That Time When a Critter in the Canal Tried to Eat Me

When I was little, my family spent a lot of time with my parents’ friends the Bennions. My first memory of visiting the Bennions was when they lived somewhere in the Salt Lake Valley, in Murray, maybe? In my memory, their house had a gradual ramp of some sort inside, and I rode down it on a tiny little riding toy. I might have been two or three years old. I remember the ramp as being huge and really steep. It was probably almost perfectly level in real life.

New Place

When I was four, we moved from Boise, Idaho, to Price, Utah. Sometime later that year, we visited the Bennions at their new place outside of Vernal, Utah. They had bought a small farm, and while we were there I learned how to ride a bike on the concrete basketball court behind their house. I remember the weather being dreary, and there were thin layers of water and ice on the surface of the basketball court. My mom was not pleased that I now knew how to ride a bike. With me, that could only mean trouble.

For four years we lived in Price, a few hours’ drive away from Vernal where the Bennions lived. Then we moved to Vernal ourselves, where we lived for a year. During those five years, we regularly spent holidays at the Bennions’ farm. Thanksgiving, summer visits, sleepovers, and more. Sometimes my mom would drop one or more of us off at the Bennions’ for a play day with their kids.

The Canal

There was a slow-flowing irrigation canal across the road from the Bennions’ house. It was an old canal. During the summer it was the de-facto swimming pool for kids in the community. The canal had huge cottonwood trees growing on its sloped banks, hanging over the water and providing nice shade during summer months. The banks were low and in most places they were easy to climb up and down. We loved hanging out there, swimming, wading, having water fights, and watching the other kids and even adults who came there to escape from the summer heat.

Playing in the canal (courtesy of Beckie Bennion)

On one of our visits to the Bennions’ we went swimming at the canal early in the day. It was hot, and there were a lot of kids there. While I was swimming, I felt a sudden, stabbing pain on one of my outer thighs. I mean REALLY bad pain! I quickly jumped up and waded out of the water, looking down to see what was hurting me.

Freak Out

What I saw completely FREAKED ME OUT!!! Some kind of bizarre insect had me in the grip of multiple pincer legs, sharp ends buried in my skin. But worse, IT WAS TRYING TO EAT ME!!!! I am not kidding. I AM NOT MAKING THIS UP!! It was quickly and steadily using a beak-like appendage to eat a hole in the side of my leg!! Its legs were latched onto me and its head was buried in my thigh.

I’m pretty sure my words could not possibly convey the horror I felt at what was happening to me. As I clamored up the bank of the canal, I pulled at the thing, trying to get it to let go and to stop eating me. I did manage to get it off of me and flung it away. I walked across the road to the Bennions’ house (I’m certain I was freaked-out sobbing, maybe even screaming at that point in time, but I don’t remember that). As I walked, I realized that my leg wasn’t working right. In fact, it was quickly becoming paralyzed!!!

Damage

I’m not sure who contacted my mom or how long it took for her to come to get me. But by the time we got home, I couldn’t walk at all. My leg was completely paralyzed. Sometime after I got home (it might have been later that day, or maybe it was the day after) I developed the unmistakable signs of blood poisoning. A red ring appeared around the wound, and a red streak extended from it.

Mom took me to see a doctor, and I suspect that the MD put me on antibiotics, although I don’t remember. The paralysis slowly wore off, I regained my ability to walk normally, and eventually I had a full physical recovery.

Trauma

Unfortunately, my mental state did not bounce back quite as fast. I had already been a die-hard bugophobe (hashtag FYI the right kinds of bees CAN sting you more than once!). The canal attack put me over the edge. I’m pretty sure my parents got really tired of listening to me shriek any time some crawling or flying bug-like creature got near me. There’s a high probability that I was suffering from some sort of PTSD after the attack of the canal critter.

An odd thing happened in the years after the canal incident. From time to time I would tell someone the story, and they wouldn’t believe me! I had a clear picture in my head of what I had pulled off of my leg, but I didn’t come across anything in any of my school classes, reading, or TV viewing that matched what I remembered.

The Critter

That was, at least, until I was a teenager. One night my family was sitting together watching a nature show on PBS when lo and behold, here came a segment on giant water bugs. They showed how water bugs and their nymphs attach small fish and pollywogs, grab on, inject paralyzing poison, and suck the insides out of their helpless victims!!! I WAS ONE OF THEM!!!!

Giant water beetle eating lunch

I jumped up in my seat and yelled, “That’s the thing that bit me in Vernal!!!”

Yuck!

