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 »  Home  »  home  »  Be kind to spiders
Be kind to spiders
By Green Living Tips | Published  02/25/2008 | home , garden
Humanely dealing with spiders
 

I'm not a spider lover, also not a spider hater. As long as they aren't crawling on me and I can see them, they don't bother me much. Even big spiders I'll let roam around my office as they keep other insect pests at bay; which means less insecticide.

The benefits of pest control by insects such as spiders may exceed US $100 billion per year globally. Spider venom is also used as the base for some medicines and the web silk (gossamer) made by spiders is used in some optical devices and is comparable in density strength to kevlar (used in bulletproof vests).

Here in Australia we have some really nasty spiders such as funnelwebs and redbacks, the former's bite being potentially fatal. We also have far larger spiders which for the most part are harmless - such as the huntsman.

Unfortunately the one in the pic below became infatuated with my notebook and wouldn't allow me to get on with my work - he'd rear up and when I did manage to catch him and took him outside; he was back an hour later. He was particularly tenacious though.

In regards getting rid of spiders, if they aren't particularly venomous; they are fairly easy to catch - just knock them onto the floor and then quickly cover them with a plastic cup, bucket or bowl. Then just slide thin carboard carefully under the container and holding onto the cardboard, flip the bucket over.

You can also try the same directly on a wall if you have a clear shot. Your spider is then trapped and you can stick him out into the garden.

However, that's not for everyone; so here's a very interesting looking invention - the aptly named Spider catcher.

It allows you to reach into corners, under furniture and is long enough to reach the average ceiling. By squeezing a trigger on the handle, the bristles open. According to the company, after surrounding the spider in the open bristle position, release the trigger and the bristles close gently around the spider, allowing you to safely release it outside.

Spider Catcher is not limited to just spiders - it can catch all sorts of other creepy crawlies. My partner isn't one for the bucket/cardboard trick, so she's ordered a special "Australian" version of the Spider Catcher for tackling our monster huntsmans - I'll post up results here soon :). You can learn more about the Spider Catcher here.

Have any ideas for humanely dealing with spiders? Add your tips below!


 
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Michael Bloch
Green Living Tips.com
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Comments
  • Comment #1 (Posted by Renee Cantara)

    =] me i love spiders to death (from a distace) they are adorable and a wonderful creature. but when they are in my house i freak or run for the hills. my sister Anna she catches them and wants them for pets. do you think it is healthy that she does that? She has this planter that she puts them in and surprisingly they stay.
     
  • Comment #2 (Posted by sarah)

    My roommate is terified of spiders so i got her a spider cather for christmas. it works but if you are deathly afraid of spiders this contraption is not for you. eventhough the spider is safely in the bristles of the catcher, you can see it wiggleing around.
     
  • Comment #3 (Posted by Dale)

    I have a beautiful St Andrews Cross spider building a lovely web just outside our front door. My son and I watch him catch bugs and wrap them up. You can see him growing every day. When he/she gets too big (or looks like having babies) we will catch him in a plastic container and move him to a mango tree in the yard. For the moment, though, he is minimising mosquitos coming in the house, and what he misses the geckos get. We love it.
     
  • Comment #4 (Posted by jean salmon)

    I have found 4 large spiders in my tiny apartment in the past year, all zoropsis spimimana according to my county vector control technician. My wonderful bugzooka wand was too small to catch this 3" in diameter spider, so I finessed the last one under a salad bowl.
    Anyone have experience with these spiders? I'm told they migrated here from Europe about 20 years ago and are being tracked by the California Academy of Sciences spiderman Darryl Ubick. He says he's had them crawling about his body with no bites so far. EEEKKK!!
     
  • Comment #5 (Posted by Michael - Green Living Tips)

    Thanks for all the feedback folks! Nice to see people who don't hate the critters :). That bugzooka is an interesting looking gadget and those zoropsis spimimana spiders look very much like the wolf spiders we have here in Australia.
     
  • Comment #6 (Posted by Peggy)

    Hey. Great post. Let us know how the spider gadget works.

    I mentioned you in my post www.treehuggingfamily.com/green-links-to-love/
     
  • Comment #7 (Posted by Michael - Green Living Tips)

    Thanks for the mention Peggy! We got the Spider Catcher a couple of weeks back and of course now all the spiders have made themselves scarce. We've had a lot of fun with the "training" spider provided though so when one does "threaten" the family; we now have spider commandos on hand to deal with the critter.. humanely :).
     
  • Comment #8 (Posted by dave fergusson)

    We used to have beautiful black white & yellow backed spiders that had very short legs. They appeared to have thorns on their abdomens. They build lovely webs usually over ponds or in the our polyhouse. I am worried that they didnt appear this summer. I believe they are gastrocanthos minax.
     
  • Comment #9 (Posted by Sue B. Balcom)

    We have had a spider relocation program at our house for years. They are good, and I have one tatooed on my shoulder because I am a weaver, just like spiders. I find more men are afraid of them than women. If we leave our tennis shoes on the porch too long, spiders move in and build some amazing webs. They are a good thing.
     
  • Comment #10 (Posted by john)

    hello. i work in the pest control industry and i come into contact with insects and spiders on a daily basis. i'm no entomologist, but it doesn't take a rocket scientist to see the benefit of spiders and beetles when it comes to natural pest control. they both are predatory to other insects and i can tell you with no shame that spiders do my job FAR better than i could ever hope to. there are only a few species of spiders in north america that pose a *real* threat to humans and most of those are rare (black widows by far are the most notorious and are quite common here in the south so beware). i urge everyone to think twice before stomping on our 8-legged friends because you simply don't realize how many other creepy crawlies they are eliminating for you.
     
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