word List: Fly
beautiful words with "fly" for your next poem/story
Alderfly - any of numerous insects (order Megaloptera) of the genus Sialis or related genera having aquatic larvae that are used for bait
Catchfly - any of various plants (as of the genera Lychnis and Silene) of the pink family often with viscid stems
Damselfly - any of numerous odonate insects (suborder Zygoptera) distinguished from dragonflies by laterally projecting eyes and usually stalked wings folded above the body when at rest
Deerfly - any of numerous small horseflies (as of the genus Chrysops) that include important vectors of tularemia
Flowerfly - a syrphid fly (i.e., any of numerous active day-flying flies that constitute the family Syrphidae, frequent flowers and feed on nectar, vary greatly in form and coloration but generally have a spurious longitudinal vein near the middle of each wing, often mimic bees or wasps and have the abdomen banded with yellow, and produce larvae which feed on decaying organic matter or are predaceous on plant lice)
Flybane - any of several plants considered to be destructive to houseflies (as a catchfly or the fly agaric)
Flybridge - an open deck on a cabin cruiser located above the bridge on the cabin roof and usually having a duplicate set of navigating equipment
Flyflower - dutchman's-breeches
Flyleaf - one of the free endpapers of a book
Flypaper - paper coated with a sticky often poisonous substance for killing flies
Flyspeck - a speck made by fly excrement; something small and insignificant
Greenfly - aphid i.e., any of numerous very small soft-bodied homopterous insects (superfamily Aphidoidea) that suck the juices of plants
Medfly - Mediterranean fruit fly i.e., a small widely distributed yellowish-brown dipteran fly (Ceratitis capitata) with a banded abdomen whose larva lives and feeds in ripening fruit
Sandfly - any of various small biting dipteran flies (especially genus Phlebotomus of the family Psychodidae)
Whitefly - any of numerous small homopterous insects (family Aleyrodidae) that are injurious plant pests
If any of these words inspire your writing, do tag me or send me a link. I'd love to read your work!
More: Word Lists
#word list#fly#spilled ink#writing reference#dark academia#writeblr#literature#writers on tumblr#writing prompt#poets on tumblr#poetry#creative writing#writing inspiration#writing inspo#langblr#words#linguistics#writing ideas#light academia#arthur lismer#writing resources
53 notes
¡
View notes
Note
you might've got this one before but depending on where/when you're heading to the arctic I cannot recommend bug spray/a bug jacket enough đđ some folks I know and I have worked up there and well. there's a reason biting fly researchers love it so much. the mosquitos and deerflies and all them are Intense so do your best to keep your blood
oh shit i had no idea there'd be Bugs up there that's really good advice
209 notes
¡
View notes
Text
Test night. I'm a magnet for mosquitoes so that is all I can test but it should keep away most things. Gnats, deerflies, ticks and skeeters. One thing about all natural bug spray you must reapply every few hours and always shake well before use to blend the oils. Im in love with the scent. If you would like to be a guinea pig...holler at your girl. I have 5 ready to go đ
18 notes
¡
View notes
Text
arsonistâs lullaby
Pairing: John Marston x gn!reader
Summary: With Sean dead and the Confederate gold nowhere to be found, the Braithwaites learn exactly why boys are off-limits.
Warnings: Canon-typical violence/gore, canonical character death, arson/fiery deaths, angst, kidnapping, toxic loyaltyyyyy
Word count: 2,777
A/N: Emerging from my absence to post this chapter and fade back into the ether âď¸
Series masterlist ⢠AO3
â
In the end, itâs a perfectly ordinary day when things come to a head.
Midsummer sun has beat down all day, only just now mellowing to a deep orange, early evening glow. Standing halfway up the path to camp on guard duty, nothing remarkable has happened at all, except maybe the number of deerflies youâve had to fend off. Like the heat alone isnât enough.
Micah and Sean and Bill rode into town on business earlier. Sean jabbered something about meeting up with Arthur and that Gray sheriff, but he was insistent on keeping the rest a mystery. High profile stuff, you know. Not for old-timers like you to worry about. You just rolled your eyes and sent him on his way.
