Demon Centipedes

Homebrew Talk - Beer, Wine, Mead, & Cider Brewing Discussion Forum

Help Support Homebrew Talk - Beer, Wine, Mead, & Cider Brewing Discussion Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Evan!

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 9, 2006
Messages
11,835
Reaction score
115
Location
Charlottesville, VA
I don't know if it's just the exceptionally rainy year, but this is the first time these things have been in my house. They're only about 1" long, they don't really cause any trouble, I just don't like centipedes crawling around my house (mainly the basement). Anyone else have these little bastards invading their place? With a newborn, there's no way I'm bug-bombing...and I think they're just coming in under the back door anyway...AGH!
 
Can't answer your question, but we had a big ass centipede for the first time in our house a few weeks ago. Saw it up on the ceiling in the living room and it was a good 3-4 inches long. I don't mind bugs in the house, but that was just too much.
 
We used to get them all the time back when I lived in Michigan. Seemed like they would always crawl out when you least expect it and freak you out.

Glad I don't have to deal with them out here
 
We don't have them, but we have Grasshoppers from hell !!!!

Not in the house, but outside they are eating all the flowers we planted this spring.
Flower boxes look like sh#t anymore.

We have a ton of Earwigs also, and they do get into the house.
 
I've got the 3 inch-long black ones. They love compost and moldy hay bales. Mainly outside, but once in a while they show up inside.
 
Strange this is the first time they have invaded my space as well. I have found places that have literally thousands of them. Like under a barrel or in the sand next to the foundation.

Looked them up and read quite a bit and the seem harmless butt you are right they are just a little icky.
 
I spray malathion around the yard and especially around all the foundations of the buildings, spring and fall. I get ants and spiders and that sorta thing in the summer, and then it's those horrible little elder bug things invading in the fall. Also helps with mosquitoes.

The only good bug is a dead bug.
 
Are you talking about these (house centipedes)? They like moist environments and are harmless (don't bite), but are creepy as hell and I'm sure they carry plenty of bacteria that could cause problems. The good thing is that they are predators for other insects and don't eat your food/crumbs. I believe they also shed their legs as a defense mechanism... leaving stray, twitching legs as you try to swat at them.

HouseCentipede7lr.jpg
 
Yeah, don't spray for them with a newborn in the house. Just mash them....a 90 minute mash with some 2-row would be a good start.
Get it? mash.... you know, I mean, not with a shoe.... like, ummm....mash, you know... like we do when we brew.... with 2-row....
Hmmm, I think I need another pain pill..... I'll be back.
 
I get those in the house occasionally. I toss them outside if I can get to them before the cats do. They eat other insects so I give 'em a pass. :)
 
Giant cockroaches: One thing I don't miss about Florida.
 
Are you talking about these (house centipedes)? They like moist environments and are harmless (don't bite), but are creepy as hell and I'm sure they carry plenty of bacteria that could cause problems. The good thing is that they are predators for other insects and don't eat your food/crumbs. I believe they also shed their legs as a defense mechanism... leaving stray, twitching legs as you try to swat at them.

HouseCentipede7lr.jpg

God no, I hate those things even more. No, these are very compact, less than 1/16" wide, and you'd mistake them for a little twig if they were straightened out and not moving...
 
God no, I hate those things even more. No, these are very compact, less than 1/16" wide, and you'd mistake them for a little twig if they were straightened out and not moving...

We have had the ones you are talking about here in our area too Evan. We had a nice wet spring followed by several weeks of dry weather. I think they are wandering in looking for moisture. We also get the earwigs, the little wigglers from hell that look like they have pinchers on their tail. They come up out of the drains.
Get some indoor/outdoor insecticide and spray it OUTSIDE around your foundation and sills. I find that that helps quite a bit.
 
We have had the ones you are talking about here in our area too Evan. We had a nice wet spring followed by several weeks of dry weather. I think they are wandering in looking for moisture. We also get the earwigs, the little wigglers from hell that look like they have pinchers on their tail. They come up out of the drains.
Get some indoor/outdoor insecticide and spray it OUTSIDE around your foundation and sills. I find that that helps quite a bit.

