We have entered the micro-season of “The Praying Mantis Hatches”. This is the first micro-season of the season of Grain in Ear. The other micro-seasons within Grain in Ear are:
- The Praying Mantis Hatches (Jun 5 – Jun 9)
- Fireflies Rise from the Rotten Grass (Jun 10 -Jun 15)
- The Plums Turn Yellow (Jue 16- Jun 20)
The micro-seasons were established in 1685 by Japanese astronomer Shibukawa Shunkai. While they are specific to Japan, they can be helpful to people all over the world. No matter where you live, you can use these seasons as a starting point for your own exploration of the natural world.
To celebrate this season we will learn about the Praying Mantis and then read haiku by Basho, Issa, Takarai Kikaku, Kerouac, and others.
The Praying Mantis
The European Praying Mantis (Mantis religiosa) is the species that is most often associated with the term Praying Mantis. However, people often use the name “Praying Mantis” to describe any insects within the scientific order Mantodea.(1,2)
There are around 2500 species of insect in the order Mantodea. These insects live on all the continents of the world except Antarctica. The mantises, which are part of the family Mantidae (also known as Mantids) all have similar features which include elongated bodies, triangular heads, bulging eyes, and forelegs that are adapted for catching and gripping prey.
Mantises are carnivorous insects. Their diet usually consists of other insects, but will sometimes include lizards, frogs, and fish. National Geographic provides us with this great description of a mantis hunt.
“Mantids may stalk or ambush prey, waiting silently then launching a sudden, individually calculated attack on their quarry that takes only milliseconds. Springing forward, they grasp their victim with those forelegs, called raptorial legs. The second and third sections of these limbs have interlocking spines, like a claw clip for your hair, making escape impossible.”(2)
The Life Cycle of the Praying Mantis
Mantises usually mate in Autumn. The females will lay eggs on plants in a foamy secretion that is called an ootheca. This foamy secretion will harden and the eggs will remain in this “nursery” throughout the winter. In spring, the eggs will hatch and release hundreds of nymphs. The nymphs look a lot like the adult mantises only smaller and wingless.(4) These nymphs will go through several molts before maturing into breeding adults.
Praying Mantises’ mating behavior has been studied extensively by scientists because they engage in sexual cannibalism. It is estimated that 30% of male mantises become a meal for the female mantis during the mating process. Scientists suspect the females eat the males because they provide a convenient, high-quality, protein source that is necessary for egg production.(4)
Fun Facts About Mantises
Below are a few other fun facts about mantises from Berkley.edu and the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station.
- Mantis can see in 3D
- Mantids are the only insect that can turn their heads from side to side.
- Female mantises are larger than male mantises
- A mantis’s color often matches their surroundings
- Mantis nymphs are cannibalistic and they will eat each other if confined together
Seasonal Haiku
According to the World Kigo Database, “Praying Mantis” is primarily an Autuumn kigo. Yet, “Mantis is born” (tooroo umaru) and “baby mantis” (kokamakiri) are mid summer kigo.
In The Five Hundred Essential Japanese Season Words as selected by Kenkichi Yamamoto, “ants” are included as summer insect kigo. In Jane Reichhold’s A Dictionary of Haiku, she also lists “ants” and then includes “ticks” and “fleas” as crawling insects that are also summer kigo.
Now with all these crawling insects in mind, let’s read some haiku.
Basho
fleas and lice now a horse pisses by my pillow (translated by Jane Reichhold)
Takarai Kikaku
That dream I had of being stabbed –was for real! bitten by a flea (translated by Steven D. Carter)
Anonymous
Zen priest his meditation finished he looks for fleas
Jack Kerouac
Hummingbirds hum hello–bugs Race and swoop
“Bugs” are listed as a summer kigo in Jane Reichhold A Dictionary of Haiku
Two ants hurry to catch up With lonely Joe
Issa
a praying mantis to the base of Mount Fuji clings (translated by David G. Lanoue)
the praying mantis hangs by one hand... temple bell (translated by David G. Lanoue)
the praying mantis's shy expression... wild roses (translated by David G. Lanoue)
Haiku Invitation
This week’s haiku invitation is to write a haiku or senryu that references crawling insects.
Share your haiku in the comments below, or post on your own page and link back to this post. I can’t wait to read what you write!