Other than that, itâs been awfully quietâ Even after Karen and Bill and Lenny and Arthur hit Valentineâs bank the other week. If you were a more suspicious person you might call it too quiet, but itâs been nice to have a bit of a break. You and John have hardly spent a moment apart. Camp chores go quicker together, you tell everyone, but it hardly takes a genius to see youâre more attached at the hip than ever. Moving sacks of cornmeal and haying horses and chopping wood doesnât usually result in the lovestruck looks stuck on your faces, after all.
Arthur, too, has enjoyed the down time. If he isnât sharing a cup of morning coffee with his wife then heâs reading storybooks to his surrogate son, complete with ridiculous voices. He puts on a deep, gruff baritone for the bad guys, then pitches higher for a hero that sounds suspiciously like Jack. Itâs sweet. The mantle of secondhand fatherhood fits snugly across his broad shoulders, and you canât help but feel that if anyone ever deserved a second chance at all this, itâs him.
Johnâs been watching them with the strangest mix of joy and wistfulness and regret and shame. Itâs always gone in a blink. You never quite know what to say.
But thereâs no time to ruminate further when a slow, steady, thumping lope comes within earshot. You almost miss it, lost in thought.
âWho goes there?â
Youâre not sure why you bother asking; the footfalls are too heavy to be anyone but Bill on Brown Jack. When they come into view thereâs a tense set to Billâs shoulders and unease in the whites of Brown Jackâs eyes. You see something slung behind the saddle, unmoving.
A body.
You only register it as Sean when he slows to a stop beside you.
Itâs jarring to see the lively young Irishman so horribly, deathly still. His clothes are stained with blood and singed from bullets, but the gaping hole in his head is what turns your stomach and raises your hackles as well as the hairs on the back of your neck. Pulpy brains. Shards of skull. A once-bright eye bulged, crooked and unseeing. A damn good headshot.
Who would be gunning for him? you think. But really, after all the trouble youâve been stirring down here, who wouldnât? Itâs only been a matter of weeks since you and the boys stole those horses. Less since he and Arthur burned the tobacco fields.
You look up at Bill after a long moment.
âWanna tell me how the fuck you got the kid killed?â you say, voice low. Simmering. Seething in the summer heat.
Billâs expression is caught between guilt and resentment. âIt was them Gray boys.â
âThem Gray boys?â
âThey were waitinâ for us! Arthur⌠well, he reckons they figured us out. Talked to that Braithwaite woman, I mean.â
âWhere is he? Alive?â
âHe and Micah ainât far behind. Donât expect theyâll be cominâ together.â
You donât know what to say to that, so you just shake your head and try to think past the blood pounding through your eardrums. Ringing in your skull. âWe gotta bury him.â
âI know,â he snaps.
Where would Sean want to be buried? With a view of the water? In the shade of the trees? Certainly not alone, but thereâs little choice there. âWe gottaâ He deserves someplace decent.â
âI know.â Softer, this time. â...Thereâs a quiet spot up the other side of the path.â
You nod. âDonât let the girls see.â
â
The air is thick and stagnant even as the afternoon fades into evening. Youâve always hated digging graves, and this heat only makes it worse. Cicadas hum. Flies buzz. Bill picked a good spot out of the dying sun, but sweat still pours down both of your faces and necks, soaking through your shirts. Salt stings your eyes and the tip of your tongue.
Once the hole is deep enough, Bill does his best to arrange whateverâs left of Sean with some dignity; arms crossed, a coin over his intact eye. Itâs still a sorry sight. You take the pistol from his holster to give to Karen and let its dead weight rest in your belt while you and Bill get to burying. When the work is done, he stutters a few insufficient words over a yet-unmarked grave. He looks to you, then, and you fish your flask off your belt and take a strong swig before pouring a generous amount over the freshly turned earth.
âCheers, brother,â says a hollow voice that sounds like yours. âSave us a seat.â
You donât bother saying where.
â
Karen hits you when you tell her. A full arm swing. Open-palmed. Then again when you hand her the pistol.
You let her.
