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Sunday, June 28, 2026

Heat

College students are usually required to study a few iconic figures of history. Two of these are Salvador Dali and Sigmund Freud. While most come away from the experience feeling that Freud was misguided and Dali was deranged, some notice that these men developed amazing insights in their own way
The spadefoot frogs are almost an impossibility. These soft creatures break out of the tough hardpan as the rains gather above. That gaze of "distracted fixation" is exactly what Dali wrote in his 1937 book titled "Metamorphosis of Narcissus" as he dove into the world of "paranoiac-critical method" as he studied the Freudian field of dream analysis.
In Freudian dream analysis ants represent repressed feelings that "boil" out of the inscrutable earth. Dali was fascinated with dreams and used the motif of ants in his paintings to symbolize feelings uncontrolled and the erosion by nature. This carpenter ant seems to be a bit stereotyped by these avatars of creativity. Everything ants do is controlled and directed to definite goals. We just don't understand it. Right now the ants are swarming and spreading their fertilized queens.
Narcissus in legend was a vibrant youth who was brought low by the goddess Nemesis for an indifference to the attentions of the water nymph Echo. This Western Pondhawk dragonfly is a beautiful predator that is often found gazing at its reflection. This is a female, the males are powder blue. Unlike most dragonfly, this species perches close to the ground and hunts damselflies and smaller dragonflies.
This is a water scavenger beetle. It keeps a silvery air bubble in hairs against its abdomen while underwater. Freud postulated that the delicate human ego expresses guilt as a defense against subconscious desires that are uncivilized. Both Freud and Dali were deeply flawed individuals who brought some illumination on the dark recesses of the human mind. Where most people were interested in, but also glad to avoid. The scavenger beetle goes where other beetles cannot for these same, very good reasons. There are few predators in the oxygen poor depths of wetlands, and none of the effective ones like birds or lizards. There is a form of freedom in the solitary.
There are universes in the human condition that we hopefully never need to experience, even as we want to learn of their existence. I still am quite unsure what this critter is I found in a droplet of pond water. Looking at the world through a microscope is time consuming and very frustrating without a map. In London in July 1938 Dali and Freud sat down for tea. Freud had just fled the Nazi Austria and Dali had been displaced by the Spanish civil war. Their meeting was a colossal misunderstanding of two inerlectual giants. The microscopic world can often seem like that, where nothing seen makes any sense, and often, there is no reference to consult (no, not even the internet)
This is  Tetragnatha laboriosa it is very delicate web creating spider always found above still water, where its delicate webs collect emerging water insects like gnats, or mayfly. Being this lightweight allows the spider to mimic dry grass, as well as to run across the surface of water. In Freud's book, the interpretation of dreams, condensation is how the mind hides meanings behind confusing symbology and dream interpretations. This spider just wants to avoid confrontations, but the mimicry is the exact same.
 
