With no joy I bring you news of the lawn-eating beetles, which will add their distinctive unpleasantness to the chunky goulash of calamity we call 2020.
But first, other insect news: We have reports of the dreaded ground bees.
If that's the technical term. Probably not. What do I know of these things? Nothing.
I'm not even good with the names of trees. Oh, birches and firs I can recognize. Elms I can quickly identify by the big stumps on the boulevard. Beyond that I'm useless, and just call the tree "Buddy" or "Sport" or other names you use when you've forgotten the name. Or I make up fake Latin and hope the person with whom I'm conversing is not a professional treeologist.
"Yes, I love the way the leaves of that … woodus branchus turn in the fall. Almost as good as the tallus treecus, wouldn't you say?"
"You do know I'm an arborist, right? And that you're speaking nonsense?"
"If I knew the word 'arborist,' I wouldn't have called you a treeologist a few paragraphs above, would I?"
If trees wore name tags, that'd be great. Birds, too.