I like spiders

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The female in that gif is very attractive to me. She should check out the utricating hairs in my crotchetal area. Bet she's a freak in the sack too.

I was so disappointed when my entomology professor told me we would be ignoring spiders for the semester as the class was strictly about insects. I wouldn't be opposed to taking a class in arachnology
 
Always found them fun to watch. One time was watching a spider fight a bunch of ants for 10 minutes but then I had to leave the area so I never saw the fight finish =/

Family doesn't like spiders though so we get rid of them from the apartment, but overall as long as they aren't in any of my living spaces they're cool.
 
Spiders are the only bugs ("bugs") I let roam free in my apartment. They stay out of the way, in corners and shit, just hangin out, eatin up other critters. Don't crawl in my mouth and we got no beef.
 
Always found them fun to watch. One time was watching a spider fight a bunch of ants for 10 minutes but then I had to leave the area so I never saw the fight finish =/

Family doesn't like spiders though so we get rid of them from the apartment, but overall as long as they aren't in any of my living spaces they're cool.

Ants won. Ants always win.
 
I bet they find you pretty creepy, too, with your 2 eyes, 4 limbs, and soft, squishy skin.

Not to mention, I tower over them like moving mountains. I am a friend of spiders. Though, I have never see (or knew) that they molted. Which is really the only creepy part to me. :p
 
As long they're not in the shower, toilet or my bedroom, I like them. But that goes for most insects in general. They can be pretty awesome.

Except for mosquitoes and fruit flies. I'll kill indiscriminately.
 
I respect them and admire them, but if they are in the house they gotta go. I live in Washington D.C. so I might feel more fearful if I lived in Brazil or Australia.

I live in Australia, haven't had any real problems where ive been. Either let them be in the corner of the room, or just put a glass on top and slip a piece of card underneath and then take the spider somewhere outside.
 
The internet has changed my opinion on spiders completely. My friends/family think it's insane that I will just live with spiders now without any concerns whatsoever.

Spider on the wall? Good, he's just doing his job. But anyone else in the room is freaked out and wants it dead, and they think I'm some kind of freak.
 
As long as they don't crawl at me/in my space I'm fine. I've been bit and scarred twice by spiders though (knee, elbow) and if they come anywhere near me I smash them.
 
I really do! When I was a kid, I'd often find myself a cute little spider and play with it. It would cast its web, attach it to my hand and hang from it (in retrospect it was a pretty cruel thing to do though). Haven't seen any spider action in quite a long time (or any spiders at all, for that matter), but I still like them. Arachnophobia seems to be a huge thing though. Those of you who have it, did you always have it? Any stories connected to it? Stories from people who like spiders are appreciated as well.

My arachnophobia started when I was 6 years old. My dad was renting a room from one of his friends (he did that between marriages) and when it was his turn for visitation I would stay over there. This man's house was a little stone cottage in the woods that had no air conditioning so he just left the door open in the summer for whatever to come in. Also, there was no bed for me so I slept on a mattress on the floor. One night while I was sleeping a giant fucking wolf spider crawled on my face and bit me several times. The pain woke me in time to see it scurrying away. After that day, spiders are my mortal enemy.
 
Spiders are okay by me. The one pest I hate are house mice. They're too anthropomorphic for my taste.
 
I like spiders too - not crawling on me, but I love looking at them. A few years ago, I discovered we have black widows living outside our house, and I started feeding them various insects.

I took this picture a couple summers ago of this little gal living under my porch.

BMBHb.jpg
 
I remember driving home to my house after a long day of work, and a fucking spider just entered the Car from behind the handle. It was a really small one thankfully.
 
I like spiders too - not crawling on me, but I love looking at them. A few years ago, I discovered we have black widows living outside our house, and I started feeding them various insects.

I took this picture a couple summers ago of this little gal living under my porch.

BMBHb.jpg

Ya.... no.

NoNoNoNoNoNoNo.

I try to be nice to my eight legged friends, but a line has to be drawn somewhere. Black Widows and Brown Recluses die under my shoe.
 
I'll never understand the "Spiders get rid of bugs around the house" mentality. Spiders are bugs! (Yeah, they're arachnids or whatever. I'm no biologist, but I'm using the more colloquial 'bug' here. All the creepy crawlies and arachnids and beetles and insects and bugs)

It's like saying "Yeah, I keep a murderer around the house. He murderers the other murderers for me and keeps me safe." You still have the problem of the original murderer.
 
Ya.... no.

NoNoNoNoNoNoNo.

I try to be nice to my eight legged friends, but a line has to be drawn somewhere. Black Widows and Brown Recluses die under my shoe.

We have brown recluses in my area too - although I've never seen one. I'd not let them live outside my house (and I can't really let the widows stay now that I have a daughter) -- this will be their last summer to thrive under my porch, after that I will have to remove or kill them.

Brown Recluses are far more dangerous than widow's though - and a lot harder to identify.

Here's another shot I took:

hSz7Pl.jpg


Plus a little spider I found one day who was moulting(?):

PzwTGl.jpg
 
I'll never understand the "Spiders get rid of bugs around the house" mentality. Spiders are bugs! (Yeah, they're arachnids or whatever. I'm no biologist, but I'm using the more colloquial 'bug' here. All the creepy crawlies and arachnids and beetles and insects and bugs)

It's like saying "Yeah, I keep a murderer around the house. He murderers the other murderers for me and keeps me safe." You still have the problem of the original murderer.

On the national level they usually call it "ministry of defence" or "armed forces".
 
Ya.... no.

NoNoNoNoNoNoNo.

I try to be nice to my eight legged friends, but a line has to be drawn somewhere. Black Widows and Brown Recluses die under my shoe.