Great idea...do you know if that stuff is dog-safe?
 
Flying roaches, and these motherf'ers, stinging and grow to 8 inches.View attachment 12122

YEESH!!

*Note to Self: Avoid Japan.

We bought our house back in April and have had a lot of the ones that Mensch posted up. They are really creepy and really fast. If you get aclose look at them moving, it's actually pretty awesome to see their legs going. Even more awesome to hear their legs crunch when you kill them.

Yeah, so I'm pretty much a 12 year old. Wanna fight about it?
 
i let the spiders in the basement live on condition they eat the centipedes and mice that make their way in. anything past say the kitchen gets escorted off the premises and summarily executed.
 
i let the spiders in the basement live on condition they eat the centipedes and mice that make their way in. anything past say the kitchen gets escorted off the premises and summarily executed.

I don't want to alarm you or anything. But if you have spiders that can be expected to eat the mice, I think you have more to worry about than the mice! :eek:
 
Nerdy biology tidbit...

Many times in nature, it's the smaller, less ominous critters that have more lethal venom. The smaller ones evolved more powerful venom to disable prey, while the large ones have their size to rely on. Scorpions are a great example... the smaller species have much more potent venom than the huge, scary looking ones.
 
Nerdy biology tidbit...

Many times in nature, it's the smaller, less ominous critters that have more lethal venom. The smaller ones evolved more powerful venom to disable prey, while the large ones have their size to rely on. Scorpions are a great example... the smaller species have much more potent venom than the huge, scary looking ones.

nerdlinger!

All the more reason to kill ALL spiders in your house, if you don't know what they are.
 
All the more reason to kill ALL spiders in your house, if you don't know what they are.

Yep, and don't forget to check your shoes every morning for scorpions!:eek:

And a new one I just learned... check your lawn prior to mowing for yellow jackets nests! (Different thread.;))
 
Anything with more legs than a dog needs to be stomped on and sent back to whatever level of Hell it came from! The more legs they have, the more they freak me out!

We used to go razor clam digging all the time when I was a kid. If you've never done it, here's how it goes. You walk along the wet sand when the tide is going out and watch for a little dimple in the sand that tells you there's a clam a couple feet down. You dig a few shovelfulls of dirt to start your hole and then get down on your knees or belly and start digging the wet sand out with your bare hands to find the clam. You have to be fast because as soon as you start, the clam starts digging for the sea. When your finger brushes the clam's shell (careful, they don't call them razor clams for nothing) you clamp on to it and fight the suction of the wet sand to get it out.

Well, I found out the hard way that millipedes live in sand, are about as big around as your finger, nest in groups (LARGE groups) and they leave the same kind of dimple in the sand that a razor clam does. If "the willies" could be terminal, I'd have died right there on the beach.
 
Well, I've never dug for a razor clam, and now I certainly never will. :eek:
 
when we first moved into this home, it had been empty for years. there were huge huge huge wolf spiders in the basement (about the size of half dollars). one morning, i went down the basement stairs, and there at the landing were three small mice stiff as a board, with puncture marks on their bellies and five or six of these huge spiders sucking out their precisous bodily fluids... the mice probably only just were big enough to be out of the nest, but they were breakfast.

we've gotten rid of the mice, but i tend to leave the spiders alone. they don't give me the wilies, and if they stay in the basement, they are pretty much free to roam.
 
Yep, and don't forget to check your shoes every morning for scorpions!:eek:

And a new one I just learned... check your lawn prior to mowing for yellow jackets nests! (Different thread.;))

I think it's about time our tax dollars go towards complete and total eradication of useless evil bastards like the tiger mosquito and yellowjackets. Can't they just figure out some kind of chemical that only kills those two useless pieces of sh*t? And crop dust the entire US with it? That's one service I'd be happy to give my tax dollars to support. :cross:
 
Thread resurrection!!!!

Starting to see spiders and centipedes in the basement, now that spring is here. I hate insects. Any recommendations for products to use to git rid of these nasty things?
 
Back
Top