If you grew up without television, you’d probably think watching chubby red ants bringing treasures home to their anthills was loads of fun too.
Luckily, we had tons of anthills to scope out on our Arizona
ranch. If I stood or squatted on a rock beside the mounds and didn’t wiggle very
much, the ants considered me scenery, which was okay by me.
Some types of ant
attention can be painful, you know.
The ants carried bits and pieces of sticks, weeds, rocks, dead
insects or their wings *especially beetles and wasps* and flicks of flint back
to their mounds without a word of complaint. Invariably, they took their
gleaned goodies straight into the mysterious hole leading into the central
parts of their colony.
Can’t you just see a couple of sweating ants lugging a crystalized
wasp wing into the throne room? I can!
I never actually witnessed the ants placing items on the outside
of their pebbly hills, and I’m sure they had to obtain Queenie’s orders before
they did any outside decorating.
Unless they were rebels.
I don’t think I saw any rebel ants, but I thought I saw one
wearing a teeny little leather outfit once. Or did I imagine that?
My favorite anthill pickings to take home with me back then were
the tiny hollow-bone beads, little bits of ancient pottery, fragments of flint,
and obsidian. Less often, I found miniature arrowheads fashioned centuries
earlier for hunting small animals and birds.
What I never found was an Arizona pyrope garnet—an anthill garnet.
Reportedly, most of the anthill garnets (silicates) are mined
by ants from beneath the earth in the Navajo Nation. The gems are not only
rare but also known to be some of the brightest reds of the entire garnet
family. Arizona pyrope garnets were used to make bullets by the
Navajos in the 1800s. Rumor has it the Navajos believed the dark red color
helped produce fatal wounds. I haven’t asked any of my Navajo friends if that’s
true, so I mention it here only as a point of interest.
One myth I’m happy to squash is about the two- and three-carat
size “anthill garnets” touted on infomercials and in ads. Though sources vary
widely about how much weight an ant can carry (from ten to fifty times its own
weight and I lean toward the latter), it’s doubtful an ant can carry much more
than a garnet about the size of an English pea.
Because I had heard garnet dust is used for cutting metals, I
consulted with Michael Castaῆeda, a water-jet professional who daily works with
garnet dust in his line of work.
- Garnets are a 7 to 7.5 on the Mohs Scale of Hardness. To compare, diamonds are about a 10 on that scale.
- Since garnets are 1) generally inexpensive, 2) rate high on the Mohs Scale of Hardness, and 3) are easy on the equipment used, they are preferred for use in cutting metal, plastic, and stone when using water-jet cutters.
- A water jet uses garnets in granular sand 50-, 80-, and 120-grit sandpaper manufactured in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho.
- Two hundred hours of use is possible from one mixing tube of garnet sand grit versus only thirty minutes from a mixture of aluminum oxide.
Over the centuries, ants have been used as examples of
diligence and sacrifice. Most famous people had at least one or two things to
say about their work ethic.
Thoreau said it wasn’t enough to be busy like ants,
but that “we should also know what we are busy about.”
I think Thoreau would agree that ants mining little red jewels
from the earth is both resourceful and intriguing. Just think, they do all that
work with no pickaxes, pullies, or hard hats!
As usual, I love to hear from you! Have you ever found any treasures on an anthill?
Trouble sneaks in one hot Oklahoma afternoon in 1934 like an oily twister. A beloved neighbor is murdered, and a single piece of evidence sends the sheriff to arrest a Black man that Biddy *a sharecropper’s daughter* knows is innocent. Hauntingly terrifying sounds seeping from the woods lead Biddy into even deeper mysteries and despair, and finally into the shocking truths of that fateful summer.
The Accidental Road, Sundown Press, debuts September 2019.
As usual, I love to hear from you! Have you ever found any treasures on an anthill?
Blackberry Road is published by Sundown Press and is available on Amazon.
The Accidental Road, Sundown Press, debuts September 2019.
A teen and her mom escaping an abusive husband tumble into the epicenter of crime peddlers invading Arizona and Nevada in the 1950s. Stranded hundreds of miles from their planned destination of Las Vegas, they land in a dusty town full of ghosts and tales, treachery and corruption. Avoiding disaster is tricky, especially as it leads Kat into a fevered quest for things as simple as home and trust. Danger lurks everywhere, leading her to wonder if she and her mother really did take The Accidental Road of life, or if it’s the exact right road to all they ever hoped for.
Jodi Lea Stewart was born in Texas to an "Okie" mom and a Texan dad. Her younger years were spent in Texas and Oklahoma; hence, she knows all about biscuits and gravy, blackberry picking, chiggers, and snipe hunting. At the age of eight, she moved to a vast cattle ranch in the White Mountains of Arizona. As a teen, she left her studies at the University of Arizona in Tucson to move to San Francisco, where she learned about peace, love, and exactly what she DIDN'T want to do with her life. Since then, Jodi graduated summa cum laude with a BS in Business Management, raised three children, worked as an electro-mechanical drafter, penned humor columns for a college periodical, wrote regional Western articles, and served as managing editor of a Fortune 500 corporate newsletter.
She is the author of a contemporary trilogy set in the Navajo Nation and featuring a Navajo protagonist, as well as two historical novels. Her current novel, Blackberry Road, is available on Amazon. Her next historical novel, The Accidental Road, debuts in September 2019. She currently resides in Arizona with her husband, her delightful 90+-year-old mother, a crazy Standard poodle named Jazz, one rescue cat, and numerous gigantic, bossy houseplants.
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