Six-Legged Giant Finds Secret Hideaway, Hides For 80 Years
“No, this isn’t a make-believe place. It’s real.
They call it “Ball’s Pyramid.” It’s what’s left of an old volcano that emerged from the sea about 7 million years ago. A British naval officer named Ball was the first European to see it in 1788. It sits off Australia, in the South Pacific. It is extremely narrow, 1,844 feet high, and it sits alone.
What’s more, for years this place had a secret. At 225 feet above sea level, hanging on the rock surface, there is a small, spindly little bush, and under that bush, a few years ago, two climbers, working in the dark, found something totally improbable hiding in the soil below. How it got there, we still don’t know.

A satellite view of Ball’s Pyramid in the Tasman Sea off the eastern coast of Australia.
Here’s the story: About 13 miles from this spindle of rock, there’s a bigger island, called Lord Howe Island.
On Lord Howe, there used to be an insect, famous for being big. It’s a stick insect, a critter that masquerades as a piece of wood, and the Lord Howe Island version was so large — as big as a human hand — that the Europeans labeled it a “tree lobster” because of its size and hard, lobsterlike exoskeleton. It was 12 centimeters long and the heaviest flightless stick insect in the world. Local fishermen used to put them on fishing hooks and use them as bait.”
For all of you who don’t like insect, here’s something else to fear.
As much as I love bugs - Look at that fucking Mono-brow!
The only thing that caught my attention was the guy and his uni-brow hahaha
These. I really want one of these no. They look awesome, and how casually he handles them, shows they are probably...
ew..
omg -salta por la ventana-
FUCK THIS.
FUCK THIS.
interesting, hope there are no spiders or grasshoppers there
Life will find a way :D
My worst nightmare. O___O
The story of the Lord Howe’s stick insect is also a chapter in Jane Goodall’s book “Hope For Animals And Their World”, a...