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Tarantulas!! Okay, so I was just posting a reply to the "Butterflies" thread and didn't want to ruin it with tarantula talk but.... Anyone else have those boogers where they live? My daughter ran into the house last night hollering about a tarantula in the yard and that it was crawling on one of the cats! She said Patches was laying in the grass sunning herself and this tarantula was crawling across her face. The poor baby (the cat) jumped up pretty quick when my daughter hollered at her. So I took a jar outside to capture it to get a closer look. They're pretty creepy looking but for the most part... harmless. I'm just not crazy about them running around in my yard! Last summer my other daughter was playing ball with her grandma in the yard and one crawled UP her leg!! EEWWW! But yes, my darling husband took the poor creature way out into the pasture and released it. He told the girls that he had a long talk with "Freddie" and told him he better not come back in the yard and scare the poor kitty and his girls. Then he said he broke two legs and told him if he came back he would break three more. He was kidding but it was funny the way he told the story. We really do value the "good bugs" we have out in the country. If it weren't for those, we'd be overtaken by the "bad bugs" BUT tarantulas are still creepy!! |
EWWWW! I would freak out! I don't know how you do it. Saw this show not too long ago about these people who have all these scorpions and they have to do all this stuff to their houses to keep em out, yet they still get in.... :eek: EWWWW, I would MOVE!! I'd be on edge 24/7. |
All I can say is I would die. :eek: I HATE spiders, bees you name it...I hate it! About 6 years ago I was on the roof putting Christmas lights up (in NOVEMBER) and a wasp came at me, I ran...right off the roof! broke my rist and ancle. :( |
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A friend of mine has scorpions pretty bad at her house. They do exterminate quite often to keep them under control but we all know to check our shoes before putting them on if they've been laying around. They also come up the bathtub drain somehow! I agree.... EWWW! I've been stung by one before and I will NEVER forget that pain. |
Tatumsmom, How considerate of you not going off topic on the butterfly thread. LOL. I would absolutly die if I saw one of those. I hate spiders, well I hate any bug, insect, snakes, worms, crawly, creepy thing. Guess I can add TX to my list of places to never live. |
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BTW, What is a mud-dobber? |
I'm soooooooo afraid of bugs -- I HATE them!! Anything that crawls or creeps ... gross! |
OMG! I'm absolutely terrified of spiders and the bigger they are, the faster my heart pounds! :fainted: Something VERY unnatural about how they look with those 8 long hairy legs and those beady little eyeballls!:eek: They are disgusting!:confuse8: Then in the Amazon, they have those HUUUUUUGE ones that freaking jump in the air to catch birds! HOLY MOSES! There just ain't NOOOO freaking way!!!!:eek: I remember being 7 years old one Saturday morning climing on the counter to get a bowl for my cereal. Went to jump down and there was a huge hairy light brown tarantula on the floor! OMG!!!! I woke up EVERYONE in the house. My uncle captured it and took it outside!:shocked7q |
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You poor thing... to have to be the butt of the jokes in the family. It's okay, we all have those things that even our lovely family can't let go!! You know what, I don't know what a mud-dobber is really. They are called that because they build little hut looking "nests" out of mud. Usually on an outside wall of your house or inside an old tire or box laying around. I'm sure there is a more official name for them..... anyone?? A little help?? |
Yuck! I hate all ceepy crawlies but i would die if i saw one of those things. |
We have them here in Missouri but I rarely see one. I have made my hubby stop the car so i could get as closer look at one crossing the road. I think they are interesting and harmless. I never kill spiders unless they are poisonious and inside my house. We have wolf spiders coming inside all the time. I try to get tissue and get them back outside. I don't like killing spiders or snakes as long as they aren't harming anyone. Misquitoes, ticks, chiggers and flies are a different story!Oh Yeah, mice have to go also. |
I have seen two in my entire life here in NM. One was at the “lake” and we were camping in tents…I didn’t sleep too well that night. lol |
OMG...I would FREAK I swear...I think I have that phobia of spiders...I can't spell it. My husband was joking around once...there was a HUGE corn spider that made a web in our yard. HUGE yellow and black thing...:eek: he was acting like gonna push me into it...I just about clawed his eyes out. Reading your post has my heart racing. If one of those things crawled on my I think I would go into cardiac arrest. :eek: I am VERY afraid of big spider...I can handle the little ones. :D |
My old roomie Joe and I had a pet tarantula, his name was Dexter! We used to let him crawl around on the couch with us. He was very calm. |
Then he said he broke two legs and told him if he came back he would break three more. He was kidding but it was funny the way he told the story. We really do value the "good bugs" we have out in the country. If it weren't for those, we'd be overtaken by the "bad bugs" BUT tarantulas are still creepy!![/QUOTE] LOL.....you husband is a Hoot! Francie |
