We haven't had enough trees for enough generations here to have many of them. In fact, we only started seeing/hearing them here about 10 years ago.A double bloom of Cicadas to sing in the Spring!
A Double Emergence of Periodical Cicadas Isn’t Cicada-geddon—It’s a Marvel
The U.S. will see two adjacent broods of periodical cicadas emerge this spring
By Meghan Bartels
![]()
Late spring and early summer in the forests of the eastern half of the U.S. have been eerily quiet for the past two years. In most years, long-lived periodical cicadas thrum through the region, but a quirk of timing means these insects have been sparse since 2021. This year, though, they’re roaring back.
That’s because 2024 will see two separate batches of periodical cicadas emerge en masse, spread across much of the eastern half of the U.S. These insects crawl out of the ground once every 13 or 17 years for a rush of mating and egg-laying until all the adults die, and the next generation is tucked underground until their own teenage years. It’s an unusual but ancient lifecycle that has become part of the fabric of Eastern U.S. forests. And it will be on full display this spring, with both a 13-year brood and a 17-year brood emerging across adjoining territories—a particularly rare occurrence.
Scientific American
When we lived in Ohio, we were there for a double brood hatching.
There were piles everywhere. There were even contests for who could bring in the most of them and win a VW Bug car. Radio station contest.
People were bringing them in by the garbage bag full.