

|  | A poem about catching frogs by the bucketful... | 
| The grandfather sat down to read a book before bedtime with his three-year-old grandson. âWhatâs this, Wyatt?â âFrog!â âThatâs right. Look. He hops! Say, did your daddy ever tell you of the fun we had when he was your age going frog hunting? He was great at it. Of course, frogs arenât too cunning. At night just after dark weâd take this plastic bucket and walk around the block. Heâd catch dozens of toads until eventually theyâd be able to jump out of our bucket. Once this large bullfrog from the bayou across the road was on the lawn. As your dad went to catch him, he jumped six feet. Your dad screamed with glee. Boy, was he pumped! Every time he squatted down to pick up that bullfrog, it jumped again. Soon they were jumping in unison all over three lawns. Hilarious! A sight Iâll never forget. Finally he caught it. Gigantic! It made the toads look small. As your dad told his mother about it, I laughed âtil I cried. That was one bullfrog that certainly didnât get his legs fried. Weâd dump our haul on the neighborâs lawn; heâd be impressed.â âGranddad, will you take me frog hunting? We could go now.â âWyatt, all the toads have disappeared! Whoâd have ever guessed that the frogs would be gone. Things just arenât the same somehow.â Please check out my ten books: http://www.amazon.com/Jr.-Harry-E.-Gilleland/e/B004SVLY02/ref=ntt_dp_epwbk_0 |