My favorite firefly story... Elkmont, Tn. Experiencing the once in a lifetime event ... The magic of synchronized fireflies... enhanced by meeting a new friend, you.
@radimsch4 жыл бұрын
Hi Toni! yes! I remember. It was special to meet you in Elkmont. I hope you can write the story for my blog here: fireflyexperience.org/blogs/your-firefly-story/my-favorite-firefly-story
@susansanchez47944 жыл бұрын
Such a beautiful, magical video, how such little insects glow with such beauty, I don't live in an area where fireflies are, I wish I did but your videos make me feel like I'm there, keep posting more of these, hugs from Orange County, Ca 😊
@radimsch4 жыл бұрын
Oh, thank you! Stay tuned :-)
@susansanchez47944 жыл бұрын
@@radimsch I sure will, can hardly wait, take care and stay safe 😊
@robertabate3617 Жыл бұрын
Growing up in chautauqua County New York I remember them since childhood. I don't know if it's a good story, but last summer I was on the porch, a firefly flew into a spider web . I gently got it out but the web was sticky and it was bound up. If I tried pulling it off I could have killed it. So as it was in my hand it was slowly freeing itself, methodically like houdini. It regained itself and then flew away. I filmed it on my phone. Have you been here or the Allegheny region? I spent every evening during fire fly season watching them last summer. I noticed that some are more yellow and others green. I hear that in the Allegheny forest there are synchronizing fire flies , about an hour from here.
@skull0034 ай бұрын
Your story makes me sad..sad because i remember growing up we used to go camping and find fireflies ..we break their abdomen for the glow and rub it in our foreheads...We did not know better..we should have cherish their magic and beauty without harming them 😢. I feel sad remembering what we did as kids. I feel more sad now knowing the population is dropping due to pesticides and pollution. We as a species have so much trauma to resolve and so much to grow before we can fully appreciate life in all its beauty, in all forms shapes and sizes.
@PeppersnGlowworms3 жыл бұрын
I moved my channel a while ago and all my old comments were deleted. So I will re-post my story again here: It is about how I first met some long term companions of mine. In the year 2004 I partook in a field trip to the island Sardinia (Italy). I was already a huge lampyrid nerd, although I personally had met any of them only in two places so far. Once, as a child, during a vacation in Turkey in the summer of 1988. That was my first contact, so to speak. In 1996 I stumbled upon the first specimen in my home country of Germany. It was a rainy September night and only a weakly glowing larva, but I was blown away by the fact that they live here as well! I did some digging and collected all information I could get my hands on. I became an obsessed Fireflyer, basically, and started a collection of German sightings as a school science project. A few years later I was studying biology and that field trip to Sardinia came close. I was fairly excited, because there are multiple species of lampyrid occuring, even one that has been found only on that island, Lampyris sardiniae. After all that build-up, can you imagine how I felt, when I first spotted a Sardinian glowworm while searching through some leaf litter? That moment is burned into my memory. It was a well fed larva with lovely magenta coloration on the sides. I showed it to my professor and he was like: "Yes, this could very well be the larva of a lampyrid, what makes you so sure?" I smiled. My reply: "It glows..." Indeed, it was so well fed, that it showed the behaviour of disturbance induced glowing, likely to advertise poor taste and toxicity to would-be predators in lieu of trying to escape by crawling away with said "well fed" body. Later during the field trip there were even larvae walking right across our path in different areas of Sardinia. In spring, larvae of certain species start walking about during the day. This might assist dispersal just before pupation. I collected a few larvae and they traveled with me across Sardinia, carefully shielded from the heat of the day in a thermobox. Some small snails were also collected and given as food. It has been my dream to breed fireflies since that rainy September night in 1996, so this was what I tried back home. It turned out, that there was only one male among the nine specimens. But they reproduced and this male became the sire of my colony of Sardinian glowworms, which I could indeed verify as belonging to the species Lampyris sardiniae. Now in 2021, offspring of the 22nd generation are still with me and I have been able to share some of these amazing animals for projects of art, education, and science without the need to take further individuals from the wild. These Sardinian glowworms have been and continue to be a constant part of my every day life since 2004 and I am very grateful for that.
@PeppersnGlowworms3 жыл бұрын
I also made a video from it at: kzbin.info/www/bejne/q4LQgqFmidaGo5Y