Feels like the least you can do.
â
The evening passes in a haze of numb grief. You donât know what to do with yourself, so you hide, only emerging from your tent when you hear raised voices outside Dutchâs.
âWhereâs my goddamn son?â Abigail demands. âThey took him, didnât they? They took my son!â
And Jesus if this day couldnât get worse. Your eyes scan the camp, like youâd be able to spot little Jack where his mother couldnât. The sick feeling thatâs been festering in your stomach since Seanâs burial twists and writhes and weighs you down like lead. Everyone knows missing is about as good as dead these days, but you donât dare say that to Abigail.
âWhere is my son, Dutch Van der Linde?!â
More and more begin to crowd around the commotion. The girls lay consoling hands on Abigailâs shoulders that quake with anger and fear. Arthurâs face is grim and drawn beside her. Johnâs is shadowed behind them, torn between guilt and anger. Hosea pushes past the throng to lay blame on the Braithwaitesâ at least, he says Kieran saw some boys what looked like Braithwaites not far from camp earlier. After what happened in town today, you have to admit it makes sense. Both families have you figured out, and theyâre out for their pound of flesh.
As if Sean wasnât enough already.
âWe will find Jack, we will bring him back to you, and we will kill any fool that had the temerity to touch one hair on that boyâs head,â Dutch vows in answer to Abigailâs frantic questioning. âRight now.â
And he turns on his heel and makes toward The Count to do just that. Everyone follows. Bill calls out asking about extra guns that are accepted readily. Micah and Kieran are ordered to protect the camp while youâre all away. Weapons drawn, eyes blazing, you mount your horses and make off into the night.
This is the warpath. The beating hooves and rushing blood. Moonshine canters steadily beneath you, keeping stride with Old Boy and Arthurâs mount on either side. Itâs been a long time since the whole gang has ridden out like this, chomping at the bit for a bloodletting.
âI swear, Iâll kill everyone there!â John snarls. Heâs settled into his anger now, quicker on its draw than his pistol.
âEasy, Marston,â Arthur says. His voice is low and dangerous like how he warns off strangers. Not family. Not John. âYou donât check your shots, Jackâll end up dead too.â
âDonât tell me to take it easy! Thatâs myââ but John chokes on the word before he can get it out.
Son, he was going to say. Thatâs his son.
But Jack is as much Arthurâs as he is Johnâs anymore, and right now neither one can stand it. You canât bear to look at the fear nor the anger nor the burning blame in either of their eyes.
â
The oaks that line the path to Braithwaite Manor are always imposing, but here in the dusky nighttime you swear you can feel their ancient eyes watching. Bloody roots gorged on bloodstained grounds; twisted, gnarled branches grasping for a Heaven theyâll never reach. There are few stars that shine through the scattered clouds in the early night sky, but you wish upon every one that Jack is safe, and you vow that no one will make it out of here alive if he isnât.
Everyone dismounts at the gate. Beside you John and Arthur are tense. Mouths set, trigger fingers twitching, eyes aflame with a primal sort of anger and fear that can only come from losing a child. Dutch, too, is furious. The fact that anyone would touch one of his own is normally enough to have him ranting, almost frothing at the mouth, but he must sense that Arthur and John need him calm.
Calmer than them, anyhow.
Ahead, the manor house is lit with a warm orange glow from its pillared porch. The moon casts strange light across the shadowy night, flickering in and out of cloud cover. There is only the sound of gravel beneath your boots and anticipation.
âGet down here now, you inbred trash!â Dutch bellows at the first sight of the Braithwaite boys.
âWhat the hell do you want?â they call back, like they donât know.
John makes to aim his gun and you brush against his shoulder as a comfort and a warning. He snarls but doesnât shoot. Not yet.
Dutch continues, âWeâve come for the boy. You mustâve known we would.â
Arthur is little better off, glaring holes in the heads of every Braithwaite son and cousin and uncle and friend that emerges from the looming house. Thereâs more of them by the minute. You feel everyone tense around you. Their guns arenât lifted - not yet - but all it will take is a sign from Dutch.
Not yet.
