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Nocturnal Hunt

Winter 2016-17

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Cuttings

Nocturnal Hunt

I have a small vegetable and herb garden at the back of my house in Houston, which includes a couple of basil plants. They were doing very well until I noticed that huge chunks were being gouged out of the leaves. I know from experience that the best time to find culprits in a garden is at night, so after I returned from a very uplifting choral concert, I grabbed my flashlight and headed for the sleeping garden behind my house. Sure enough, there it was, a huge, long, black insect, caught in flagrante delicto, devouring my ever-shrinking basil plant. I raced into my garage for a pair of garden gloves and a disposable container, cut off the leaf it was enjoying, and dropped the intruder in.

I did not want to kill it, after all. It was just busy doing what it was born to do. I consulted the online oracle and saw that I was dealing with a California Timema, related to the walking stick insect. The larger female spends most of her life carrying around the smaller male on her back (that may sound all too familiar to some women who read this), dropping her eggs as she goes, which stay in the ground through the winter and hatch in the spring. I think that I had found the female because she was very large. But what to do with her?

I came up with the perfect solution. It was well past midnight by this point, so I slipped down the block to the house of a man whom I know treats his girlfriend very badly. With no compunction at all, I tipped out the Timema into the soft and fragrant foliage of his herb garden wishing her bon appetit, feeling pleased that not only had I avoided taking a life, but I’d also delivered symbolic justice on someone who well deserved it.

By Susan P. Blevins of Houston, TX.

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

  • At The Gate
  • Contributors
  • Stories

  • My Sprawling Cherry Tomato Plants
  • My Garden Origin Story
  • The Old Rose
  • Wish Books
  • Great Garden Quotes
  • King Roscoe, His Royal Hineyness
  • Happy Ending
  • Miracle in Pink
  • Chester the Toad
  • I’m a Peasant
  • Turning Certainties
  • Tomato Heartburn
  • The Prison Garden
  • Snail Wars
  • The Most Unforgettable Christmas Tree
  • Aim for Beauty
  • After the Spring
  • Buds

  • There Might Be A Place
  • The Garden Needs You
  • Pernicious Machineries
  • Poems

  • Spring in Winter
  • Cuttings

  • The Lucky One
  • Perennial Friend
  • Nocturnal Hunt
  • Some Too-Exciting Evening
  • Broken Trowel

  • The Great Peony Massacre
  • The GreenPrints Letter

  • Sammy Gets Married!

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