Here’s what happens in a water bug or nymph attack: “If prey is successfully grasped it is quickly dispatched with a pierce from the bug’s needle-like rostrum (fused mouth parts) and an injection of toxic enzymes. These enzymes poison the prey and begin to digest it at the same time. Once the enzymes have completed their job the bug again uses its rostrum, but this time sucks out the pre-digested soup that was its prey, leaving a limp bag of skin.” (source: NatureNorth) THAT WAS ME!!!!!

Ew!

It was a huge relief to finally know what had attacked me. It was great to know the source of my personal horror story. I’ve never met anyone else who has had a giant water bug or nymph try to eat them. I’m sure they’re out there, maybe one of you is a fellow victim! Their nickname is “toe biters” for a reason. For me, the moral of the story is this: when a little kid tells you that something in the water tried to eat them, BELIEVE THEM!!! Hahahaha!!!!

Learn More

To learn more, click on this link to a an article in Scientific American. Another great source of information is NatureNorth.

A plug for NatureNorth: You can help NatureNorth produce more great articles with a secure donation through PayPal. I have no connection to them but was happy to find their page on giant water beetles. To learn more follow this link: Support NatureNorth.

Mountains and Lightning and Autism

In the Winds

Mountains

When I was growing up, my family backpacked together. My first official backpacking trip was in the mountains north of Boise, Idaho, when I was four years old. I carried a can of peaches in a little drab green knapsack (and nothing else) and was pretty proud of that. We spent the night in a big sleeping bag with my whole family, the kids squished between my parents. My memory is of two rectangular car camping bags zipped together, taking up the entire floor of our pup tent.

We didn’t do much family backpacking for quite a few years after that first trip, but when I was a teenager we started up again. Over the next decade, one combination or another of my five immediate family members backpacked into one basin after another in the Uinta mountains in Utah and in the Wind Rivers in Wyoming. We logged hundreds of miles on trails in the two mountain ranges combined. It was a routine summer/fall activity for us. We trained in advance for our trips, hiking many miles to get in shape (sometimes carrying backpacks with jugs of water or encyclopedia volumes in them).

Mom planned out our menus and made fresh beef jerky and baked “Logan” bread and dried fruit in a dehydrator and so on. It was a huge undertaking. Then she methodically organized our meals and snacks in carefully-marked plastic bags. Dad had each of us weigh ourselves, then he distributed the gear and food packages among our packs, reweighing from time to time, trying to keep our starting loads at or below the recommended physical limits for our respective body weights.

Our backpacking trips lasted anything from a few days to as long as a week or two. For our longest trips, we cached food ahead of time at midpoints on our planned routes.

Uintas Highline Trail

In my young adult years, after my two older siblings had moved away, my parents and I still backpacked together. Twice, the three of us (and our Old English sheepdog, Chaucer) backpacked the Uintas Highline trail in Utah from one end of the mountain range to the other; once from east to west (a route covering 85 miles) and once from west to east (a 100-mile trip). We did the east-to-west trip just before I left to serve an 18-month church service mission in South Korea. (2 months of language training in Utah, 16 months of missionary work in Seoul.) The west-to-east trip was just after my return to Utah.

Fairly early in the east-to-west trip, my parents and I spent a morning climbing up a valley to a broad ridgeline west of Chepeta Reservoir. As we climbed to the northwest, the forest thinned out until only scattered small scrubby trees remained. Then there were no trees at all. We couldn’t see much ahead of us other than the higher ridgeline and a few clouds. Along the trail here and there we passed surprisingly large rock cairns, some as tall as me or taller. I wondered whether they had been built by sheepherders. The morning weather was a bit sketchy. Shredded white, misty clouds rose up around us and blew past. It was foggy in places.

As we reached a point at the top of the climb where the highline trail turned slightly southwest, we could see to the north of the mountain range for the first time that day. The view was unsettling. Big cumulonimbus clouds were billowing up from floor of the basin to the north of us. As we hiked westward, the clouds rapidly built into a dark, threatening storm that soon rose above the mountains. It was headed our way.

Trouble

In the High Uintas, there are some basic rules for summer travel: Get up early, get packed, and get going. Storms are going to hit—and they’ll often hit hard with little warning—at any time from noon-ish on. Lightning is the biggest danger, but hail, high winds, and driving rain are typical hazards as well. The daily storms can sometimes be avoided by getting over a pass, or by hitting a summit and then getting back down, early in the day. But there are times when circumstances make high altitude travel during storm hours unavoidable. This was one of those times.