âThat is a young boy. That is not the way you do things. Hand him over.â
âGet the hell off our land!â
Not yet.
Dutchâs eyes darken in challenge. He doesnât so much as turn his head toward any of you, but the shift in energy is electric. The whole world holds its breath.
âIf you ainât gonna be civilized about thisâŚâ
Now.
All at once everyone opens fire. Itâs a symphony of gunfire, bullets screaming by from every direction. You pull John behind a crate just as one grazes his ear. He snarls out a curse while you kill the man on the balcony who shot at him. The body tumbles over the railing and stains the steps red with blood and brains.
Dutch calls out marching orders, but through the din heâs nearly impossible to hear. John heads inside. You follow suit. The manor doors swing wide open like the unhinged jaw of a snake, welcoming you into the belly of the beast.
âJack!â
âWhere are you, kid?â
âJack!â
His name echoes off expensive oak floors and through lofted ceilings. You tear through the lower floor like someone possessed, ripping open mahogany chests and finely stained china cabinets and the couch cushions of richly-rugged sitting rooms. Anywhere a little boy might fit. Then plenty of places he wouldnât just for good measure.
Somewhere in the rush you lose John. Over the gurgling rasp of a Braithwaite sonâs last breath you hear him shout something from upstairs. You make to run up the winding staircase but stop dead in your tracks when you see Catherine Braithwaite being kicked down them.
Dutch sneers, his lip curled with generational distaste for a man who preaches against revenge. Sheâs sobbing, spewing vitriol with every shaky breath. All her sons are dead now. You can see it in the gape of her burnt ash mouth. In the flames that lick the polished wood floors from their dropped torches. In the fire reflected back in Dutchâs eyes.
â
Jack isnât there. Catherine Braithwaite uses her last breaths to gloat that heâs been sold to a man in the city.
Sold.
You watch Dutch let her go, then watch still as she runs screaming into the flames. The house collapses over a shrieking phantom of the Deep South with a groan and a sigh. By the color of the flames itâll burn for hours yet.
The trees stare as you leave, gorged on blood and ash.
â
Dawn comes blood red and brutal, streaking through the sky with its first light warning. Dutch, John, Hosea, and Arthur are all gathered around the camp table to discuss your next moves. Whatever those are, though, you canât imagine. John didnât sleep a wink last night, just staring at tent canvas and stewing in blame. He looks awful. Everyone does.
Youâre sat next to Abigail by the campfire. She says nothing, but the hunch of her shoulders and the blue-hot flame of her eyes tells you thereâs nothing to be said. Her boy is gone. Missing.
You brought her a bowl of porridge for breakfast, but neither of you is up for eating much. She stares into the fire while it sits untouched in her lap. You push your oats around with the spoon and pretend not to eavesdrop.
Of course Marstonâs scared rotten, Arthur says in hushed tones. I am too. We killed all them peopleâ for what? For nothinâ. There ainât no gold here.
For living, Dutch corrects him, and you canât help but think itâs a shame that not all of you got to that part. The living. Sean is dead and gone forever. For all you know, Jack might be too.
But all of that is put immediately to rest when Lenny walks into camp with two Pinkerton agents at gunpoint.
Milton and Ross, they call themselves, swaggering through the whole of camp like youâre not all outlaws and thieves. Killers. Everyone stands as they pass, slowly circling in like vultures to the promise of violence.
The matching felt bowler hats on their heads canât hide the pockmarks on Miltonâs face nor the smug, bristling mustache on Rossâ. The government is surely paying a pretty penny for your capture if the fineness of their clothes is anything to go by. Their shoes are shined and polished. You canât help but notice the way the red Rhodes clay oozes up beneath the soles and paints them muddy.
âThis thing? Itâs done,â Milton announces when he makes his way to Dutch.
Dutch barely bothers to turn and face him. He doesnât stand. Everyone else slowly, slowly creeps closer. One step at a time. All coming together. Vultures. Violence.
Things like this are never just done.
Never.