Resources
- “Mantis”; Wikipedia
- “Praying Mantis”; National Geographic
- “Wondrous Facts About Praying Mantises”; Treehugger.com
- Dugas, Katherine; Mantids. Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station
- “Mantodea”; Berkeley.edu
- “Praying Mantis”; World Kigo Database
Basho’s haiku was retrieved from Matsuo Bashō’s haiku poems in romanized Japanese with English translations. Issa’s haiku was retrieved from David G. Lanoue’s HaikuGuy.com. Takarai Kikaku’s haiku was retrieved by The Classic Tradition of Haiku: An Anthology, edited by Faubion Bowers. Buson, Shokyu-ni. Kerouac’s haiku were retrieved from Kerouac’s Book of Haikus. Anonymous haiku was retrieved from Bruce Ross’s Writing Haiku

Interesting article! I didn’t know that there were micro-seasons in Japan. The praying mantis is such an incredible insect too. Thanks for sharing!
founder of balance thy life https://balancethylife.com
Thanks for the comment and I am glad that you enjoyed this article! Thanks for stopping by.
I haven’t seen too many of these wonderful creatures. But when I have it always is a special moment! Best wishes Phil
Hi Phil, Thanks for the comment this morning. As I was writing this I was also wondering when was the last time that I encountered a mantis. It has been a long time!
Maybe we will get lucky this year!
Great post Mark:)
I am hopefully going to send a haiku
Sue:)
It’s deer tick season here, I can relate to the haiku about fleas….
Oh yes. It is also tick season! Just found one on my pant leg last week.
I took a day of doxy for a lone star nymph that dug in in april.
I sprayed my outdoor clothes with permethrin
Hi Mark
Could I have an email to send a haiku please
Sue:)
I purchased an amazing haiku book with wonderful illustrations.
Hi Sue, The best email is naturalistweekly [at] gmail.com. I am very interested to hear about this book.
Keep those horses away from my pillows. Your selections today are telling! Nice Post.
Horses… horses heads… yep… keep them away from my pillow!! 😀
Hi Jules and tnkerr, I really like that one from Basho. It is one that I often reference when people ask about possible subject matter for haiku. I guess it can be almost anything!
You, of course, are correct. And yet, haiku exudes a reverence – a mystique which causes me to forget that I can write about things like piss.
Natural things happen 🙂
Reblogged this on Art, Music, Photography, Poetry and Quotations.
I remember saving a praying mantis from some children. The mantis had a sharp feeling to its body. I could actually cut my hand on the insect.
Great that you were able to save the mantis. You are right that mantises are very angular and I can see how there edges could be sharp. Thanks for sharing your experience.
Fun prompt this week, Mark! I’ve been lucky enough to see maybe one mantis in my lifetime. Poor male mantises. Poor Basho.
https://maryjomalo.wordpress.com/
Hi Mary Jo, Wonderful offering for this week’s prompts! Thanks for adding to the conversation.
praying mantis
eating her mate —
things we do for love
Hi Lafcadio, I like this one! So straight forward yet makes you think. Thanks for sharing!
Hahahaha, this is so good!
I appreciate that Eavonka!
mystery power
a creature from another world
scared the child
Since I wasn’t afraid of ‘bugs’ I allowed my children to play with them… the ones that wouldn’t hurt them that is 🙂
I can see though how a child could be scared by a mantis… Look up Wheel bug – looks like something out of ‘SteamPunk’.
Yep! A Wheel Bug is something else! Amazing.
A Wheel Bug is supposed to eat the dreaded Spotted Lanternfly!
Also; I think I read about fines concering the mantis – “What is the fine for killing a praying mantis? – Heck, you get a $50,000 fine and time. Ten to twenty in most states. Chance of parole after 15. It’s a bug and not an endangered one. In the US there are no ordinances or laws that protect the preying mantis.”
Hi Barbara, I like have you have been able to bring forth the wonder of childhood in this one. Insects can be both mysterious and scary to some!
that’s exactly how it felt, Mark
Nice, Barbara. Ever read Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card? Now, those were insects from another world (and were scary). ~nan
Hi Mark. Thanks for another inspirational and informative post. Here is my response to this week’s prompt – ‘crawling insects’.
Happy Friday Everyone.
Hi Goff, Thanks for the great offering for this week’s prompt! Have a a great weekend!
