Spyke
piefed.social

Yes, Midwest US. I have no knowledge of spider species, but a quick image search shows pretty similar spiders to what I saw. Thanks!

4
FauxLivingreply
lemmy.world

That'd be the right area (all of the US really).

If you catch one drop them off in your garden, he'll munch up the local micro-herbivores and also not build webs for you to walk into unexpectedly (orb weavers x.x).

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lemmy.cafe

Fucking orb weavers - bastards always put up massive webs overnight right where you're going to walk in the dark... Hahaha

Ran into so many as a kid.

3

When we'd ride ATVs in the forest the lead person had to bungee a branch to their grill to catch all of the orb weaver webs that had formed over the trails overnight. There would be 30-50 of them per mile, the branch just looks like cotton candy and arachnophobia after an hour or so.

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fedinsfw.app

Every one of these I find inside gets relocated to the garden... unless its winter, then they get a tour of the potted plants.

2
FauxLivingreply
lemmy.world

There's a spring nearby so the local treefrogs and anoles eat everything smaller than a mouse. The only spiders that survive are aforementioned orb weavers and I think they spend more time trying to catch me, as I'm taking out the garbage and barely awake, than eating insects.

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fedinsfw.app

Nothing worse than walking out in the middle of the night with the dog and getting a face full of orb Weaver web...

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I broom handle that I keep near my trash bins specifically for trailblazing down the driveway.

3

Good to know! I wouldn't want to displace it from its fine industrial manufacturing home, but maybe if I see one in the yard I'll rehome it

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Jumping Spidey | Spyke