Do you eat Calamari?
I do sometimes. The Man was on a calamari kick for a little bit.
When tired of the boys asking “what’s for dinner” after a long day, I sometimes answer with a silly answer of squid fingers.
Have you ever thought about how squid lands on your plate as calamari.
Me? Not really, except I know it would have involved deep waters and HUGE monster squid and dark music playing in the background.
On this trip, while on a quick run to the store and a few minutes of fishing for Flounder at the marina, my sister in law, and the kids in tow (The Man included) were taught something by the locals.
The squid were spawning!
They aren't so big after all:
Turns out a nifty lure, a quick flick of the wrist and a bucket to hold ones catch and one can have fresh Calamari. Oh, and the ability to pull the little squids away from boats before they ink everything in sight.
A squid’s natural defense is to spray a black inky substance when he thinks he is in danger. In the water, it really clouds things up.
But they do not know they are in trouble until they attack the lure and are quickly yanked up and out of the water. So their reflexes sometimes have them inking out of the water.
As they were collected in the bucket, they kept make a noise, one that grew more frequent as the number of bucketed squid grew. They still believed they were in danger, so the continued to attempt to ink the area, and the sound that made sounded much like the sound of little ones sneezing.
Squid Sneezes . . .