Warning: this post is about semi (cicada)...
When I was in Tarumi the other day, I noticed several trees loaded with semi (cicada).
If you are looking at this post on a smartphone, pinch the photo to expand...you'll see all of them.
I also lightened the photo, so it is a little easier to spot them all...
Midori and I were sort of screaming as we took the photo...eek!
If you are interested in seeing the video I shot of them a few years back you can click here, to hear just how noisy they are.
Tidbit from Satoshi: only the male cicadas chirp...
Hope it is cooler and quieter where you are...have a nice weekend.
Kat & Satoshi's eating and traveling adventures around Japan (and sometimes Hawaii)
Showing posts with label cicada. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cicada. Show all posts
Friday, July 28, 2017
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
sounds of summer
The sound of summer in Japan is made by the semi (cicada).
They are awfully noisy especially in the morning. Sometimes you can even hear them at night too.
I once saw one on our lanai door and boy did it shake the glass with its chirping.
I've written a pretty detailed post on them here.
Do you have cicada where you live? What is the sound of summer where you are?
They are awfully noisy especially in the morning. Sometimes you can even hear them at night too.
I once saw one on our lanai door and boy did it shake the glass with its chirping.
I've written a pretty detailed post on them here.
Do you have cicada where you live? What is the sound of summer where you are?
Friday, August 31, 2007
life of a cicada

According to Satoshi, during the summers when he was growing up, they would go around with a net to catch the hatched semi or catch them with their hands (eww!). He said they would look in the trees because that is where the hatched semi fed on the sap of the trees.
Nowadays, you often see children roaming around the neighborhood with these LONG handled nets and a little plastic box--this is where they keep their bounty. (Sometimes you can hear the semi screeching from inside the plastic box--which is actually quite irritating.)

Apparently, Osaka has a huge population of kumazemi (bear cicada?). This type of semi is supposed to be larger than other semi and they have clear wings. Satoshi says that when he was young, if you were able to catch one of these, "you were the hero" (the kumazemi was a rare species then).

The thing I don't like about these semi is that they die anywhere and everywhere. I'm kind of leery of passing under trees because they sometimes just drop dead onto you, or sometimes they fly aimlessly hit you and then die (kamikazes?)....blah. Walking around the neighborhood, it kind of looks like a battlefield of sorts-- bodies of dead semi, wings of semi, road-kill semi--you get the picture. This little guy decided to let out a few screeches before keeling over on my lanai. I'm glad he was kind enough not to die on my lanai slippers (believe me, I've found them there too!)
Towards the end of September, when the weather starts to cool, the suzumushi(bell-ring crickets) and koorogi(cricket) start to come out in the evenings and chirp their chirp. That's when you know you've survived the heat and humidity of another Japan summer.
We still have a ways to go until the weather starts to cool, but it is the end of August and technically summer is over. What a hot and humid one it was...whew!
Sunday, August 06, 2006
around the neighborhood
Not much happening around here, Satoshi had to go to work today. Just wanted to show you some shots from around the neighborhood.
Everyday on my walks to the grocery store, I see this cat. He/she actually had a white face, somehow it has turned gray, probably from pollution. Anyway, he/she is always on the shady side of this house. In the afternoon, he/she moves to the glass sunroof area, which I think may be even cooler.
The playground area of an elementary school nearby. I was shocked because there is no grass! I've only seen grass at schools in Okinawa. Growing up in Hawaii, our playground area always had grass and we always ran around barefoot!
The outside shell of the semi (cicada) in Japanese it is called utsusemi and is quite fragile. Kinda ugly, yeah?
Last night, we walked to the Minoo Falls area thinking it was lit up with all these candles (I had seen an ad)--It was the weekend before. :( The falls were lit up with regular lights though, although my digital camera didn't take very good photos at night. :( Though, I was able to catch a butterfly trying to figure out what to drink at a vending machine.
And lastly, a foodie item, this curry pan (fried bread filled with curry) is made at a bakery inside of a nearby supermarket. This is the first time I've come across a curry pan that actually had chunks of beef in it and the bread is actually fluffy in texture! Delicious!
Hope you are keeping cool where you are! Have a good week!





Hope you are keeping cool where you are! Have a good week!
Adventure tags:
cicada,
curry,
Japan,
minoo,
neighborhood,
playground,
summer,
utsusemi
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)