Prairie Life
By
Amy McDowell
My little brother and I saw the giant
sinister spider at the same time, and our voices combined into one terrified,
high-pitched squeal. Screaming nonstop, we raced through the prairie up the
hill towards home, Mom, and safety. I was perhaps five, so Jeremy would’ve been
four, and the tall prairie grasses towered several feet over our heads. The
prairie was a labyrinth, but we knew home was up the hill.
We spewed, screaming, from the wild prairie
onto our neatly mown lawn. Wide-eyed and breathless, we told Mom about the
horrific spider. She was fascinated, and said she’d like to see it. Jeremy and
I stared at her with our mouths hanging open. Surely, she was joking. Nope –
she wanted to see the grotesque monster spider.
We
agreed to go only after Mom promised that she would stay right by us.
Reluctantly, we led her back into the prairie, seeking the spider. We looked
and looked, but couldn’t find it. Our fears subsided and it became a challenge
to find it, to prove to Mom how really scary it was.
Finally, we gave up and went back to the top
of the hill. Mom returned to her laundry on the clothesline, and Jeremy and I
stood on our tiptoes peering down the hill over the prairie. It was the next
season before we had the guts to venture in by ourselves again.
My memories of the fear are distinct, but
details of the spider’s appearance are long gone. Today I think the spider we
saw was probably an orb weaver. The black and yellow argiope orb weavers have
bold markings and perch in the center of their large flat webs. They can grow
to be three inches from toe to, well, toe.
These days I see orb weavers in the
summertime garden frequently, but my reaction to them has changed. I feel
joyous, for I take them as a sign that my garden is environmentally healthy. I
know they won’t harm me; they are predators of the insects in my garden. They
are doing me a favor.
I have grown to love prairies and the
fascinating hum of life within them. When I visit the 5,000-acre prairie at the
Neal Smith National Wildlife Refuge near Prairie City, the sound of the wind
through the tall grasses soothes me to the soul. It is so peaceful it takes my
breath away.