If you’ve been reading this blog for a while, you might remember that I’ve talked about Southern bugs once before. And, I imagine this time I’ll start getting hits from the search engines when people look up cockroach or water bug. But, that’s OK.
For any of you who got here using that kind of a search, I apologize. This is just a Whimsical Wednesday post, not an information site about insects.
There are pesky cockroaches lurking about outside here all year around, I imagine. But, there are times when they seem more determined to join us in the house than others. I’m not really sure what triggers it, since I’m not really a cockroach expert, but the first sign is that you’ll see a couple belly-up in the garage. That’s the clue that the roaches are on the move indoors.
So, the other night, I was sitting quietly in the living room when in FLEW a cockroach, closely followed by my cat. Of course, we all know the little devils can fly, but generally by the time they get in the house, they’re too groggy from the bug spray to work up much energy for it.
The only thing I can assume is that Joey found the bug shortly after it slithered through whatever crack it found to get in the house, and the bug was still pretty perky.
An insect that size in flight is an awesome sight. Especially when it ends up landing on your living room furniture. So, this was no time for fooling around. I raced for the vacuum cleaner while Joey tried to find a way to leap high enough to grab the intruder.
Joey has not quite come to terms with the vacuum cleaner. I think it’s a bit loud and obnoxious for his taste. So, when I came tearing up, plugged in the machine and turned it on, Joey decided to retreat to a safe distance. I sucked the cockroach up in the long extension to the vacuum, let it run long enough to convince myself that the roach had not survived, then turned the vacuum off and collapsed on the couch to try to return my breathing to a normal pattern.
Joey is evidently not completely conversant in how vacuum cleaners deal with cockroaches. He first went back to the last place he’d seen the bug and did a bit of reconnoitering, but was rather puzzled by the fact that the bug was nowhere to be seen.
Then, he approached the vacuum cleaner and sniffed it over thoroughly, looked from the vacuum to the last known location of the bug and back, and walked away shaking his head.
At times like that, I wish I could have the same level of enthusiasm for playing with cockroaches as cats do. . . but it’ll never happen.






















For example, the survey discovered that 46% of sellers attempted to negotiate a lower commission, and of those, about 71% were successful!
Check out the site
Depending on your technology setup, you could have contact information spread out over numerous databases:
Given the fact that you are running a real estate consulting business, we should stop thinking about these meetings as listing presentations. Maybe we should call them Home Selling Evaluation Meetings. The seller evaluates you and vice versa.