Terra's Worst Nightmare

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Thousands of poisonous spiders and their claim started in 2008. ewwwwwwwwwww

Spiders Force Family From of Upscale Missouri Home - ABC News
  • Profile picture of the author sbucciarel
    Banned
    What a loss. They bought the house, moved out, sued and won and the former owners declared bankruptcy and the insurance didn't pay and now a stinking mortgage company owns it.

    Too bad they didn't just hire the same people the mortgage co hired to exterminate them.
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    • Profile picture of the author Kay King
      "There'll be nothing alive in there after this," said Tim McCarthy, president of the company hired to fix the problem once and for all.
      ...and if they are wrong???
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  • Profile picture of the author HeySal
    It's really hard to believe they were this hard to get rid of. Not sure what to think about this story other than ............oh yuck.
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  • Profile picture of the author Kurt
    I'm curious about what else was in the house? 4500-6000 spiders have to be eating something...
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    • Profile picture of the author ThomM
      Originally Posted by Kurt View Post

      I'm curious about what else was in the house? 4500-6000 spiders have to be eating something...
      I'm guessing there where none of these https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scutigera_coleoptrata
      I know they keep the spider population under control in my house.
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      • Profile picture of the author Dennis Gaskill
        Originally Posted by ThomM View Post

        I'm guessing there where none of these https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scutigera_coleoptrata
        I know they keep the spider population under control in my house.
        Oh yuck, I hate centipedes. CREEPY!

        Speaking of Terra, where has she been lately?
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        • Profile picture of the author Claude Whitacre
          Originally Posted by Kurt View Post

          I'm curious about what else was in the house? 4500-6000 spiders have to be eating something...
          One of the funniest things I've read in awhile. Also, one of the most unsetting. It's a great line for a horror movie.



          Originally Posted by Dennis Gaskill View Post

          Oh yuck, I hate centipedes. CREEPY!

          Speaking of Terra, where has she been lately?
          Hiding from Kurt.

          Right now, Terra is thinking "I miss Riffle".
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        • Profile picture of the author ThomM
          Originally Posted by Dennis Gaskill View Post

          Oh yuck, I hate centipedes. CREEPY!

          Speaking of Terra, where has she been lately?
          I'll admit Dennis the first time I saw one in my house I about crapped myself.
          I was sitting at my desk bare foot and happened to look down. There was one about an inch and a half long along side my left foot staring at it with it's feelers waving in the air.
          Unfortunately I killed it before I looked up what it was.
          Then I found out how common they are and knew there had to be plenty more in the house. Then I learned how they primarily only come out in the dark and almost started sleeping with a night light on.
          More then likely if you live in their range you have them in your house, roaming around at night watching you sleep.
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          • Profile picture of the author sbucciarel
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            Originally Posted by ThomM View Post

            I'll admit Dennis the first time I saw one in my house I about crapped myself.
            I was sitting at my desk bare foot and happened to look down. There was one about an inch and a half long along side my left foot staring at it with it's feelers waving in the air.
            ...
            More then likely if you live in their range you have them in your house, roaming around at night watching you sleep.
            We have them and I always feel bad if I injure one. They're pretty fragile. I get a bit creeped out if one is sitting on my nightstand watching me, but I just try to shoo it away gently. They are so harmless and not really very scary looking.

            This one worries me. I've been seeing a few of these around the house. Had one last year that was quite large and it was sitting beside a toad that had gotten into the house. The toad was dead. I don't know what kind of spider this is, but I've caught the ones I see and put them outside.

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            • Profile picture of the author ForumGuru
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              Originally Posted by sbucciarel View Post

              I don't know what kind of spider this is, but I've caught the ones I see and put them outside.
              That looks like a species of Wolf spider. If it is a Wolf spider they can be aggressive but the venom is not usually dangerous to humans. Wolf spiders are generally considered beneficial to the environment and some folks recommend you capture and release the ones you find inside to the outside where their predatory behavior can be beneficial to the landscape.



              Cheers

              -don
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              • Profile picture of the author sbucciarel
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                Originally Posted by ForumGuru View Post

                It looks like a species of Wolf spider If it is they can be aggressive but the venom is not usually considered dangerous to humans. Wolf spiders are usually considered beneficial and many recommend you capture and release the ones you find inside to the outside where their predatory behavior is beneficial to the landscape.

                Cheers

                -don
                That's what I do. I seriously don't like them in the house, especially when I think it was complicit in the death of that toad.
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                • Profile picture of the author Kurt
                  Originally Posted by lanfear63 View Post

                  Take away pizza's of course. And they surfed the web a lot.

                  Being recluse they had a fear of the eastern countries dictators. Iraqnophobia was a common complaint.
                  If arachnophibia is the fear of spiders, and Iraqnophobia is the fear of dictators, then irocnophobia must be the fear of mullets.


                  (Note to Claude: I'm sure you won't get the "iroc" reference...it's a model of the Chevy camaro.)
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                  • Profile picture of the author Kay King
                    I have to put these outside every now and then

                    North American Millipede

                    About 3-4 inches long - so hard to miss as they crawl across the floor. They are slow so easy to catch and release.

                    My theory about spiders is that if they want to be safe they need to stay outside. Period.
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                  • Profile picture of the author Claude Whitacre
                    Originally Posted by Kurt View Post

                    If arachnophibia is the fear of spiders, and Iraqnophobia is the fear of dictators, then irocnophobia must be the fear of mullets.


                    (Note to Claude: I'm sure you won't get the "iroc" reference...it's a model of the Chevy camaro.)
                    I totally got the reference. I'm cool...I'm hip.
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                    • Profile picture of the author bizgrower
                      Originally Posted by Claude Whitacre View Post

                      I totally got the reference. I'm cool...I'm hip.
                      I'll admit to being uncool - which according to the other thread is kinda cool.
                      While I know of IROC Camaros, I did not know they are associated with mullets.

