Topic about Spiders, ever been bitten, how bad was it?

When I was bricklaying with my father & bro they had put the banded bricks near the orchard. Cat Faces had built nests in the holes. I dislike spiders so most of my time was spent looking into the holes & trying to seal them up. Father was a little miffed at me but I avoided any bites. But now black widows are another story, you see one & there's no mistakening it for something else. We had brown recluses around our foundation but 'knock on wood' I've been lucky to avoid them.
 

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I'm not squeamish about touching most animals and insects but NOT spiders, centipedes, millipedes, slugs, and potato bugs.

As a kid, due to open construction at base floor level, spiders could easily enter one Sacramento Valley home I lived in. Among things I hated most, was waking up at night only to feel something crawling against my body inside bed sheets. Thus upon feeling anything crawling might suddenly rise up like a jack-in-the-box on steroids. Each night spiders would be crawling about on walls so I would tuck bedspreads up away from floors.

Worse for we kids was walking about in outdoor fields in natural areas and accidentally walking into one of those large garden spider circular webs that tended to set up in use pathways. Any kid that did so would run about waving arms, hands knocking anything on hair, like a chicken with its head cut off with any other nearby kids rolling on the ground laughing hysterically. Of all spiders, the scariest by far are black widows that are abundant in much of California with their Halloween like webs and small round yellow egg balls. It is about tropical vegetation areas like our southern Gulf states where web spiders get huge and scariest.
 

I never deliberately kill a spider, but at the same, don't cotton to them being in the house. If I see one, I try to get it in a small plastic container I have just for that purpose, then escort it outside and dump it in the bushes and let it go about its spidery business. Can't say I've ever been bitten, but I think my dad was once. He was moving some lumber stored under the front porch in the house I grew up. He felt a sting and in a day or two, it got red and swollen. I don't think he ever did anything about it and it eventually it resolved. But what can I remember - I was 5 or 6 years old at the time.

I guess I won't be getting Lady Emeraude spider slippers for Christmas.

spider slippers.jpg
 
I never deliberately kill a spider, but at the same, don't cotton to them being in the house. If I see one, I try to get it in a small plastic container I have just for that purpose, then escort it outside and dump it in the bushes and let it go about its spidery business. Can't say I've ever been bitten, but I think my dad was once. He was moving some lumber stored under the front porch in the house I grew up. He felt a sting and in a day or two, it got red and swollen. I don't think he ever did anything about it and it eventually it resolved. But what can I remember - I was 5 or 6 years old at the time.
I usually take them outside, too.

But there's a few common "house spiders" I leave alone. They don't live long, they eat insects I don't like having around, and, though some of them build little hammocks or hides, they're not web-weavers. Plus they've never found a mate, so there's never been a population boom, and they aren't bitey at all.

Unfortunately, if they're dumb enough to walk across the floor, my cat will torture and eat them.
 
Horse flies annoy me so much I read up on them. They are apparently attracted to darker clothing and large, dark objects (like horses and cattle). When the temps get north of 70 deg. F., that's when they come out with a vengeance. As my vehicle is a dark gray color, I can't tell you how many times I'd pull up somewhere, park, and within seconds the vehicle is being divebombed. I hate those things with a passion.
We have "yellow flies" here in Florida. They apparently have mandibles as powerful as a claw on a trash truck and they don't sting, they bite a chunk out of you.

Once, at the springs, one bit me on the rump, right through my bathing suit. There was a good-sized hole in the suit and a good-sized hole in my derriere, too. They must also inject some kind of toxin, also, because I got a big lump on the rump.
 
I've never been bitten that I know of, and never saw a poisonous one that I know of... until I moved to Virginia. I heat with wood part of the time and would have a log truck of dead logs delivered on occasion. While I'm sawing and splitting, I end up with mountains of split wood in the yard. So I noticed some webs forming in the wood pile in the yard. Nothing unusual about that, but when picked up one split piece to throw it in my pickup to start moving split wood to the shed, there's a big fat black spider. A black widow? I turn it over and there's the hourglass. I look up black widow on the internet. Yep, it was black widow. Kind of exciting.