Don't worry. For every terrifying arthropod, there is a much worse wasp waiting to lay its eggs inside of it :)
 
I'll never understand the "Spiders get rid of bugs around the house" mentality. Spiders are bugs! (Yeah, they're arachnids or whatever. I'm no biologist, but I'm using the more colloquial 'bug' here. All the creepy crawlies and arachnids and beetles and insects and bugs)

It's like saying "Yeah, I keep a murderer around the house. He murderers the other murderers for me and keeps me safe." You still have the problem of the original murderer.

I think it's more that they kill lots of bugs per spider. So one spider could represent the loss of many bugs.

Also, the house centipede things are disgusting and I'd rather have 5 spiders than one of those.
 
I think it's more that they kill lots of bugs per spider. So one spider could represent the loss of many bugs.

Also, the house centipede things are disgusting and I'd rather have 5 spiders than one of those.

Exactly. Flies and mosquitoes too.
 
Tarantulas are generally pretty predictable. If she suddenly start shaking around and pawing at the spider, it might try to protect itself. That said, if you can pick up a spider and have it calmly crawl into your hand, it's not going to do anything to you unless you provoke it. Different tarantulas have varying levels of aggression. I'm not sure exactly what kind of spider the girl has - maybe Slevin can help with that one.

So in essence, they can't really be "domesticated", but they can grow accustomed to being handled. Some are inherently chill while others are inherently leery of handling. They'll never bite you for no reason.

Can't really tell from the gif but it looks to me like a Lasiodora parahybana or the Pink Salmon Bird-eater. They are a rival for the largest tarantula in the world next to a Theraphosa stirmi/blondi which I own. The parahybana is for the most part on the docile side of tarantula temperaments. Not very defensive and generally on the slow side. If she was doing that with say a Pterinochilus murinus I would be crapping my pants!
 
I think it's more that they kill lots of bugs per spider. So one spider could represent the loss of many bugs.

Also, the house centipede things are disgusting and I'd rather have 5 spiders than one of those.

They really don't. If I recall correctly, many spiders that you'll find in your house can live for a year or longer with no food or water, so they may not kill many at all in their lifetime.

My house doesn't really get many bugs. We do have moths but I like those so I wouldn't want spiders to kill them either. Spiders can fuck off.
 
Yep, spiders are misunderstood creatures that their reputation ruined by movies and whatnot, do you know that out of 50,000 known species of spiders, only 15 can harm humans ?
 
Tarantulas are generally pretty predictable. If she suddenly start shaking around and pawing at the spider, it might try to protect itself. That said, if you can pick up a spider and have it calmly crawl into your hand, it's not going to do anything to you unless you provoke it. Different tarantulas have varying levels of aggression. I'm not sure exactly what kind of spider the girl has - maybe Slevin can help with that one.

So in essence, they can't really be "domesticated", but they can grow accustomed to being handled. Some are inherently chill while others are inherently leery of handling. They'll never bite you for no reason.

interesting. thanks.
 
They really don't. If I recall correctly, many spiders that you'll find in your house can live for a year or longer with no food or water, so they may not kill many at all in their lifetime.

My house doesn't really get many bugs. We do have moths but I like those so I wouldn't want spiders to kill them either.

I'd rather live with the delusion that their webs trap lots of mosquitoes and shit that I hate.
 
They really don't. If I recall correctly, many spiders that you'll find in your house can live for a year or longer with no food or water, so they may not kill many at all in their lifetime.

My house doesn't really get many bugs. We do have moths but I like those so I wouldn't want spiders to kill them either. Spiders can fuck off.

Maybe it's all thanks to the silent protectors, who weave their webs in secrecy, unknown and unrewarded.
 
They really don't. If I recall correctly, many spiders that you'll find in your house can live for a year or longer with no food or water, so they may not kill many at all in their lifetime.

My house doesn't really get many bugs. We do have moths but I like those so I wouldn't want spiders to kill them either. Spiders can fuck off.

Yes and no. I've only ever heard of certain types of tarantulas living that long without sustenance. Spiders have incredibly low metabolism rates since most of the time they rely on their food to come to them which can be long periods of time. But even if they don't eat the insect, their webs still trap pesky critters and they eventually die anyway.
 
Spiders are the only bugs ("bugs") I let roam free in my apartment. They stay out of the way, in corners and shit, just hangin out, eatin up other critters. Don't crawl in my mouth and we got no beef.

Have an awesome black house spider in my garage. Wish I some decent pictures.
 
I remember driving home to my house after a long day of work, and a fucking spider just entered the Car from behind the handle. It was a really small one thankfully.

I once just got out of the movie theater and discovered that there was a spider in my shorts!!! WTF spider?!?! Then it bit me. :(
 
Liking them might be a bit much, but we have a mutual understanding. If they stay in the corners of the apartment and eat all the other bugs, they're free to hang around. Those that don't agree to those terms receive the boot. Literally.
 
I have an allergy to some stinging insects. Spiders eat those insects. Spiderwebs allow spiders to catch said insects. Therefore spiders are a good thing, and spiderwebs are not to be cleaned unless they are becoming an issue in some other way.

Spiders are my allies in the war against other insects. The local spiders don't even bite, so it's win-win here.
 
Yes and no. I've only ever heard of certain types of tarantulas living that long without sustenance. Spiders have incredibly low metabolism rates since most of the time they rely on their food to come to them which can be long periods of time. But even if they don't eat the insect, their webs still trap pesky critters and they eventually die anyway.

I wouldn't mind the spiders in my house if they were all web builders that stuck to little out-of-the-way corners, but most of them seem to be hunters that often show up in horrible places like my bed or my shower. Why must they attack me when I'm naked and vulnerable?
 
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