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Ulster Star
30/08/2002 |
Event at Castle Espie
FOLLOW the crowds to Castle Espie on 7 and 8 September for the Green
Living Fair. There will be idealists there, along with practical folk,
but the one thing they have in common is to provide a better world for
ourselves and our future generations.
There are workshops running all day, with such titles
as Trees for the Future, Propagating Wildflowers, Renewable Energy on
a Small Scale. You can wonder around the Castle grounds, meet a Owl
Man, listen to Pedal Powered Music, view the Irish Brent Satellite
Tracking Website.
There are a total of 13 workshops, and a total of 20
events, and hopefully a total of thousands of visitors.
The reason for the timing is that the politicians are running off to
Johannesburg to fight for a better earth, but the Castle Espie ones
are showing it to local folk on the ground. If the politicians want to
come, they are welcome as well.
A Devil's coach horse moved between stones down the
bank, and when it saw me it quickly hid under a stone. It must have
been more afraid of me that I of her. As insects go, it is quite
large. 25 mm in length, and can look menacing.
It is a common species, and it frequently visits damp
houses and gardens. This particular one was in a friend's garden. It
is when it decides that you are an enemy that the posturing starts,
and it can surely scare humans. It is such a good actress that it
almost scares me, even though I know it is harmless.
Beetle
The Devil's coach horse is a rove beetle, and there
are almost 1,000 species of rove beetle in Britain and Ireland. The
coach horse is our largest one.
If you come across a Devil's coach horse for the first
time you think, what a large black insect, how unusual! Then it
detects you, figures you as an enemy, and curls its tail up like a
scorpion, and you just want to get away from it. But it is harmless to
humans.
Other reactions of the Devils coach horse If it feels threatened it
can curl its tail over its body, and then it emits a deterrent smell,
guaranteed to make any creature decide to go the other way.
While humans may feel safe in the presence of this creature other
lesser beasts would feel distinctly apprehensive.
The horse is predatory, and is a beetle with a
powerful pair of mandibles, which it uses to great effect when
acquiring spiders, caterpillars and earwigs, and any other small thing
which moves. It enjoys them all for lunch and dinner.
It was in an English book that I learned that the
Devil's coach horse has a place in Irish mythology. It seems that this
beetle is a symbol of corruption, and is able to kill simply on sight.
It will appear after dealing with the devil, and it will then eat
sinners.
The tail, which looks so grand if forbidding, can cast
a curse if raised.
What utter rubbish, but it reminds me to be careful in
the presence of the Devil's coach horse.
