Black Widow invasion

LVSteve

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The fruits of summer are finally appearing in the form of Black Widows. I had not seen/killed many in my yard this year until we had our little monsoon outbreak followed by a spell of humid weather. Since then my score has increased dramatically.

In the last ten days I have killed two that were so big and old the hourglass was nearly gone, two other mature adults, one medium and the other possibly a male, and something over 20 juveniles. The young ones can be hard to spot due to their light colouring. In case you did not know, young Black Widows are not black.

I also killed two other spiders, not because I knew they were dangerous but because they were on the house. One was a large black spider of a species I have yet to ID. One expert thought they might be an undescribed form of funnel spider, possibly an import. The other I think was a Huntsman species. I nailed it because I thought at first it was a Desert Recluse, but my second look made me think otherwise.

The other thing that has happened is the damper conditions have brought out the young cockroaches. I go and spray the edges of the grass about every other night to discourage those little buggers. Anyone else having fun with bugs?
 
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My scourge this year has been ants. Last Friday night I killed literally hundreds in the house. Saturday morning I gave the area around the sliding glass door a good spraying and it seems to have done the trick. I don't know what kind of wood the core of the door is made of but the little buggers sure do like it. They get inside the metal door frame and the wood dust starts to fly.
 
Just had an exterminator in yesterday to rid the house of carpenter ants; should have done it two or three years ago. They guarantee the work for a year; I'll see how it goes.

Andy
 
I swear that every spider I see at night is a brown recluse. Paranoid I guess. No monster roaches since I bought that raid with the barrier that lasts 6 months. My home is home again.
 
I killed two Black Widows this year. That is two more than I have killed the rest of my life. I am 67. I hate spiders.
 
The big speckled garden spiders are safe, as long as they stay away from doors and walkways. Otherwise as far as I'm concerned dead spiders are good spiders.
 
Yup, Skeetahs.....

It was announced this morning that the county I live in has just recorded it's first cases of West Nile Virus (two people in one day) and a possible case of Eastern Equine Encephalitis.

These incidents co-incide with a dramatic decrease in the bat population as a result of the white nose syndrome. Thank God that the dragon flies have been picking up the slack and are eating thier way through the hoards of mosquitos during the day...
 
We are having more wasp nests than we had in the past. I have seen black widows in my garage.
 
South Florida, We have bugs year around.

This summer I seem to notice more wasps than usual.

Mosquitos, Its raining every afternoon so we got those too.
 
I have a large female Black Widow living in my down spout on my front porch. I live in the foothills of the Sierra Nevadas. Her name is Black Betty and she only comes out at night. I see plenty of bugs in her web. The ways see it, live and let live. I don't have any children and I don't let the dogs out front at night. If she bites me it was more than likely my fault. YMMV
 
In a typical year, I might see 2 or 3 northern black widows all year long. This year I've seen that many in a day, and it's happened a few times now. Killed a pair of them inside, under a windowsill, a couple of weeks ago, when I replaced a busted AC with a new one. Around here they are often not all black, and as LVSteve said the immature ones are light colored, usually having white or yellowish spots and streaks on them. Most people seeing an immature black widow wouldn't even make a guess they might be looking at one. You can learn much by using google-images and searching immature black widow for starters.
There are 3 or 4 slightly different species of black widow in America, and they get up in to Quebec and Ontario at the northern limits of their range.
 
There are very few black and brown widows on our side of the mountains. We have all manner of other types of arachnids though. Lots of golden garden spiders this year, I have walked through more webs than I'd care to count! Killed a big ol' wolf spider in the bathroom Wednesday, at the behest of my granddaughter...
 
And then there are these bastids...

726px-Baldie.jpg
 
None of these have bothered me much this years. It's been so dang hot outside I haven't been out that much. I keep it so cold in the house that no insect could survive. Somethin' wants to bit,sting, pinch or spray me it will have to bunker up and come on in the house...
 
And then there are these bastids...

726px-Baldie.jpg


Holy ()&#*@^%)( what IS that freaky creepy thing?!?!?! KILL IT WITH FIRE!!!

Seriously. Have not ever seen that but that picture gave me the heebiest of the jeebies.

