As a pre-teen and teen, I marveled at the ant farms in toy stores. I'd beg my parents for a farm, sorely disappointed every time until I finally gave up. Back then, with no real access to internets, I thought finding queens was impossible. Why bother with an ant farm if they will just end up dying in the end?
Fast forward 20 years, and here I am, picking up a childhood dream. I have no intention of grandiose endeavors. I want a fun desk conversation piece. I want to play god. I want to see a little community grow and prosper under my care. I want to build a metropolis. It's like Minecraft, but with real live inhabitants!
So, my first year, so far has been a mix of accidental encounters, fruitless wood-wandering, and Tetramorium. I swear they are the S. invicta of the North... The only ants I have found while actually looking for ants has been Tetramorium. Beyond that, I found Camponotus. Basically exactly what you don't want to find wandering around your house.
I have been begging my friend to not use pesticide around his house. he has a massive Crematogaster cerasi colony around his garage. I've seen a lone C. ashmeadi on my back patio. Now that it is August, I'm waiting and watching, rather impatiently, for flights. This is so much easier said than done. My lifestyle makes me a better candidate for early morning flights, not so much nightly ones. By 8:00 pm, I'm in bed! My days start at 3:00. That sort of explains the Tetramorium collection I've acquired!
I know my yard has Lasius, I've watched them. I have seen colonies of Formica while out walking the woods. I have broke open and lifted logs on lunch breaks and even ventured onto concrete loading docks while "working"! You would think I'd have wandered onto a queen at some point. Wait, there was that one time a queen flew into my office. It was a Tetramorium.
Don't get me wrong, I appreciate finding all these Tetra-queens. I do. My first one is about to eclose her first nanitics. It's exciting. But, it's like watching dandelions bloom. At least, of all ants, these form fast. Instant gratification. Practice run toward a more entertaining species. It's a hell of a lot more fun than watching the Camponotus for two or three months!
So, all you new guys, don't get discouraged. I'm right here with you, trying to find the "cool queens". Starting colonies from founding queens. Gleaning information from these forums to find that one perfect moment where the weather and month and stars align into a nuptial flight. If this isn't my year to find Crematogasters or Pheidole or Formicas, at least I've found some Dandelions so I can further understand how to grow the Orchids next year.