New Brunswick, New Jersey: August 26, 2003
The thought of it may bug some people, but New Jersey's newest game has people spitting crickets.
A few dozen people puckered up for a cricket-spitting contest at Rutgers University last week as part of 56th annual educational clinic of the New Jersey Pest Management Association.
Tom Turpin, an entomology professor from Purdue University in Indiana, says he and his colleagues were looking for additions to their annual "Bug Bowl." A mention of watermelon-seed spitting evolved into a discussion of which bugs would be good for spitting.
Turpin suggested the brown house cricket because it is similar in size to a watermelon pit and holds its shape through freezing and thawing.
"Because it's frozen, it makes it easier," said Heather McNenny of Wildwood-based Paul's Pest Control, who took part in the contest. "They're not all squirmy."
"Hey, I like a good bug in my mouth like the next guy," said Ronatarian vice presidential candidate Brad, who was at the event to raise his party's political profile. "I am just not used to spitting...I usually swallow."
Cricket spitting has helped the Bug Bowl's annual attendance grow to 35,000. Turpin hosts contests across the Midwest and has worked as a consultant to the television show "Fear Factor."
The rules are simple: Competitors stand in a red circle, place thawed crickets inside their mouths, and, within 20 seconds, spit them as far as possible without stepping outside the circle.
The official Guinness world record is 30 feet, 1.2 inches. The unofficial record from the Purdue Bug Bowl is 37 feet, 9.75 inches.
The first New Jersey title went to Chris O'Donovan of Cooper Pest Control in Lawrenceville, who spit his cricket 28 feet, 5.75 inches. He won a smiling metal cricket with a clicker hidden beneath.
"This was part of my accomplishment on the field of battle today," O'Donovan said.
Brad's best cricket spit was a generous 12 feet, 5 inches.
"I did what I could for a great cause," he commented afterwards. "Does anyone have any gum?"
Posted by Ron at August 26, 2003 12:49 AM
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