^^^^finally, someone outside northeast NC and SE VA knows what a no-see-um is.We always called them “no-see-ums”. My little brother was constantly swarmed and ate up. They never bothered me
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^^^^finally, someone outside northeast NC and SE VA knows what a no-see-um is.We always called them “no-see-ums”. My little brother was constantly swarmed and ate up. They never bothered me
We got no-see-ums up in the north east too. Also, on Cape Cod and up on the north shore and into the NH beaches they got these flies called Greenhead Horse Flies. They are savages.^^^^finally, someone outside northeast NC and SE VA knows what a no-see-um is.
That’s right. They’re called that in South Georgia too. I’d rather not see um at all! I’m sure the aquatic larvae play a very important food role in our ecosystem, but we could all do without the adults. The bane of any serious outdoorsman’s existence down here.We always called them “no-see-ums”. My little brother was constantly swarmed and ate up. They never bothered me
80s I worked in sarasota and miami and tampa and jacksonville.Amen! If any of you fine folks don't know what a sand gnat is, be thankful. Imagine a swarming insect the size of a tiny speck of pepper that will chew into your skin. We're not talking mosquito piercing, we're talking razor-like mouthpart biting. And my poor son is allergic to their bite. He got eaten up from a little bitty boy all the way through high school playing football. Bug spray is a must in Coastal Georgia-North Florida, especially in spring-summer.
Probably a palmetto bug they get big over thereAnd a bug that looked like some kind of a cockroach but it was about the size of my big toe