Many thanks Mark for your kind comments. Trusting you have a great weekend also.
Happy Friday, Goff! We both went with the nearly ubiquitous ant. 🙂
Mark,
An enjoyable post it brought back a memory. I’ve been lucky to see several Praying Mantis… including the one in my series (the first one follows the title);
kokamakiri
(baby mantis)
little boys
saved the mantis nymph;
gentle play
A toy brick home for the nymph, fed it water by drops on their fingers.
© JP/dh
Just lovely. Beautiful imagery.
Many good memories of ‘little ones’.
It was only when my children became teens… that I felt out of touch… But now they are adults and out in their own lives. We can be ‘friends’ now 🙂
I find they like us better now. 🙂
😀
Especially when they need something… 😉
Jules, the linked pairs are great! What a fun way to re-tell a story. Great job!
If I ever get around to a ‘family’ book… that’s one to include 🙂
I’m so glad I read the entire sequence. What a wonderful journey and you sound like my mom who also encouraged exploration with nature’s creatures.
Thank you. One year I got a painted lady butterfly kit for them…
And now whenever i see that one of those butterflies in my yard I wonder if it is from on of the five we set free so many years ago 🙂
meditation
on the mountain
praying mantis
I want to thank you for today’s prompt and information. I have long been a praying mantis admirer. I suspect, in large part, because the female of the species seemed like such a badass. The original man-eater, if you will. 😂 In the 70s, as a young girl, such things sung to my budding feminism. Though I feel slightly chagrined at my endorsement of cannibalism now, of course.
Hi Eavonka, Thanks for sharing that story about your interest in the mantis when you were younger and your shifting ideas about insect cannibalism.
I am also enjoying your haiku! There is a bit of Zen is there. So enjoyable.
Thank you, Mark. I was hoping the haiku would be more zen than usual.
How zen your haiku is, E. The female mantis is a badass! I have somewhere in my house a chapbook of poetry called Womantis by Kate Westfall. Much of the poetry has a bent toward the strength of the female to be stronger than the male (so beware, men!). ~nan
Oh my gosh, that chapbook sounds amazing, Nan! Right up my alley.
I appreciate the reverence in this one. You retain the original imagery of the insect’s pose. 🙂
Thank you, Mary Jo! I wanted to capture just that.
Hi Eavonka: a very lovely haiku… I couldn’t help smiling, imagining her sweet expression as she is meditating on top of the mountain!
I’m so glad. Thank you!
Eavonka,
I think we can all use a bit more meditation… anywhere we can get it. The praying mathis image is nice too.
Thank you! Anything that can bring a little peace.
☮
🙂
Love the information on the praying mantis, Mark. Here’s a senryu for now, but will be back with something else after the Internet provider updates our system.
femme fatale
the mantis preys
for a mate
~Nancy Brady
published in Failed Haiku #77, May 2022
Hi Nan,
Great word play on this one! There were a couple articles about the praying mantis that also talked about how changing one letter in their name changed the meaning drastically and was still a correct description for them. Very cool that you were able to use that in this verse.
Well, I know that the female praying mantis tends to eat a mate even as he is impregnating her as it is a rich source of protein. Amazing the difference between the first letter of the alphabet and the fifth. I’ve seen too many PBS Nature shows to know that nature is not always kind. Thanks for the compliment on the ‘ku, too, Mark.
A real femme fatale, for sure! I like the prey/pray play. 🙂
Thanks Mary Jo.
👏👏👏 This is fantastic! You had me at femme fatale.
Hi Nan: Your poem is a delight and made me chuckle..I love the description and the interchangeable word!
Thanks so much. That’s kind of you to say.
Hi Mark:)
Thank-you for the very interesting information.. I like the image in Issa’s poem of the praying mantis hanging onto the bell tower. I enjoyed all the poetry..lovely memories and stories.
Here are my three haiku:
…
praying mantis on my kitchen floor smiling
….
I lift her to the top
of a shrub…
a golden leaf
….
on top of the rubble a praying mantis emerges
Hi Madeleine, Thanks so much for sharing these. They are all great! I do, however, really like the first one. Perhaps I really just like the idea of a smiling mantis!
Thanks so much for sharing your work with us. I hope you have a good weekend.!
Hi Madeleine,
Very nice haiku and they flow together.
~nan
Hi Nan: Thank-you very much for your feedback!:)
These have a tangible, relatable quality. Lovely imagery, Madeleine.