During the course of moving the wood to the shed, I see maybe 50 black widows in the next three days. I don't know where the logs came from, but it must have been from a black widow breeding ground. That was 10 years ago, and I didn't seen another black widow until last year when I was catching my breath on a hiking trail, and I saw a single black widow scurry across the trail and under a pile of leaves.
 
I never deliberately kill a spider, but at the same, don't cotton to them being in the house. If I see one, I try to get it in a small plastic container I have just for that purpose, then escort it outside and dump it in the bushes and let it go about its spidery business. Can't say I've ever been bitten, but I think my dad was once. He was moving some lumber stored under the front porch in the house I grew up. He felt a sting and in a day or two, it got red and swollen. I don't think he ever did anything about it and it eventually it resolved. But what can I remember - I was 5 or 6 years old at the time.

I guess I won't be getting Lady Emeraude spider slippers for Christmas.

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If I owned a pair of these slippers, I would pass out cold LOL
 
All sorts of little spiders, some not so little, climbing out of my bathtub drain.
It's Springtime and so here they come again.

Oh hael no. I have spiders but not too much in the house and <knock on wood> not in the bathtub drain🤯🤯

Also to my knowledge <knock on wood> I have never been bit by a spider. Considering I don’t always remember to wear gloves when digging around in the barn, that’s a bit of a miracle.

Brown Recluse and Black Widows are the ones to worry about in my area.

Brown Recluse venom eats away at flesh. They are also filthy. According to the pest control guy, they don’t clean themselves, making them difficult to kill.

Black Widows are shy and don’t look for trouble, but they like to move into places they shouldn’t— like shoes left on the landing in the garage. One of their favorite places on my farm is underneath the 50# salt block containers for the horses. I am pretty sure if I tore the kickboards of the barn walls, I would find some Black Widows back there, but as long as they stay put, it’s all good.

I never bother the Wolf spiders or the Orb spiders. They are good neighbors.
 
While living in Australia, I was bitten by a spider that I didn't see. A thin red line appeared to be going around my wrist. It was confirmed at the hospital, that it was a spider bite. I don't recall what was done about it :unsure:

One time, a Huntsman spider was inside the house, up near the ceiling. We had to keep on eye on it, and made sure it was deposited outside. It was huge.
 
This moment there are two spider webs hanging outside
of my bedroom window. Although I have a screen for when
opening the windows for fresh air, I am going to move them
on their way. One is good size, with a blackish brown body.
I don't want it around. SO..
 
My wife and me were never bitten by spiders. In Germany there are no venomous spiders for people. Since many years we take them out.

As I was in high school a biology teacher had a terrarium with Goliath birdeaters. If relatives he disliked visited him he always took out one of them and showed it. He said "they instantly left" :ROFLMAO:.

I always considered to buy bagpipes and show guests and relatives I don't like my "progress" in playing them. Unneccessary to mention that I would play horrible even if I could play the instrument perfectly, only to drive them away :ROFLMAO:.
 
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I get very upset with people who go around killing spiders willy nilly. Like preying mantises and some others, they are good insects because they kill the real pests in our gardens. My mother was one of those hot headed people that declared war on all spiders. There was a big yellow and black spider in our front bush. She killed it with hot water. I tried to explain to her why she should let spiders live. She said, "I don't care. I hate spiders!" She wasn't very educated on a whole lot of things.

Sometime later she complained that beetles were killing off the rose blooms. I told her, "It's your own fault. This is what happens when you go around killing spiders! If you let them live, there wouldn't be so many beetles around!"
 
I have been bitten more than once by a yellow jacket (wasp). They are aggressive in the fall. One time my arm swelled up big time and it was quite painful. I was out of town at the time so I put on a jacket and just lived with it.

I saw a man at the drug store who had been bitten by a brown recluse. It made an ugly hole in his arm.
 


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