What the hell is that?!?
GilaMinumBeer said:Ayup. ESPECIALLY in rural Oklahoma.
We used to get an infestation of Wolf spiders every fall. Literally would find a dozen a day throughout the house. Some brazen enough to just waltz across the living room floor. We had a baby and I had enough.
Bayer suspend SC sprayed 3 foot up the outside walls of the house and a 3 foot band along the foundation. They didn't live long enough to even get through under the doors.
About $50 a pint. Get some.
Just added it to my list, thanks for the recommendation! Never been bit by a recluse but had way too many close calls. They LOVE cardboard as well - so watch your hands around those boxes in the closet and garage folks.
GilaMinumBeer said:It's a broad spectrum insecticide. Will kill anything QUICK. And "sticks" to what you sprayed for 3 to 6 months.
Case in point, the day after I sprayed I found hundreds of house flies peppered all over the concrete around the trash cans.
I get mine online from DIYpestcontrol.com
What the hell is that?!?
Just added it to my list, thanks for the recommendation! Never been bit by a recluse but had way too many close calls. They LOVE cardboard as well - so watch your hands around those boxes in the closet and garage folks.
Any issues with pets after it dries? Have two pugs and want something I can treat in the areas they frequent.
GilaMinumBeer said:Nope. Can even be sprayed in the house. In food service areas, on carpet, beds, etc..
Just make sure you spray downwind. The blue dots take about a week to clear from your vision.![]()
Every time I go to pull firewood from a stack at my house or my parents place, I inspect the pieces I grab before I bring them inside.
Brilliant! Bagworm spray and an Oklahoma breeze has made me all too familiar with the need for a set of goggles and mask!
tchamber said:You probably won't want to see this then:
OMG - please tell me that is found deep in the Congo and not on our continent!
tchamber said:It's a Golden Orb Weaver, the photo was taken in Atherton, QLD, Australia.
Many years ago as I was laying on the the couch one day a very large wolf spider crawled out from under that had an interesting texture to it. I pointed it out to my wife and she demanded I kill it instantly. I grabbed a stick of balsa wood that I had on the coffee table and depressed it into the head of the spider. At that point literally hundreds of baby spiders crawled off of the back of the dead spider and began to scatter.
Many years ago as I was laying on the the couch one day a very large wolf spider crawled out from under that had an interesting texture to it. I pointed it out to my wife and she demanded I kill it instantly. I grabbed a stick of balsa wood that I had on the coffee table and depressed it into the head of the spider. At that point literally hundreds of baby spiders crawled off of the back of the dead spider and began to scatter.
Have you ever seen corn spiders? My grandma's blackberry's have these monsters in them. Saw this guy yesterday.
From back leg to front leg they are around 2.5 inches!
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Yep, except we called them "garden spiders" growing-up. They are huge. We get big-ass wolf spiders around the midwest, too. Furry things that are semi-aggressive if you get too close. They don't scare me from a distance or if I have a newspaper, etc. but I wouldn't want to wake up to one staring me in the face!
I bet this makes passedpawn crap his pants:
This. Even in teh dead of winter when they should be someplace else, I make sure to keep the wood outside under a covered patio. If it comes inside, it's only long enough to go into the fire.
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That's horrid,