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Bugger of a Bedfellow
No-one warned me that the older the house, the bigger the insects. I’m spooked by the mutant army of up-sized bugs who’ve been invading our 1904 brick bungalow.
The Daddy-Long-legs have taken up squatting rights above the shower and patrol there on stilts. Their extended family has taken over the cornices in our living room. I suck them at warp speed into the vacuum cleaner but they travel around in it like a caravan. I know this because when I last opened the lid to change the bag, a Daddy-long-legs crawled out from inside the cavity and took off to inspect the spare bedroom.
Bugger of a Bedfellow
Ros Thomas
The Weekend West
Published: Saturday March 22, 2014
No-one warned me that the older the house, the bigger the insects. I’m spooked by the mutant army of up-sized bugs who’ve been invading our 1904 brick bungalow.
The Daddy-Long-legs have taken up squatting rights above the shower and patrol there on stilts. Their extended family has taken over the cornices in our living room. I suck them at warp speed into the vacuum cleaner but they travel around in it like a caravan. I know this because when I last opened the lid to change the bag, a Daddy-long-legs crawled out from inside the cavity and took off to inspect the spare bedroom.
I am horrified at the cockroaches with Dreamliner wingspans that power through the back door at sunset. The mosquitoes navigate the holes in our flyscreens like stealth bombers, then roar through my shower of Mortein acid rain.
This summer, the Cape Lilac overhanging our back fence was stripped bare by swarms of hairy black caterpillars. By day, they abseiled by the dozen down the wall and lazed by the pool, scaring the children. Even the birds seemed daunted by such a spiky smorgasbord. In the late afternoon, those caterpillars were scaling the fence back to their leafless roost, shuffling in a seething mass from one side of the tree to the other to remain in the shade.
But nothing could prepare us for the strange bedfellow who joined us for a three-way frolic at 11pm. At first I thought the soft rasping sound was an ingenious variation of foreplay – the sound of a thicket of manly leg- hair rubbing up against my calf. My erotic illusions shattered as the owner of the leg cried into the darkness:
“What the heck is that noise?”
“The house?” I ventured, knowing how the bones of old homes creak and groan at night. “Actually,” I said, “it sounds like it’s coming from IN THE BED!” And with that, I panicked and jabbed at the switch on the bedside lamp. My Greek god leapt up in a flash of red shortie pyjamas, followed a microsecond later by a ripple of tummy. I scrambled to get behind him as my human shield flung back the doona.
At the bottom of the bed, a grotesque insect scrabbled to shrink from the light. It was as wide as my palm, Gravox-brown, with an articulated abdomen like a fat grub and thick stumpy front legs attached to the sides of its head. This thing made E.T. look like George Clooney.
“What IS it?” I yelled as my husband grabbed his prized Spectator magazine and swatted the beast clear of the mattress. It nose-dived into the carpet, landing upside down with its four spindly hind legs in the air. In the next instant, it performed a half twist somersault and righted itself. My husband was as intrigued as I was repulsed.
He warily scooped it up with his magazine and liberated our captive in the parsley patch.
I slept fitfully for dreaming about our creepy intruder. The next morning, I went in search of the entomological explanation. It was, in fact, a Cylindrachetid – a sandgroper – that rarely-seen insect that’s been the nickname for West Australians since South Australians became crow-eaters and Queenslanders, banana-benders.
How we Western sophisticates came to be synonymous with this grub-ugly crawler remains a mystery. Was it the Gold Rush that started it? In 1896, the Fitzroy City newspaper reported that WA’s ‘Sandgropers’ would rather Victorian ‘T’othersiders’ ‘grope in their own soil a little more, instead of rushing in such numbers to dig up West Australian treasure.’
And yet in my lifetime in Perth, I’d never seen a single sandgroper. I’ve questioned friends about sightings but no – they hadn’t seen one either. Apparently sandgropers are common inhabitants of Perth’s dunes and sandy plains, but their subterranean lifestyle precludes them from joining our summer barbecues.
I vaguely remembered Fat Cat and Percy Penguin having a chirpy yellow friend called Sunny Sandgroper on children’s TV in the 70’s. But he was a cute stuffed toy created in the image of a happy caterpillar, not modelled on this burrowing recluse.
A week later, I was startled by a rustling noise in the pantry. Home alone and fearing a jumbo roach, I armed myself with an egg flip and bravely kicked aside three boxes of cereal. Flailing on the floor behind the Rice Bubbles was another sandgroper.
The neighbourhood lawn-mower man had his own theory. “You disturbed them,” he said. “That bob-cat that dug your pool’s the culprit. I reckon they came after you to pay you back!”
He laughed raucously at the idea of a sandgroper in our bed. I giggled uncomfortably, then gave thanks the blighters don’t fly.
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