Watering up Halloween, California style

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Courtesy of Paul Duginski, political cartoonist and veteran newspaper artist in Southern California.

By Ghost Writer

What better way to spook Californians this Halloween than to appear as a slobbering “Godzilla El Niño.” Or draped in a bedsheet as Godzilla’s opponent, “The Blob,” the amoeba-shaped patch of unusually warm Pacific water blocking storms in California.

Too scary? Not to worry. Researchers at UC Davis’ Center for Watershed Sciences (publisher of California WaterBlog) suggest how you can be California-chic without egging on people’s water fears. They have no shortage of ideas for unintimidating water- and science-themed Halloween costumes. Here are some of them:

Be a trawl net, as fish ecologist Denise De Carion demonstrates. Not shown: fishnet stockings. Photo by Amber Manfree

Louie, the Center’s Lab director, as Crab Louie. Photo by Carson Jeffres

Aquatic bug researcher Kyle Phillips competes head-on with Louie. Photo by Chris Bowman

Nothing says “Boo!” like the bug-eyed California newt with its Halloween-orange hues. Photo by Amber Manfree

Rattle your neighborhood gardeners dressed as this pumpkin-orange parasite, known as dodder. Its creepy root-like organs penetrate host plants and weaken or kill them. Photo by Amber Manfree

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jay Lund, the Center’s director, appears to be a Prophet of Precipitation in the monk’s robe he wore on Halloween week last year during a downpour. The Washington Post described his sign in latin as a “prayer of sorts.” It’s a play on the University of California’s motto, “Fiat Lux,” or, “Let there be light.” Lund’s sign reads “Fiat Pluvia.” Let there be rain. Photo by Chris Bowman