What Insect are you? - Printable Version +- Garden And Gossip Forums (https://gardenandgossip.org) +-- Forum: General (https://gardenandgossip.org/forumdisplay.php?fid=6) +--- Forum: Nutty as a fruit cake (https://gardenandgossip.org/forumdisplay.php?fid=22) +--- Thread: What Insect are you? (/showthread.php?tid=277) |
RE: What Insect are you? - Bren - 26-06-2020 Just done mine but I really wanted to be a scorpion same as my avatar but I'm a grasshopper. It looks like you have lots in common with high-jumping, musical grasshoppers. RE: What Insect are you? - Veggie - 26-06-2020 Its all the trampolining you do,, Bren. RE: What Insect are you? - JJB - 26-06-2020 (26-06-2020, 07:01 PM)Veggie Wrote: Are you out at night like PP? Not on your Nelly, nowhere to go! Perhaps I'm furry and drab, but that's a bit of an insult to moths. RE: What Insect are you? - Neffa - 26-06-2020 Ah......Grasshopper Anyone remember the prog? RE: What Insect are you? - Vinny - 27-06-2020 Another Ladybird here. Help get rid of the sodding greenfly at least (apologies if you are a greenfly!) RE: What Insect are you? - Vinny - 27-06-2020 (26-06-2020, 08:46 PM)Neffa Wrote: Ah......GrasshopperPronounced 'Glasshooper' RE: What Insect are you? - Mark_Riga - 27-06-2020 Turns out I'm a moth as well. But a few questions they asked didn't have the right answer for me. RE: What Insect are you? - Can the Man - 27-06-2020 (26-06-2020, 08:46 PM)Neffa Wrote: Ah......GrasshopperYes Neffa, was it Kung Fu with David Carridine ? RE: What Insect are you? - Mikey - 28-06-2020 I'm a bit gutted I wanted to be a stag beetle but, I was an ant, will have another go... I think it's rigged there are no stag beetles in there. RE: What Insect are you? - SarrissUK - 29-06-2020 I'm a moth too "It seems, like marvellous moths, you have an underappreciated style. Often dismissed as butterflies' drab cousins, many moths wear striking patterns and colours, like this emperor moth. Moths have developed cunning ways to evade bats, their biggest predators. Some moths make high-pitched, ultrasonic squeaks that jam the sonar bats use to locate them. Adult moths stick to an all-liquid diet (if they eat at all). Most drink nectar from flowers, sap from trees or sugary liquid from fruits. Many moths doze all day and stay up at night. Some flowers have evolved to produce night-time perfume to attract moths to them. But some moths can see colours in the dark." |