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Old December 5, 2016   #1
Gardenboy
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Default My "tomato" protectors!

I counted 21 Argiope spiders this morning. Some are the size of a quarter. I am SURE they are helping with eating cutworm and fruit worms . Found one cutworm wrapped in its web...yeah!!! Nature is the best defense.
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Old December 5, 2016   #2
Cole_Robbie
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Cool pic.

I met a guy recently who is terrified of spiders. He will hardly go outside at night, because he is scared he is going to walk into a spiderweb.
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Old December 5, 2016   #3
Jimbotomateo
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Great pic gardenboy! My wife has nitemares about spiders. She's sleeping, sits up points to ceiling says "spiders". I've learned to tell her softly it's ok there's no spiders. Reassured it's safe she will doze off to sleep. This summer she trapped a black widow under glass cup and says it was therapeutic experience and has helped her get over fear of spiders. I like to see them in garden cuzz their so beneficial.
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Old December 5, 2016   #4
BigVanVader
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If I had a dollar for every time I've rode through a spider web on a lawnmower I could retire. Nice pic.
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Old December 6, 2016   #5
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Originally Posted by BigVanVader View Post
If I had a dollar for every time I've rode through a spider web on a lawnmower I could retire. Nice pic.
I have walked into so many spider webs that I should look like a mummy by now.
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Old December 7, 2016   #6
salix
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I remember once leaning into one with my face accidentally and being surprised at how strong it was, it almost bounced me out!
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Old December 7, 2016   #7
Starlight
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Spiders are good friends of gardeners for sure. What's pretty to see tall grasses and bushes at daybreak when dew is out. You can look out and see spider webs all over the place. I walk into them all the time. Do hate when I get one unknown down the shirt and it bites. During growing season, not unusual to come in after working with plants and take a shower and wash hair and find a couple drop down into tub.

It's actually kind of hard to keep spider population up here. Birds eat alot of them.

Beautiful pic Doug. : )
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Old December 7, 2016   #8
berryman
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Reading the title of this thread reminded me of (45 years ago....) of my best high school friend. We liked to eat our tomatoes whole when eating lunch. We would then take the stubby green calyx and tuck them into our ears, and go to our 10th grade math class taught by a terribly sanctimonious man.
When the teacher noticed these he wanted to know what the googleyeyed heck we were doing. I said, "what? Can't hear very good. I've got my tomato protectors in"
Class cracks up, teacher gets mad...success!
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Old December 7, 2016   #9
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Here's a chart on spiders I just discovered. It looks like Gardenboy's spider is listed.
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Old December 7, 2016   #10
Cole_Robbie
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The recluse and the black widow are the only two I know to be afraid of. The recluse looks a lot like a cellar spider, which are common and like to hang out on my ceiling. I think the easiest way to tell them apart is behavior. A recluse is true to its name. It wants to hide, not be out in the open.

Black Widows look like Halloween props. It only makes sense to give them a wide berth. I've had a few big ones on trays of plants in the greenhouse. Dirt Dauber mud wasps are their natural enemy.
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Old December 7, 2016   #11
Jimbotomateo
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cole_Robbie View Post
The recluse and the black widow are the only two I know to be afraid of. The recluse looks a lot like a cellar spider, which are common and like to hang out on my ceiling. I think the easiest way to tell them apart is behavior. A recluse is true to its name. It wants to hide, not be out in the open.

Black Widows look like Halloween props. It only makes sense to give them a wide berth. I've had a few big ones on trays of plants in the greenhouse. Dirt Dauber mud wasps are their natural enemy.
Cole, there was body builder guy delivered beer to the restaurant and we didn't see him for couple weeks. He comes in shows us nickel size hole half inch deep in his huge bicep muscle! Says he was drinking beer on patio fell asleep, woke up and was unable to move for 2 days! Dr said it was brown recluse and he was lucky he was in great physical condition or he coulda died.
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Old December 7, 2016   #12
brownrexx
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The 2 things that people are said to fear most are spiders and snakes. I like them both, but not necessarily in the house!
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Old December 7, 2016   #13
Gardenboy
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They are Argiope spiders. Their bite is similar to a bee sting. I see flies and pieces of cutworms in their webs. They leave the web and hide under leaves when you come to close.
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Old December 7, 2016   #14
dmforcier
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Hunting spiders are welcome anywhere I am, in the house or out. Web spiders need to stay outside, but are not to be disturbed unnecessarily.

In the South, you learn to pick up a stick and hold it up in front of you when you walk at night in the dark when you can't see a web.

Up north in the Boundary Waters area there is the legend of Huey, God of Rain. Kill a spider and answer to Huey for it!
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Old December 7, 2016   #15
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Here's the worst story. A local doctor was bitten on his heal by a spider (probably brown recluse but no one knows for sure). The foot then leg were infected then amputated. He was dead in about 3 weeks. True story. He was my and many peoples chiropracter (sp) and sorely missed.
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