SCORCHING WINDS RIPPLED through the sea of brown grass as Tom and his pony drove the family’s small herd of cattle onto the prairie to graze. Tom’s father had gone into town that morning, leaving the ten-year-old in charge of the herd. Fences were rare on the Kansas frontier, and it was Tom’s job to keep the family’scattle from scattering over the vast grassland.
As he scanned the western sky, hoping for any sign of rain that might yet rescue his family’s drought-shriveled crops, Tom noticed a mysterious cloud forming on the horizon. Soon its dark, smoky wisps grew into a thick, eerie brown mass that began covering the prairie in shadow. It was as if a blanket were being pulled over the earth.
A weird buzzing and whirring noise came from inside the cloud. As it swept overhead, large grasshoppers began dropping from the sky, pelting the ground like hail. They thudded against Tom, clinging to his clothes with their spindly legs.
Grasshoppers soon blanketed everything, including Tom’s cattle. Bawling and bellowing, the frightened animals stampeded across the prairie. Tom chased them through the blizzard of grasshoppers for miles. Finally, the exhausted cattle slowed, and Tom was able to turn the herd around. On the way back he met up with his father, who had followed the cattle’s trail for three hours to find him. They continued their trip home through a devastated countryside that no longer looked familiar.
The insects causing havoc with Tom’s cattle that summer of 1874 were Rocky Mountain locusts, a type of grasshopper with a split personality. For periods lasting several years, locusts act like other grasshoppers. They stay close to their home range and feed in a limited area. But during severe droughts, when conditions are right, locusts become the supermen of the insect world. They grow larger and stronger, and their bodies change from green to a dark brown or black. They mass together in gigantic mobs and take to the air in search of food. Over several generations, locust swarms become so enormous and their destruction so widespread that their invasions are called plagues. Once a plague starts, there is no way to stop it.
هذه القصة مأخوذة من طبعة April 2017 من Cricket Magazine for Kids.
ابدأ النسخة التجريبية المجانية من Magzter GOLD لمدة 7 أيام للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة وأكثر من 9,000 مجلة وصحيفة.
بالفعل مشترك ? تسجيل الدخول
هذه القصة مأخوذة من طبعة April 2017 من Cricket Magazine for Kids.
ابدأ النسخة التجريبية المجانية من Magzter GOLD لمدة 7 أيام للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة وأكثر من 9,000 مجلة وصحيفة.
بالفعل مشترك? تسجيل الدخول
The Tale Of Paddy Ahern
THERE ONCE WAS a lad named Paddy Ahern who trod the green hills of Limerick, Ireland, offering to help farmers with their chores in return for food and lodging.
The Pedestrians
EACH TIME HELGA Estby looked over her shoulder, the big cat was there. Crossing Wyoming’s Red Desert on foot, in the dust and heat of August 1896, was tough.
The Magic Gifts
A Basque Folk Tale
The Dragon's Scales
“THREE YEARS I'VE been waiting, when Torquil promised he’d return them in three days. I’m not waiting three more days to get back what’s mine!” The dragon punctuated his remarks with a smoky snort and a lashing tail.
The Water Bucketre
A Chinese Folk Tale.
Between The Pages
One rainy night, while alone in the castle library with her talking gargoyle, Marcus, Princess Audrey finds a book with the odd title Finding Angel. Meanwhile, in modern times, a girl named Angel is celebrating her thirteenth birthday.
Swim Buddies
I LEAN OVER the side of the catamaran and peer into the crystal blue water. This is my last chance, I think.
The Bushwhackers
I CAN’T ABIDE living one more day in this pigpen!” I groaned and rolled out of bed to pull on my dress.
As American as Appleless Pie!
NOTHING IS MORE American than the humble apple pie. There’s even an old saying to prove it: “as American as apple pie.” So it may come as a surprise that many early settlers who forged the trails of our expanding nation were often without apples to make this most American of desserts. As pioneers headed west in pursuit of territory and gold, they had to leave many things behind, including apples. Not only did life on the trail make fresh fruit like apples hard to carry and keep, apple trees were native only to the east coast, which made finding apples in the West nearly impossible.
The Man Who Built A Better Leg
THE CIVIL WAR was only a few weeks old when seven hundred and fifty Confederate recruits gathered in the fields around Philippi, Virginia. It was early June 1861, and as yet there had been no real battles. The men had eagerly volunteered, but most had no training as soldiers. Their only weapons were the ones they brought from home— old-fashioned flintlock muskets, cap and ball pistols, and a few shotguns.