Topic: Wolf Spider | |
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KILL that sucker!!!! They just make more. And who needs them? JUST KILL IT <sigh> That's so mean... |
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If it's any consolation, the spider is 10 times more afraid of you, than you are of it. Wolf spiders have voracious appetites, so they are especially handy to have around as they eat almost twice as much as a regular funnel web spider or other Lycosidae-family spiders. If ever you get a chance to watch them up close, they're fascinating. They rarely "web hunt", and instead have been known to actually chase down prey....hence their common name, Wolf. (= I watch them up close all the time..I have a house full of them. They don't make webs at all, do they Jace? I didn't think they did. I figure they help keep the population of true pests down..ants, flies, aphids, etc. |
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KILL that sucker!!!! They just make more. And who needs them? JUST KILL IT <sigh> That's so mean... |
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This reminds me.....
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sHzdsFiBbFc |
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Then spray it with hair spray.....He won't last long. Especially if you're holding a lighter in front of the can of hairspray, right? |
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KILL that sucker!!!! They just make more. And who needs them? JUST KILL IT <sigh> That's so mean... the only good spider is a dead spider.... |
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KILL that sucker!!!! They just make more. And who needs them? JUST KILL IT <sigh> That's so mean... the only good spider is a dead spider.... |
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No, they don't make webs in the traditional sense. They generally use burrows or crevices (whatever they can find) and use their spinnerets to secure a covering or "glue down" small rocks or pieces of whatever to give them shelter.
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That's how I do it.........good old lighter and hair spray.
Then they are good spiders. |
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No, they don't make webs in the traditional sense. They generally use burrows or crevices (whatever they can find) and use their spinnerets to secure a covering or "glue down" small rocks or pieces of whatever to give them shelter. They find shelter in my house! I had never seen one before I bought this house. Now I see them all the time. |
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That's how I do it.........good old lighter and hair spray. Then they are good spiders. agreed |
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I had a house outside of Seattle where they lived in the walls (mostly). They were actually big enough that you could HEAR them at night. EEEwwww.....
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That's how I do it.........good old lighter and hair spray. Then they are good spiders. agreed |
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Wolf spiders are fairly common, and tolerate a lot. Extreme cold is about the only thing that dissuades them. That and hair spray and a lighter... <sigh>
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I had a house outside of Seattle where they lived in the walls (mostly). They were actually big enough that you could HEAR them at night. EEEwwww..... |
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That's how I do it.........good old lighter and hair spray. Then they are good spiders. agreed that's why you lure it to a non-flamable area |
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That's how I do it.........good old lighter and hair spray. Then they are good spiders. agreed that's why you lure it to a non-flamable area |
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If it's any consolation, the spider is 10 times more afraid of you, than you are of it. Wolf spiders have voracious appetites, so they are especially handy to have around as they eat almost twice as much as a regular funnel web spider or other Lycosidae-family spiders. If ever you get a chance to watch them up close, they're fascinating. They rarely "web hunt", and instead have been known to actually chase down prey....hence their common name, Wolf. (= Dude that rocks. I did not know that see JSH does serve a purpose I've learned my Biology lesson for today. I thought they were called wolf spiders because they were hairy and friggin' big! |
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Thank You See hair spray is actually a
good thing. |
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I feel like such a dork.
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