It became apparent that the storm was going to reach us soon. The specific place where we were on the Uintas ridge is a kind of wide plateau where the elevation is about 12,000 feet for a mile or more in any direction. There was nowhere safe to go to in the time we had left.

The three of us decided that we would have to hunker down and ride out the storm up there on the ridge. We took off our backpacks, removing a rolled-up foam sleeping pad and a plastic tarp. We put on our rain gear then leaned the metal-framed backpacks against each other. Then we covered them with black garbage bags that we used as pack covers, tucking in the bottoms of the garbage bags to hopefully keep water out.

Lightning

After we had covered the packs, we moved a ways away from them to get away from the metal. We spread the sleeping pad on the ground and squatted on it in a row, facing north, shoulder to shoulder, and covered up with the tarp just as the storm hit. The wind, rain, and hail blasted us. We hung onto the tarp and to the dog, doing our best to keep as dry as possible while minimizing our contact with the ground. Lightning was popping all around us. I could feel my hair standing up and thought for sure we’d be hit at any second.

The noise was deafening. Over and over blinding lightning flashed around us and the sound of close-up lightning—like a bedsheet being ripped—was followed instantly by the rifle- then crushing cannon-shot KA BOOOM of thunder right on top of us. Hail was pounding and the wind and rain and the storm on the tarp were all so loud, we couldn’t hear each other even when yelling at the tops of our voices even though we were physically touching each other.

I was certain we were going to die. “If lightning hits one of us,” I thought, “it’s going to take out all of us.”

Then an odd thing happened. I thought, “This couldn’t possibly be any worse,” followed immediately by the thought that it would be worse if, in addition to the storm, a sniper were shooting at us right at that moment. A sniper would have definitely made things worse for us in the middle of the storm. And that thought—for some bizarre reason—was comforting to me. I suddenly felt relieved.

(A Word of Apology

Now, in no way at all do I mean to trivialize the complicated trauma associated with actual sniper shootings. I can’t imagine the horror of being a part of, living through, or dying in a sniper shooting, whether in war or otherwise. This was a time well before the U.S. had experienced the shootings that have occurred in recent years. I thought about changing my story to get rid of the sniper part. The idea of a sniper making things worse was central to my experience and my story, however, so I decided to be true to that. I apologize if this re-traumatizes anyone in any way.)

Survival

After what seemed like a very long time, the storm blew over. We stood up in a bit of a daze, shook the water off of the tarp and the sleeping pad. Then we repacked and gathered ourselves enough to get our backpacks back on and continue on our way westward. We had been incredibly fortunate.

*

Late last Monday afternoon, I got into our car and drove away from a medical office building in Bountiful, Utah, lost in a haze of thoughts. For years we’ve struggled with our triplets’ behavior and have sought out many professional opinions and educational support for them. We’ve been in and out of multiple school and medical and psychology offices, trying various types of therapy, counseling, and treatments, looking for answers and trying to find ways to help our kids and ourselves.

After several years of this and having made minimal progress, we were recently able to finally get all three into in-depth neuropsychological testing to find out what their individual specific issues are. Last week, I met for an hour with the triplets’ neuropsychologist and one of her interns to get the results from Miss A’s four hours of testing. During the meeting, as we went over test result after test result, Dr. C (who is great, by the way) explained to me that little Miss A has deeply challenging learning disabilities. Her test results indicate that she has ADHD, an anxiety disorder, a social disorder, and multiple cognitive challenges.

Autism

I also learned that my sweet boy B has been diagnosed as being on the autism spectrum. This came as no real surprise, given B’s behavior over the past four years or so. Still, it put me back on my heels a bit, so to speak. (Today, Ryan and I learned that C, too, has been diagnosed with autism. B and C are identical twins, so it isn’t surprising that their test results are similar. Both boys tested as having cognitive disabilities and attention deficit issues as well.) Two past screenings had missed it, but it seemed obvious to me that B was autistic. Even with that, the official diagnosis is a lot to absorb.

Dr. C said to me, “[A] has a complex set of things she’s dealing with, and she’s the least complicated of your three. You have three one-in-one-hundred kids.”

As I drove home that day last week, thinking through everything Dr. C and her intern had discussed with me, I found myself slipping into an increasingly negative state of mind. “How are we going to get through this? What’s going to happen to my kids? How will this ever be okay?” And then the thought came to me, “At least there isn’t a sniper shooting at us,” and I knew it was going to be okay. The storm will blow over, we’ll get up, we’ll get ourselves pulled together, and we’ll get going again. And it will be okay.

It’s going to be an interesting experience!