Milton calls Dutch a lot of things. A shepherd of lost souls. A messiah. Sarcasm drips from the syllables, and you wonder how he might react if you told him Dutch was the only god to answer a single one of your prayers. Even Swanson lost touch with Christ long ago. Now when he falters he begs Dutch Van der Linde for forgiveness. All of you do.
âIâm nothing but a seeker, Mr. Milton,â Dutch finally says.
Miltonâs eyes narrow. There's a faint expression you canât quite place on his face when he replies, âYou ainât much of anything more than a killer, Mr. Van der Linde.â
He offers freedom, then. Three days to run and hide and live like civilized human beings in exchange for Dutch. Itâs almost laughable.
Dutch steps forward and every gun in camp cocks. Agent Milton seems suddenly to remember how very much outnumbered and outgunned he is.
âI think your new friend should leave, Dutch,â Ms. Grimshaw says.
Milton calls it a mistake, calls you all fools, but the only foolish mistake you can see is letting them live.
â
John and Arthur leave together after all that. They make for a place called Shady Belle and promise Abigail itâs close to the city where her son is being held. A good spot to camp while everyone does what they can to bring that little boy home.
Looking at Karen, miserable and bleary-eyed drunk, you canât help but think itâs awfully far from Seanâs grave.
41 notes
¡
View notes
Text
Hiked up the mountain while battling deerflies and one irate squirrel. I almost fell in the brook while crossing mossy stones while Tika just hopped and swam across like the badass she is. Driving home a moose calf crossed in front of us. (Or the world's biggest dog according to Tika)
16 notes
¡
View notes
Text
God fucking damnit there was a deerfly on me fuck
5 notes
¡
View notes
Text
Being a biologist that works with "uncharismatic" species can be really upsetting at times. We as biologists do our best to find the most beautiful examples of our species, but convincing people who are stuck in their way of disliking something is often very difficult. On the flip side, being surrounded by academics who simply gush over their animals, especially the more unappreciated species, is eye-opening.
I had a professor who specializes in biting flies, specifically those belonging to the family Tabanidae (more commonly known as deerflies and horseflies). He would light up whenever he talked about them, lamenting about their gorgeous diversity in colour and patterns. I see them quite differently now.
There is not a single animal that I dislike. In fact, it is extremely difficult for me to pick a favourite, given just how many there are! Please feel free to tag this post with your favourite critters, as I'd love to hear about them!
#biology#text post#mine#nature#bugs r cool#hognose snakes are wonderful#so are blue racers#also#yall should look at more moths than just luna moths and rosy maple moths#they have such a wide diversity#same with beetles#sea slugs are also very weird and wonderful#marine flatworms too
19 notes
¡
View notes
Text
I have a theory that Angel Dust isn't a spider.
I think that his dad definitely is a spider. He was a mob boss who ensnared people and drained them of their money, morals, and dignity.
But I don't think that Angel is one.
His dad saw him as a gangster, so he accepted that he had to be one, and that is what trapped him in a life of sin.
Now in Hell, his dad is a spider, so Angel must be one too, right?
I think the foundational root of all of Angel Dust's sins is the fact that he accepts that he is what other people see him as and he leans into it to try to feel safe.
Now Valentino sees Angel as useful tool to help him pitch his tent. A cheap toy to be tossed around for the entertainment of dogs.
I don't think we've actually seen Angel Dust with eight arms in the canon show, and when Molly appeared, she had four legs and two arms. I think that Heroin is a spider, but his kids are all bugs trapped in his webs. I think that Molly is an Orchid Mantis, Arackniss is a deerfly (a sadistic parasite), and Angel Dust is-
Angel's a-
VIV STICK BUGGED US! THIS WHOLE TIME WE'VE BEEN WATCHING HIM DANCE AND WE DIDN'T EVEN REALIZE IT!
For Angel Dust to achieve redemption, he needs to break free of his father's webs which drove him into Valentino's deal. He needs to decide once and for all that he isn't Henroin's Anthony and he isn't Valentino's pimp cane. He is Angel.