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I've heard about people having them for pets. One of the things that bother me is that they can and will bite although unless you are particularly allergic to the venom, it's not deadly. I'm just not sure I'd like the feeling of being bit. And then something else I read is that the hair on their bodies can cause itching and they defend themselves with it at times. Here's an interesting thing I read last night when I had to double check my knowledge about the poisonous aspect.... Tarantulas have small brains (but large for arthropods) and may react in unexpected ways to whatever they perceive as being a threatening situation for people not highly experienced with them. Tarantulas, especially the ground-dwellers, can easily be killed by even a short fall; they can be very fragile. The arboreals are far less likely to be injured by a fall, but they tend to be very fast and can easily escape and be difficult to recapture. Furthermore, tarantulas possess venom. There is no scientific evidence that any of their venoms are lethal, but bites from some species can be painful and cause unpleasant symptoms. Some people may be harmfully allergic to certain venoms. If you are bitten and have trouble breathing, see a doctor. Most tarantulas from North, South, and Central America have urticating (itch-causing) hairs on their abdomens. They can kick these in the air or in some cases press them into an "intruder." This may cause bald spots on the abdomen, which is nothing to worry about. However, these hairs can cause rashes and occasionally bad eye inflammations in humans. Keep your face away from your spiders and wash your hands after any contact with their bodies or cage bedding. Benadryl may help with rashes. |
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Nudges Rhonda.....ok...Texas is definitely OUT for Vacation...- Francie |
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LOL.....you husband is a Hoot! Francie[/QUOTE] Oh yes..... he was using his best "mob boss" voice when he told the story too! He IS a hoot and kids (and adults) love him! In fact.... a little off subject on my own thread but I was reading my 10 year old daughter's Writing folder and she wrote a story about why she loved her dad.... two of the main reasons - he's funny and he does cartwheels! Reason she loves her mom.... she feeds me, takes care of the house, keeps me safe! Hmmm, maybe I need to play with spiders and do cartwheels so that I can be the "fun one" too! ;) |
Wow we dont have tarantulas in my country but could you post a pick of it in your garden? |
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I actually found a really good short overview on the mud dauber (correct spelling according to this site) in case anyone is interested... ************************************************ I understand that mud daubers (Hymenoptera: Sphecidae) can be a nuisance putting their mud nests in unwanted places. However, they are providing beneficial service by eliminating many spiders (especially black widows). While they are very resourceful in finding available mud, they are much more active where mud is abundant. If you live along the river there is little you can do, but if you eliminate mud puddles caused by leaking pipes and etc, you will reduce the mud dauber activity. This Iowa State University web site is the most informative of the references that I found: http://www.ipm.iastate.edu/ipm/iiin/bmuddaub.html This is what it has to say: "Mud daubers are solitary wasps that construct small nests of mud in or around homes, sheds, and barns and under open structures, bridges and similar sites. Several species exist in Iowa. These wasps are long and slender with a narrow, thread-like waist. Some are a solid steel blue or black but others have additional yellow markings. This wasp group is named for the nests that are made from mud collected by the females. Mud is rolled into a ball, carried to the nest and molded into place with the wasp's mandibles. There are three different wasps that practice this behavior. The black and yellow mud dauber builds a series of cylindrical cells that are eventually plastered over with mud to form a smooth mud nest about the size of a fist. The organ-pipe mud dauber, a more robust, black species, builds cylindrical tubes resembling pipe-organ pipes. The third species is a beautiful metallic-blue wasp with blue wings. This one does not build its own mud nest but instead uses the abandoned nests of the black and yellow mud dauber. After completing the mud nest the female captures several insects or spiders to provision the cells. Prey are stung and paralyzed before being placed in the nest. A single egg is deposited on the prey within each cell, and the cell sealed with mud. After the wasp has finished a series of cells, she departs and does not return. The larvae that hatch from the eggs feed on the prey items left by the adult wasp. New adult wasps emerge to start the process over again. Wasps usually evoke a great deal of anxiety or fear. However, solitary wasps such as the mud daubers do not defend their nest the way social wasps such as hornets and yellow jackets do. Mud daubers are very unlikely to sting, even when thoroughly aroused. They may sting if mishandled. Control of these insects is not warranted since they normally pose little threat. Rather, mud daubers should be regarded as beneficial, since they remove and use as prey many species of spiders which most people find disagreeable. The mud nests can be scraped off and discarded at night if they are objectionable, or wasp and hornet aerosol sprays can be used to treat nests if desired. There is no proven method that is effective in discouraging wasps from building nests in sheltered or protected areas. Prompt and frequent removal of nests is suggested in areas favored by the wasps." ******************************************** I guess my husband is right about this one..... although I don't usually stick around to figure out if what is buzzing around me is a red wasp (that DOES sting and it's painful!) or a mud dauber. ;) |
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