NOTE: NO NEGATIVE COMMENTS HERE PLEASE! I do NOT appreciate or put up with "kill it with fire!" type comments, nor do I tolerate the spreading of misinformation. I'm happy to educate and to learn, though 
I've loved bugs since I was small. I think they are some of the most interesting animals and their lives should be appreciated a lot more than they are.
I haven't had any schooling, so everything I learn about bugs comes from at-home research. I want to meet more hobby entomologists (and I definitely wouldn't say no to having some professional entomologist friends ;D)!
Fellow bug lovers, what are some of your favorites? Which ones do you find the most interesting? Do you keep any bugs as pets or to study?
(Of course when I say "bug" I'm using the term colloquially, not necessarily just the order Hemiptera
)
Here are some of my favorites: SPIDERS! Roaches (I keep dubias as feeders for my leopard gecko and as pets), cicadas, katydids, and wasps and hornets!
I'd love to keep a scorpion, a solifugid, a vinegaroon, a centipede, and/or wolf spider someday. Honestly, the ones that most people think are scary are my favorites!
Here, have some pictures I've taken of bugs I've found. And share yours too, if you have any!
EDIT: these bugs are, in order,
1) Pterophylla camellifolia, the common true katydid
2) Diapheromera femorata, the northern walkingstick
3) Eburia sp., a longhorn beetle. Leaning toward quadrigeminata species.
4) Dragonfly ID pending... *scratching my head*
5) Tigrosa helluo, the giant wetlands wolf spider (one of my favorite species!)
6) Pisaurina mira, the nursery web spider. This female was gravid and constructed her eggsac and laid the eggs later that night
7) Gladicosa gulosa, the drumming or purring wolf spider. The male of this species "purrs" to attract a mate by vibrating leaves on the forest floor. Here's a very cool (and adorable) video of this behavior in action!
8) Dolichovespula maculata, the bald-faced hornet, and one of my favorite wasp species. We had a good sized nest in the trees right next to the driveway last summer!
9) Manduca sexta, the carolina sphinx moth. The larval form, the tobacco hornworm, is a common garden pest

I've loved bugs since I was small. I think they are some of the most interesting animals and their lives should be appreciated a lot more than they are.
I haven't had any schooling, so everything I learn about bugs comes from at-home research. I want to meet more hobby entomologists (and I definitely wouldn't say no to having some professional entomologist friends ;D)!
Fellow bug lovers, what are some of your favorites? Which ones do you find the most interesting? Do you keep any bugs as pets or to study?
(Of course when I say "bug" I'm using the term colloquially, not necessarily just the order Hemiptera

Here are some of my favorites: SPIDERS! Roaches (I keep dubias as feeders for my leopard gecko and as pets), cicadas, katydids, and wasps and hornets!
I'd love to keep a scorpion, a solifugid, a vinegaroon, a centipede, and/or wolf spider someday. Honestly, the ones that most people think are scary are my favorites!
Here, have some pictures I've taken of bugs I've found. And share yours too, if you have any!
EDIT: these bugs are, in order,
1) Pterophylla camellifolia, the common true katydid
2) Diapheromera femorata, the northern walkingstick
3) Eburia sp., a longhorn beetle. Leaning toward quadrigeminata species.
4) Dragonfly ID pending... *scratching my head*
5) Tigrosa helluo, the giant wetlands wolf spider (one of my favorite species!)
6) Pisaurina mira, the nursery web spider. This female was gravid and constructed her eggsac and laid the eggs later that night

7) Gladicosa gulosa, the drumming or purring wolf spider. The male of this species "purrs" to attract a mate by vibrating leaves on the forest floor. Here's a very cool (and adorable) video of this behavior in action!
8) Dolichovespula maculata, the bald-faced hornet, and one of my favorite wasp species. We had a good sized nest in the trees right next to the driveway last summer!
9) Manduca sexta, the carolina sphinx moth. The larval form, the tobacco hornworm, is a common garden pest
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