CajunMama wrote:Those videos gave me the heebie jeebies! I can't stand grasshoppers/locusts.
Nor can I!!! I don't mind the little ones too much but when the big migratory ones come......
I found a letter written by a Texan, who lived in Boerne, that talked about an infestation there (written/published in the 1860's)
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FB0917F83B59107B93C3AA178BD95F438684F9************************************
A Texan in Australia: A Texan farmer goes to Australia for a vacation. There he meets an Aussie farmer and gets to talkin. The Aussie shows off his big wheat field and the Texan says, “Oh! We have wheat fields that are at least twice that big”! They walk around the ranch a little, and the Aussie shows off his herd of cattle. The Texan immediately says, “We have longhorns that are at least twice as big as your cows”. The conversation has, meanwhile, almost died when the Texan sees a herd of kangaroos hopping through the field. He asks, “And what are those”? The Aussie replies with an incredulous look,
“Don’t you have any grasshoppers in Texas”?
(his reply is in this interesting blog from a Texan)
http://theforkintheroad.wordpress.com/2011/08/01/the-grasshopper-and-the-cow/***************************
And some *fun*

stats:
"I got that statistic from Jeffery Lockwood, entomology professor at the University of Wyoming: a knowledgeable guy with a flair for memorable quotes. I asked Jeff how he computed the figure after I read your question.
Jeff says a cow eats 30 pounds in a day. So, first we calculate how many grasshoppers eat as much as a cow. A decent-sized grasshopper eats at least 0.1 grams (0.0002188 lb) of food per day. Thus, for one day, thirty pounds of food supports 137,111 grasshoppers (30 lb / 0.0002188 lb). That's a lot of grasshoppers.
Then we look at densities and areas. If one grasshopper eats 0.1 g, then a density of 6 or 7 grasshoppers per sq. yd. eat 0.6 or 0.7 grams per sq. yd. But note: we're talking about a small area-- 1 square yard. That's the misleading lurk.
However, we're really interested in the area needed to feed that big number (137,111) of grasshoppers. At a density of 6.5 grasshoppers per square yard, that grasshopper horde needs an area of 21,094 square yards (137,111 grasshoppers / 6.5 grasshoppers / sq. yd.) or 4.36 acres of the voracious pests.
Jeff lives in Wyoming where it takes about 5 acres to support a cow with the required 30 pounds of fodder, but 5 acres of grasshoppers (at a density of 6.5 per sq. yd.) will eat 34 pounds of food (30 x 5 / 4.36). So the grasshoppers do eat more than the cow. "
http://www.wonderquest.com/grasshopper-stats.htm*****************************
Oh how they'd love the yards of those Houstonians that aren't rationing water!