Thank-you very much Mary Jo. I appreciate your feedback.
Mary Jo, I really like your poem and your use of imagery. It is very thought provoking.
Thank you, Madeleine. 🙂
Hi Mark: Thank-you for your kind words. I have to agree…It was a treat to see her there! Your welcome! I am very happy to share my work. I hope you have a very good week-end too!
summer walk…
on a tiny branch
a walking stick
~Nancy Brady, 2023
My sons and I discovered a walking stick one afternoon as we entered Cox Arboretum. We almost missed it. The camouflage was incredible.
http://www.nbsmithblog.wordpress.com
Wonderful use of both ways of seeing/using a walking stick! The word tiny works so well here.
Oh I agree! It’s wonderful….Walking with a stick a.k.a. cane is precarious. If I had to walk a straight line (like a tiny branch) to save my life, I’d be in deep trouble. Praying helps. 🙂
Me, too, Mary Jo. I have to say it precarious enough to have to walk with a cane, but traveling on a tiny branch would be impossible (even presuming it would support my weight). 😉 ~nan
Ah we’re sympatico. I often tell my grown children, “I’m a Weeble, but I don’t fall down.” Well mostly. Then I have to explain what a Weeble was. 🙂
I don’t Weeble, but I do have a tendency to trip.I usually catch myself before I hit the ground.
Slowing down has greatly helped, because if I trip there’s time to recover as you say. Sorry for the tangent…let’s blame the walking stick. 🙂
It is the walking stick’s fault! 😉
Thanks, Eavonka. Never considered the alternate use of a walking stick, but then I was still flexible then as were my sons. By the way, with Mark’s prompts, I am writing haiku on subjects that I would have never considered in the past. I must have squirreling them in my memories for just this purpose. ~nan
That is one of the reasons I love participating here. It is helping me actually use and enjoy using kigo.
I love when the subconscious makes a haiku have multiple meanings you hadn’t thought about.
I agree, Eavonka. New kigo, new focus means new haiku! Yay!
Hi Nan, Thanks for sharing these really wonderful insects haiku! I think we have collectively elevated the role of the insect in poetry!
Thanks, Mark. It’s rather cool all the insect haiku that have been posted. So varied, but then there are more insects in the world than people. The most abundant class of Arthropoda and more than any of the others combined. (Can you tell I was an invertebrate lab tutor in college?) ~nan
Hi Nan, that is fascinating that you worked with invertebrates college! I bet it was so interesting to learn about all the insects and then work with students through their own challenges with insects.
Mark,
It was fun and educational. I probably learned more during those three years of being a lab tutor than I learned while taking the course. The scariest moment was when the professor asked me to lecture one day. He had to be away for some reason, and he gave me his notes. Between my notes and his I managed to lecture and the students (only a couple years younger than me) actually listened and took notes. I’m still amazed as I am still not much of a public speaker.
It’s wonderful that you all saw a walking stick. I love that you discovered it on a walk with your sons and that you didn’t miss it!
Hi Madeleine,
Yes, I was thrilled to see one, and more importantly, that my sons got to see it. We were really lucky as we could have so easily missed it (as I am sure that I have walked right by them many times). ~nan
This is a fabulous connection with the walking stick, Nancy! I love it!
Thanks, Colleen. That’s nice of you to say. Some haiku just come easily and turn out okay. This was one of them. More than that, the experience with my kids was the best, showing them an insect they’d never seen before (or probably since, too). ~Nan
I had some issues posting! Don’t ask! LOL! https://colleenmchesebro.com/2023/06/10/60997/. Thanks for the challenge, Mark.
Hi Colleen, Thanks so much for joining the conversation! I really appreciated your senryu for this week. Thanks again and I hope you have a good week!
Thanks, Mark. I got ahead of myself on the haiku, but I couldn’t get past the lightning bugs! See you next week.
So interesting Mark, thanks 🙌https://poetisatinta.wordpress.com/2023/06/11/micro-season-haiku-5/
Hi Angela: A very lovely haiku…wonderful action going on!:)
Thanks so much madeleine ❤️
I apologize for taking so long to get back to you, and I am so glad your were able to add your ants haiku to the conversation! I hope you are having a good week!
No issues Mark, thanks for the prompt – enjoy your week 💕