And that's saying something. I live in Houston. This place is a War Zone on bugs year round. Right now I am fighting roaches.
 
Holy ()&#*@^%)( what IS that freaky creepy thing?!?!?! KILL IT WITH FIRE!!!

Seriously. Have not ever seen that but that picture gave me the heebiest of the jeebies.

And that's saying something. I live in Houston. This place is a War Zone on bugs year round. Right now I am fighting roaches.

Baldfaced hornet. They hunt other bugs. I've seen them kill honeybees before....
 
Holy ()&#*@^%)( what IS that freaky creepy thing?!?!?! KILL IT WITH FIRE!!!

Seriously. Have not ever seen that but that picture gave me the heebiest of the jeebies.

And that's saying something. I live in Houston. This place is a War Zone on bugs year round. Right now I am fighting roaches.

Would you like me to trump that with a Tarantula Hawk?:D We also have Cricket Hunters and Scarab Hunters. All are LARGE species of wasp with a life cycle straight from the movie Alien.
 
Our biggest pest in SW GA is the devilish gnat! Go outside for more that 2 minutes and they begin to swarm around the eyes, ears, nose and mouth. The best of the bug sprays will keep 'em off for about 10 min, the worst only seems to attract more. This year there seem to LOTS more and they are particularly aggressive compared to years past.
 
I've killed a bunch of black widow spiders myself this year....like maybe 8 or 10 of them.

Crickets and grasshoppers are the real problem this year though. The black widow spider may be poisonous...but they really don't bother me all that much.
 
There are very few black and brown widows on our side of the mountains. We have all manner of other types of arachnids though. Lots of golden garden spiders this year, I have walked through more webs than I'd care to count! Killed a big ol' wolf spider in the bathroom Wednesday, at the behest of my granddaughter...

Don't laugh but I have severe arachnophobia. Snakes, scorpions and big nasty guys with teeth don't bother me.

On the east side of the mountain (the GOOD side) we get a few widows. Unless they are in a protected spot, they'll die over winter. We tore up a deck we had put in and I found one female but at least 60 nests with dead eggs in them. Have found a couple in our garage.

Growing up in SoCal, we learned very early to watch where you put your hands.
 
Earwigs and crickets here, far more than usual. Haven't seen a larger amount of spiders but I know with the abundance of these others, they're around.
 
Would you like me to trump that with a Tarantula Hawk?:D We also have Cricket Hunters and Scarab Hunters. All are LARGE species of wasp with a life cycle straight from the movie Alien.

No thanks, I'm good. Not crazy about wasps. I think I feel about their looks like my daughter feels about lobsters. I tell her they are delicious.

She says she wants to know who saw a lobster and said, "hey that alien thing looks delicious. I will cook it and see." I told her it probably went down more like, "Holy *&%&(% look at the thing KILL IT WITH FIRE!!!" and as it died in the fire someone said, "that smells pretty good, go get some butter. No sweeter revenge than eating something that scared the *&%*& out of me!"
 
Bald faced hornets, they are also really aggressive, and big. Nasty things. Hunting wasps don't bother me, pretty interesting creatures IMO. The insect world, must be a lot like things were in the age of the dinosaurs. Thoughtless creatures that exist on ancient, primordial instinct. One creepy crawler eating another alive, stuff right out of a good horror movie. :eek: :D

I've personally seen dragonfly fossils that the bug was 14 inches long. They say much bigger fossils exist. If you know what a robber fly is, the fossil record on those is as old as that of the dragonfly, and I'll tell you, if modern day robber flies were as big as they were 400 million years ago, few of us would dare venture outdoors very often.
 
I was buzzed by a tarantula hawk a few years ago. I was out in the desert with a friend, busting some caps. I was manning the spotting scope when i felt something on my lap; it was a brown tarantula, about 4 inches across, not a very big one. Don't know what would have happened if it had gone up the inside of my pant leg. The sound I emitted caused my friend to turn around, even through he was wearing earmuffs. I brushed the tarantula off and stomped on him, and a few minutes later his remains were investigated by a tarantula hawk. It apparently didn't like what it saw for it soon buzzed off.
 
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