'Gross' swarm of flying ants in Stephenville captured on video - Action News
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'Gross' swarm of flying ants in Stephenville captured on video

When Jon Myers saw the approaching black cloud of bugs, he grabbed his video camera and went straight out into it.

'The best way I could actually explain it, it was like a snowstorm.'

A large queen and smaller king carpenter ant, just two insects in the swarm Jon Myers captured on video on Sunday. (Submitted by Jon Myers)

Imagine hearing screams,seeing an oncoming insect swarm, and then deciding to head right into the fray. That's the line of logic one Stephenville videographer took recently, to equal parts laughter and regret.

"It was kinda gross actually,because they were out there by the millions,they were absolutely everywhere," said Jon Myers.

The 'they' in question were carpenter ants sometimes called 'emmets' in Newfoundland and Labradoreach between three to five centimetres long,filling the Sunday evening air as Myerswas inside his apartment.

"Iheard all these kids screaming, and Iwas like 'what's going on?' So Iwent out to the front road, and there was like 20 something kids just running down the road, and kids on their bikes, and there was this black kind ofcloud in the sky, in back of them."

'I was absolutely covered'

Myersseized the opportunity, and his camera equipment, tocapturethe moment.But filming a swarm of flying bugs posed a few logistical problems.

"Iwas trying to grab myt-shirtto put over my face, and they were almost crawling up my nose. Iwaswearingshorts, and they were crawling up my shorts, legs and all that stuff... I was absolutely covered," he told CBC Radio's Corner Brook Morning Show.

"The best way I could actually explain it, it was like a snowstorm."

Jon Myers says the white specks in this photo, causing a grainy or pixellated appearance, are actually all ants. (Submitted by Jon Myers)

Flying hordes of carpenter ants are an annual occurrence, as kings and queens from different nests take to the air on particularly warm, muggy eveningsto mate.

"They're harmless," said Lloyd Hollett, the director of the Newfoundland Insectarium, adding that doesn't mean the clouds of insects aren't intimidating.

"The only time they fly is when they mate."

The males, smaller than the females, die soon after doing the deed, and the females land, lose their wings, and begin establishing new colonies.

Myersisn't deterred from his close insect encounter, and hopes to better capture the experience next time.

"In the video, you don't get the feel for it, of actually seeing it... I'venever seen itthat bad."

With files from the Corner Brook Morning Show