Thursday 28 October 2010

The Lizard's Day

This is a story I wrote yesterday for an assignment in school. I wrote it using from the perspective of the lizard:

The Lizard's Day

The lizard wakes to a warm sunny morning, but too cold to go get breakfast. He decides he should wait awhile.
After about ten minutes, he is warm enough to start hunting. He looks around briefly to see if there is food nearby; ah, his eyes fall upon a beetle scurrying across the rocky terrain and the chase is on!
He chases that beetle till he is just about on it. As he opens his mouth to engulf it a horrible sting burns his tongue. This is no breakfast, but a bombardier beetle! YUCK!!
Soon, luckily, a suitable breakfast comes along, and he enjoys his meal.
The lizard continues to bask on his warm, beautiful, rock, taking in the sun's warmth. But oh no, what does he hear? It is the screech of an eagle and the beating of wings; this is no time to bask in the sun. Full of energy and fear, he dashes for a crevasse in the rock. Just as he reached it, the eagle's sharp beak rips his tail off, but that's all the eagle gets - the tail, and the lizard's tail end closes up so not much blood is lost.

In the early evening, the lizard is once again basking, waiting, and being hungry. He hears a rustling sound in the nearby grass. Thinking it another meal, he crawls curiously towards it, but to his surprise it's another lizard, a rival lizard. The two reptiles aggressively size each other up, wondering who will attack first. The rival lunges at his enemy inflicting wounds into his tail. But the current ruler bites back at the attacker's neck hard enough to discourage his opponent and then he chases it away. Thus the owner keeps his territory. And the lizard retires for the night and slinks back to his crevasse.




Monday 18 October 2010

Spiders in Hunting

Spider study continued. I recently found another large orb spider outside on a window under the deck. It is larger than mine and is more active too. I will tell you how spiders catch and eat their prey. The Wolf spider chases its lunch down while the Spitting Spider shoots out streams of goo at its prey to trap it then it goes to it and bites. Trapdoor spiders dig a burrow and wait for an insect to walk near and it darts out and grabs it. Spiders do not actually eat there prey, skeleton and all. BSSut inject them with things that digest there insides and they drink it out like a soda. spiders who have webs sometimes can not see very well so they rel on vibration. When and insect gets into a web such as an orb spiders it senses the movements in the web and rushes out to grab it and then it injects it with venom. This movie will show how orb spiders hunt. And watch closely and you might see little flashes at the ends of its body that is the silk its wrapping it up with

Wednesday 13 October 2010

My Arachnid ( arak- nid )




A little while ago, I got a spider as a pet, to be exact it is an Orb Spider. In my eyes it is a beautiful creature, designed by God himself. I acquired this interesting pet by walking by the fence, and to my my surprise, I saw a giant spider! This one is around an inch long and an inch across including the legs. This spider is in the arachnid family, which includes scorpions, mites, and spiders. You can classify an arachnid by how many legs it's got and how many body sections, which is usually two. Spiders are not in the insect family because insects have six legs and three body sections. I take care of my spider by putting them in a terrarium and adding the kinds of things they would have in the wild. If you want to have a pet spider try to make it's habitat as realistic as possible. I even make it rain in his cage by dripping water on and in the cage. My spider very amazingly made a web the same way it would have in the wild and it's web works. Taking the advantage of this awesome thing: I feed flies to the spider and it catches the flies in the web and then attacks it, sometimes wraps it up and sucks it dry. I marvel at how God took time to make this small spider and it just ends up being a thing people run from when they see it.