After the detonation of the Atomic bomb, Dali became obsessed with "Nuclear mysticism" and turned his impressive technical painting skills to trying to capture themes of the invisible power of interatomic force. He also explored the themes of classic faith as a shield against the horrors of war. This is the velvet ant, actually a type of parasitic wasp armored against basically everything. Its shell is so strong entomologists have to use thickened pins to mount them. Its short stiff red hairs prevent ant bites from getting close enough to grip. The curved surfaces on its thorax resist gripping by rodent teeth and its stinger deals with anything that manages to engulf it, like a toad's mouth.
Here are several eggs of a house finch laid in a nest under eaves of our house. Several bird species have learnt they can raise more broods using human structures. Barn swallows are named for them. The egg is a well known motif for rebirth. In Dali's famous "Metamorphosis of Narcissus" the egg symbolizes growth of the self. House finches are likely developing into a different species as the evolutionary pressures are very different. While urban finches have different beaks, better designed to handle the sunflowers found in bird feeders, they are known to be better at problem solving and are able to solve while humans are nearby. In the double plane style of Dali the two styles of finch exist side by side in the boundary between humans and wilderness.
Brachycistis genus species. The males are delicate and winged. It is designed to travel and detect females. The females dig, looking for beetle grubs to parasitize. Freud interpreted insect phobias as a manifestation of internalized traumas and anxieties that society represses for the temporary individual social gain. It can we weird that while humans know there are more species of wasp than any other group, yet individual people always assume every wasp is a eusocial paper wasp.
Spiders exist in many types. In the summer season the most common genus is the active, muscular jumping spiders. The reason for this is actually uncanny. Specifically it is "Das Unheimliche" as written about by Freud in 1919. Without human activity, the sensitive senses of smell and vibrations are the best hunting strategy. However, with heavy vibration sources such as sound, vehicles, AC units, and shouting, the delicate vibrations of insects walking on a leaf are drowned out. This gives a huge advantage to spiders that hunt using sight, like the jumping spiders. Solitary spiders are kept in check by ant species that work as a super orgainsm, not by direct killing, but by a method of "ecology of fear" Freud completely explained this around world war 1, just for humans, not insects.
"Je suis fou du chocolat Lanvin!" This was a famous advertising slogan for snail shaped chocolates sold by Salvador Dali and is a quasi economic artistic banner that surrealism showed up so well. These leafhoppers are processing plant fluid and excreting sugars that the ants crave like chocolate. In return the ants protect the insects from predator such as jumping spiders. Leafhoppers are very active, so the ants produce chemical tranquillizers such as dendrolasin to keep them tranquil. There are many chemical signals that allow communication and control of these insects.
in 1974 Dali illustrated a poem by Tristan Corbiere entitled "Le Crapeau". In typical Dali fashion it looked like the crazed doodling of a purile minded adolescent, but there is a suggestion of a toad. The poem wasn't very good, either. But on deeper inspection the detailed workmanship in gold leaf borders on amazing. 300 copies were produced (many destroyed in accidents) and today they sell for several thousand dollars each. The toad is common and named after the famous naturalist Samuel Woodhouse who first collected a specimen in 1851 that currently resides in the Smithsonian
Polyphylla decemlineata is a common beetle found in the Summer in Corrales. Those huge antlers are scent organs designed to detect pheromones of buried virgin females beneath the soil. Dali's personal obsessions often revolved around his "muse" Gala who was the anchor that made a possible manic sociopath into a highly successful Spanish artist.
For a few weeks in the year the crickets can be heard and seen. This is a Spring Field Cricket. Like most of the summer insects, they are attuned to the night soundscape. Freud was famously afraid of unfiltered Id as expressed in music. It made him anxious because he couldn't rationalize the emotions evoked. Crickets have adapted to music and it shapes their activities. These crickets exploit the dawn when other insects like katydids and cicadas are winding down to be heard better and communicate with their species. Their noise is both territorial andd alluring, depending on the gender of the listening cricket.
Studying the microscope world usually creates more questions, which is usually the first step to greater understanding. Taking two steps back to move forwards is an odd way of progressing. Late Dali was interested in how matter could be composed mostly of empty space. I think about his explorations in that field often when I'm trying to figure out whatever it is this animal is found in a drop of pond water.
Coyotes are a very polarizing creature in Corrales. I notice that animals people think they know well are often the most difficult to understand. People's beliefs get in the way of their understanding. Pankejeff was a famous patient of Freud who after being cured continued to have neurosis but then had to see other practitioners because Freud had no further use for a patient who was "not ill" decades later. His nick-name was "the wolf-man" and most of the therapist's conclusions have been disputed by the patient himself. The coyote is likewise very misunderstood and stories are confused about what they do and their intentions.
One of the coolest things about Corrales by the river is the holes. All sorts of things make holes in corrales and they are not all obvious. This one is a mini-eruption from something coming out from below, cracking the hard clay surface. What could it be?
Cicadas spend most o their lives underground eating tree roots. This particular one died as it couldn't escape from its final pupal stage into a winged adult. The term is dysecdysis and happens when the emergence from the old shell takes too long. The inner structure hardens before the molt is able to fully escape. Usually because the temperature was too high, or the humidity too low, or there is a genetic defect.
Kafka wrote how a person manifested as a beetle, his outer appearance now matching his inner sense of worth. This doesn't say much about beetles, and that is the point. Kafka went to quite some lengths to prevent the focus of the book being about the insect exterior. This click beetle species is in the genus Glyphonyx is surprisingly well defined for an insect that humans don't persecute. Its Latin name is referenced for the fine hooks on the legs designed for climbing vegetation.
Most of these animals are very unique and interesting. Like people such as Dali and Freud these creatures are weird and odd, but on close inspection they are also amazing and impressively nuanced. Also, sadly they seem very unrelated to the everyday world most of us live in currently.

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