fellow willows

It's about the love of our space. Our yard, the garden, our earth. There is something about working the soil, getting your hands dirty, planting, tending and patiently watching it grow. I will photograph many journey's in my yard, and in the outdoors.

I encourage questions, especially when it's green, growing, squirming, crawling, swimming, flying, sqeeking, chirping or just plain gross! Bring it on!

So I'm quirky..I love Nature, and all the things that come with it..that includes a desire to understand what and why, and how I can be involved, (even if observing). This blog will be about what I find, grow, rescue or identify.

Friday, March 25, 2011

Helpful insects

In the garden today I found a few Praying Mantis egg sacks..in a few weeks they swill hatch just in time to gobble up any garden invaders..
Check out my "links" if you do not have any in your yard..you can mail order them!



Mantodea or mantises is an order of insects that contains approximately 2,200 species in nine families[1] worldwide in temperate and tropical habitats. Most of the species are in the family Mantidae. Historically, the term "mantid" was used to refer to any member of the order because for most of the past century, only one family was recognized within the order; technically, however, the term only refers to this one family, meaning the species in the other eight recently established families are not mantids, by definition (i.e., they are empusids, or hymenopodids, etc.), and the term "mantises" should be used when referring to the entire order.
A colloquial name for the order is "praying mantises", because of the typical "prayer-like" stance, although the term is often misspelled as "preying mantis" since mantises are predatory.[2] In Europe, the name "praying mantis" refers to Mantis religiosa. The closest relatives of mantises are the orders Isoptera (termites) and Blattodea (cockroaches), and these three groups together are sometimes ranked as an order rather than a superorder. They are sometimes confused with phasmids (stick/leaf insects) and other elongated insects such as grasshoppers and crickets.
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