7 notes
¡
View notes
Note
Thoughts / rating on Arachne or Driders? As a bug lover I adore the idea of a giant half-human bug buddy. (But I also get that a lot of people fear bugs so they're not for everyone)
LOVELOVELOVELOVE
I think driders are so cool! Funfact about me: mosquitos and deerflies really love to bite me. I'm the member of my family who always gets covered in bugbites no matter how much/what kind of bugspray I wear. Having a drider around miiiiight level the playing field for me a little bit!
Also: I'm a knitter so when I imagine having a drider bff I imagine us knitting together and it makes me so happy.
Thanks for the ask!
4 notes
¡
View notes
Text
I think deerly deerfly would look like this without glasses
3 notes
¡
View notes
Text
Amazon: Monkey Island/Animal Sanctuary
I was starving by the time lunch was ready at 1:30pm - golden catfish with rice and peppers which was pretty tasty. After lunch I went for a little siesta for an hour and then regrouped with Rodrigo and the Puerto Rican family (minus the mother) and we took the boat out to spot some birds and dolphins. There were glimpses of dolphins but I was always too slow to get a good look at them, and when I did see one pop up it always looked grey - they get more pink the more active they are. There was a massive deerfly (dragonfly/horsefly type creature) that landed on papaâs leg and was smacked off him by Rodrigo! We arrived shortly after at Monkey Island, guess what was in store for us there? A little capuchin monkey was waiting at the dock for the boat to get close enough to where it could jump aboard and check for snacks. The family bought some guava fruit from the owners of the island and then some big hefty boys climbed down from the trees and climbed onto papaâs shoulder to sit there and eat their fruit. The girls also took turns holding the monkeys and feeding them fruit but they were quite big and intimidating so I didnât want to have it climb on me. I wouldnât have minded one of the smaller capuchins on my shoulder but they werenât so friendly and kept a bit of a distance. There was also a tiny malnourished puppy on the island and it seemed like the monkeys tormented him. Theyâd run up when he back was turned and grab his legs, or smack his head, and then run away when he turned around. The boat driver was laughing and joined in with the torment, touching the dogâs back when he was looking at the monkey. The boat got a bit stuck on the island so the owners helped us push off back into the river and we continued down to San Juan de Huashalado village where we visited an animal rescue sanctuary. A young guide took us around to show us the parrots, macaw, sloths, matamata swamp turtle, caiman, and boa constrictor. He encouraged us to all hold the caiman and the sloth and pose for a photo. I did these and felt guilty about it but I could barely take any other photos as I was being completely eaten alive by mosquitos in this humid swampy area even though Rodrigo had bought me an emergency repellent packet from a small shop to try and stop them. We hopped back in the boat and I was glad for the breeze blowing the mosquitos away from me, we stopped at the pink dolphin viewing area again and the girls and papa went for a swim. I stayed in the boat not wanting to swim in this dirty water or get my clothes dirty since I didnât have too many things remaining clean for this hot weather. Rodrigo set all of our minds at ease (at least it was after the swim) about the piranha-ridden water and told us about when he was 10 years old and had his nail chomped off by a piranha. The people on the other boat stopped there were detailing stories of river fish swimming inside peopleâs bodies and eating them from the inside out. I was glad I didnât swim! This time of the day was better for the dolphins being active and I was able to see some that had a pink belly as they dived out of the water. On our way back to the camp, Rodrigo pointed out the markings on the trees where the water level had been about 2m higher in the rainy season a month prior. The water was getting much more shallow and our boat actually wasnât able to make it all the way in so we stopped at another bank where the water was high enough to get us close enough to clamber out onto a bridge. I  took a shower and was feeling very refreshed for about 20 minutes before Rodrigo, the girls, and I headed out with our boots and flashlights into the humidity and darkness. We walked the same path as earlier and it was a totally different experience. We saw spiders, tarantulas, frogs, fireflies, and some birds asleep up in a tree â luckily no snakes! When we got back, a chicken and pineapple dish over rice with egg was waiting, there was also a picked over salad that I could take a few pieces of lettuce from, and an empty plate that had once offered up slices of pineapple.
Night walk: sleeping birds, tarantula
2 notes
¡
View notes
Text
0 notes