huge spiders

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02GF74

Über Member
soulful dog said:
As wafflycat said, apparently they are growing a lot bigger than usual this year, I just didn't realise how big.


heard that on the radio a couple weeks ago. tis due to the wet summerro auti=umn last year and th dry hot summer/autimn this year.

they are gonna be big!! and now is the time of year they look for somwhere warm as it is getting cold out side i.e. yer hoose!!!! :blush:
 

Baggy

Cake connoisseur
My parents' house is old, not hoovered very often and has minimal central heating so is home to some pretty robust spiders, it's not unusual to find 3" - 4" ones there.

A 6" spider, although rare, is entirely feasible - the "Tupperware spider" of c1976 is still spoken of with awe in our family. We had to catch it in a Tupperware sandwich box because nothing else would fit over the top.
 

Baggy

Cake connoisseur
From the Wildlife Trust factsheet:

"The two biggest UK species are the Great Raft spider and the Cardinal spider – which can be over 13 cm across its legs!".

That's about 6"!
 
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peanut

Guest
just to make things clear for Wiggsie and others that cannot read :tongue::biggrin:

the spider was about 4.5" across
If you pull its legs out straight and flat you could probably add 1"-1.5" to that again.ie 6";)

Tegenaria are very common at 3.5" to 4" across .
I have personally seen 2x house spiders at 4" one we caught on the stairs last month was over 4" across
 

Lisa21

Mooching.............
Location
North Wales
I believe it wholeheartedly as I work in a huge, several-hundred year old mansion house and have encountered some there that have nearly made me throw upxx(
I dont mind the small-body longish leg ones quite as much but I cannot cope with the huge stealthy ones with legs longer(and hairier:biggrin:)than mexx(:tongue:
 

Davidc

Guru
Location
Somerset UK
In Mrs P's defence - I was called by Mrs DC last week to remove a spider from the bedroom wall, about 15 miles from Mrs P's bedroom wall..

Now in the DC house there's a big disagreement as to what should happen to arachnids* discovered lurking indoors. Mrs DC is in favour of squashing first and asking questions later. I rather like them, and just pick them up and throw then out through the nearest door or window. If I'm here I'm called to remove them, if I'm not it's curtains for the spider!

That particular evening I was summonsed, and told to remove the spider on the wall beside the table on her side of the bed. Thinking nothing of it I went round and looked. Then looked again. Then said "wait here".

I went back downstairs, and reappeared a minute or so later with a ruler, only to be told that if it ran under the bed, or worse still into the bed, while I was measuring it I'd be joining it outside for the night, or be being squashed in its place...

The monster didn't even move as I approached. It just sat where it was while I measured it, and announced the result of the measure-in.

Now I had to remove it. Preparation was made, the window opened ready. I'm not sure how much English the average spider can understand, but presumably an unnatural, elephantine spider, which had quite clearly been hatched and bred somewhere near Hinkley Point**, could understand quite clearly that it had two choices. It could surrender peacefully to me and spend a rather cold night in the garden, or it could run away and risk being stood on by Mrs DC.

I didn't know at the time that I was dealing with the arthropod brain of Britain 2009, and approached the beastie with some trepidation. After all, if I hurt it, it might have freinds waiting to spin enough webs, all in proportion with their size, to catch me when I tried to leave the room! I moved my hand over her and slowly closed my fingers around her body. A wriggle. Where had all the bits of leg gone which had been sticking out between my fingers?

I picked her up and moved to the window, stuck my arm out, and opened the palm of my hand. There in the middle was a black, roughly round, blob. It was no bigger than a twenty pence coin, with a framework of folded up legs around the outside.

I watched, amazed, as this little animal unwound itself, spread its legs out across the full size of the palm of my hand, and then launched itself groundwards attached to its end of an invisible thread.

Mrs DC seemed quite impressed that I would even think of taking on such a dangerous, huge and ferocious animal - a lion, a great white, no problem, but a spider - well!

That measurement: 130mm from leg tip to leg tip (a fraction over 5")

* Except spider mites - too small to catch and squash so we import predators for them. They attack house plants.

** Nuclear power station on the Somerset coast.
 
I had to send my kid off to get a neighbour to rescue me from a monster in my kitchen sink recently.:biggrin:
It was so big I nearly threw up. It could wave its horrible legs up to the top of the sink whilst the other legs were on the sink floor .I had to keep batting it back in with a spatula till she got there,(whilst doing the whole screaming-flapping hands-hyperventilating thing as mentioned above..:smile::blush: ). so that's about, what 5 inches..?:biggrin:
And it was so, so hairy..xx(:biggrin:
 
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peanut

Guest
I'm amazed that people pick them up .All spiders can bite and some bites are very painful.
Particularly the red spiders that eat woodlice. Their bite feels like a wasp sting .I can attest to this as I once trod on one which sank its fangs into the sole of my foot through the thick bit of skin.

All spiders inject a solution which dissolves the tissues of their victims so that they can 'suck' the innards . This mild venom can set up a nasty painful infection under the skin somewhat akin to a wasp or bee sting.

you might want to think about that the next time you pick one up;)
 
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