Bug out with Ava

Bug out with Ava Bug out with Ava! Bug Zoo Parties. Ava is an aspiring entomologist.

05/17/2026
05/16/2026
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05/06/2026

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I am not a pest. The perfect circles cut from your rose leaves weren't made by a caterpillar, a beetle, or a disease.

They were cut by a bee. With her jaws. Standing on the leaf, she rotated her body and sliced a circle around herself — like a compass drawing a curve — then flew away with the piece.

She's a leafcutter bee. She's using the circles to wallpaper a nursery.

🐦 Each circle lines a brood cell inside a narrow cavity — a hollow stem, a beetle hole in wood, a gap in a fence post. She stacks the cells in a row, like a roll of coins. Round pieces form the caps. Oval pieces form the walls. Each cell gets a ball of pollen and nectar, then a single egg, then a leaf cap. Sealed. Done.

She carries pollen on her belly, not her legs — a brush of dense hair on her abdomen called a scopa. She's one of the most efficient pollinators in the eastern U.S. One leafcutter bee does the pollination work of roughly twenty honeybees.

She doesn't make honey. She doesn't live in a hive. She doesn't sting unless physically crushed between your skin and a hard surface. She's solitary. She builds alone. She provisions alone. She seals the nursery and leaves.

🌿 If you find circular holes in rose leaves:
- That's her signature — clean, precise, always at the leaf edge
- The plant is fine — leafcutter damage is cosmetic, not structural
- She's nesting within a few hundred feet of the cuts

The circles in the rose leaves aren't damage. They're building materials.

She cut them with her own jaws, carried them one at a time, and wallpapered a nursery you'll never find. 🌱

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04/30/2026

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A luna moth on your siding at dawn isn't dead. She's resting.

Adult luna moths have no mouths. They can't eat or drink. They emerge from the cocoon with a fixed fuel reserve that has to last their entire adult life — roughly a week. She's not resting between meals. She's rationing for the one thing she emerged to do.

She's on your wall because your porch light pulled her in. Moths navigate by the moon, and an artificial light hijacks that instinct. She spiraled toward it instead of finding a mate.

- If you find one on siding or a screen door, leave her. She'll rest all day and fly at true dark
- If she's somewhere a cat will find her, slide paper under her feet — she'll grip it — and carry her to a shaded tree trunk
- Don't touch the wings. The scales rub off and don't grow back
- Swap white porch bulbs for warm amber LEDs — moths don't orient to those wavelengths
- Put exterior lights on a timer that cuts off by 10 p.m. — peak moth flight is the hours you're asleep anyway

A luna moth that was common a generation ago is now a sighting people photograph. The porch light is most of the reason.

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Jacksonville, FL

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