                      To make up for that uncoolness - that I just shake off - I know there is or used to
                      be a website devoted to mullets. Now I need a cool handshake of the day website
                      and I'll have it made. (After I learn how to do the correct cool handshake.)
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            • Profile picture of the author HeySal
              Originally Posted by sbucciarel View Post

              We have them and I always feel bad if I injure one. They're pretty fragile. I get a bit creeped out if one is sitting on my nightstand watching me, but I just try to shoo it away gently. They are so harmless and not really very scary looking.

              This one worries me. I've been seeing a few of these around the house. Had one last year that was quite large and it was sitting beside a toad that had gotten into the house. The toad was dead. I don't know what kind of spider this is, but I've caught the ones I see and put them outside.
              That's what I do with anything I find that I don't want in my house. Spiders are very beneficial creatures..........they also rank the top 15th for intelligence in species. The way they show fear when approached makes me very empathetic about just walking up and crushing them just for trying to find a good place to survive. I take them outside. If it's too cold, and they aren't poisonous, I'll just shoo them off and in spring do a trap and release. I really don't believe in killing just to kill -- and I don't care what it is. It has meaning in its ecosystem and a right to live. It's not their fault we've invaded every damned nook and cranny on earth.

              Those little black and white fuzzy jumping spiders are kind of cute. I had one in my room for awhile and one night it landed on my hand and startled me and got tossed. It seemed okay - ran off - and it's never come near me since, LOL. I'm not sure if it lives in here or outside, but whenever I see it it's around the windowsill and I usually have the window at least cracked open an inch or so.

              When I was a kid I was deadly afraid of spiders. It took a lot of years for me to learn to accept them, and it was their fear reaction to me that built a my empathy for them. If they're smart enough to be afraid, they're smart enough to respect their life and pain a little, too.
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              Sal
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    • Profile picture of the author joseph7384
      Originally Posted by Kurt View Post

      I'm curious about what else was in the house? 4500-6000 spiders have to be eating something...

      Dietarily, brown recluses are little different from other spiders. They eat small insects and other spiders. As a running spider (not a spider that uses webs to catch prey), recluses chase down prey like a wolf. The purpose of their venom is to subdue their prey.
      I also heard that they eat flies and moths.
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    • Profile picture of the author lanfear63
      Originally Posted by Kurt View Post

      I'm curious about what else was in the house? 4500-6000 spiders have to be eating something...
      Take away pizza's of course. And they surfed the web a lot.

      Being recluse they had a fear of the eastern countries dictators. Iraqnophobia was a common complaint.
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      • Profile picture of the author Claude Whitacre
        Originally Posted by lanfear63 View Post

        Take away pizza's of course. And they surfed the web a lot.

        Being recluse they had a fear of the eastern countries dictators. Iraqnophobia was a common complaint.
        Iragnophobia...........Jeesh.......that's priceless.

        Hurry back from your cruise.
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  • Profile picture of the author Dan Riffle
    I had a mullet and an IROC, but not at the same time. Thankfully, I dodged that cliche.

    On topic, if I were the owner, or even a neighbor, I'd probably set that house on fire.
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    Raising a child is akin to knowing you're getting fired in 18 years and having to train your replacement without actively sabotaging them.

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  • Profile picture of the author HeySal
    I'm seeing that this house sat right on the edge of a golf course and am betting the golf course drove them there by spraying toxins all over hell and back and drove them there. I'd check that out and sue the golf course if what they were spraying by my property was toxic crap.
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    Sal
    When the Roads and Paths end, learn to guide yourself through the wilderness
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  • Profile picture of the author SteveJohnson
    I got bit in 2001 by what the Idaho extension service said was a hobo. I was putting on a tyvek paint suit that I had left overnight in the garage of a house we were painting. Felt a pinprick just above my ankle, felt the damn thing crawling up my leg. Grabbed it with a rag and stuck it in a shopping bag.

    Didn't think much more about it until I got home that night. It never really hurt, but where it bit me was all red and starting to weep. Couple of days later it was the size of a quarter. Went to the doctor with the now-dead spider. They took it to the extension service and found out what it was. Then they wanted to 'debride' the area to keep the damage from spreading. WTF? You want to cut out half my calf? I don't think so.

    Wrapped in charcoal poultice. Took about three weeks but finally healed over. Still have a good sized scar. This is it on the second day:

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    • Profile picture of the author sbucciarel
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      Originally Posted by SteveJohnson View Post

      Wrapped in charcoal poultice. Took about three weeks but finally healed over. Still have a good sized scar. This is it on the second day:

      Ughhh. That is awful. I've heard that hobos are pretty poisonous.
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  • Profile picture of the author HeySal
    I got bit by a spider on the calf this summer out in the field. Don't know what kind it was. I also felt the "pinprick" then it started to burn. I applied hydrogen peroxide, then used hydrocortizone, which I've heard both yea's and nay's about. It seemed to work pretty well. It also made quite a large "infection" zone, and took weeks to completely heal, but finally went away. I don't even remember where it was now. Can't find a scar.
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    Sal
    When the Roads and Paths end, learn to guide yourself through the wilderness
    Beyond the Path

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    • Profile picture of the author positivenegative
      Originally Posted by SteveJohnson View Post

      I got bit in 2001 by what the Idaho extension service said was a hobo.]
      Originally Posted by HeySal View Post

      I got bit by a spider on the calf this summer . . .

      My grandad said they had them real big in his day . . .


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