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-   -   Nightmare Fuel (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=27698)

BigV 08-22-2014 03:13 PM

HO-LEE YIKES!!!

He *might* have that camera pointed in the wrong direction.

Gravdigr 08-23-2014 11:09 AM

GAH!! JFC.

Someone please break out the Holy Hand Grenade Of Antioch.



Or a J-DAM.

glatt 08-23-2014 12:15 PM

I was expecting it to leap at the camera.

Gravdigr 08-23-2014 01:29 PM

I was literally leaning away from my monitor, waiting for just that.

xoxoxoBruce 09-12-2014 12:56 AM

Quote:

Horror as abandoned house infested with over 100 killer spiders found in Co Carlow
How's that for a headline?

http://cellar.org/2014/spiderss.jpg

Apparently this guy in Ireland ordered over the internet, "Over 100 killer spiders...", and, "Among the lethal critters found crawling in the house were black widows, funnel-web spiders, scorpions and deadly tarantulas."
Oh, forgot to tell you... you should now panic.

The worst part is after he collected all these critters, he walked away, abandoned them like they were common puppies/kittens or something. :(

Sundae 09-12-2014 06:05 AM

Poor little critters. Miles from their natural environment, left without adequate heating or food. They killed the dangerous ones when they found them. Shame.

Carruthers 09-12-2014 09:48 AM

This featured in several news outlets a couple of days ago:

Quote:

Mother finds deadly spider eggs in Tesco bananas

Abby Woodgate poked a white lump on her bananas which turned out to be cocoon full of tropical spider eggs


A mother who found eggs belonging to one of the world’s most venomous spiders hidden in her Tesco bananas had to have her vacuum cleaner incinerated after she tried to clean them up.

Pest control experts hired by the supermarket told Abby Woodgate, 30, anything that had been in contact with the bunch and its deadly cargo would have to be burned.

At first she had thought the bananas were mouldy when she noticed a white lump after they were delivered to her home.

But when she poked the mysterious growth with a toothpick, a cocoon opened, revealing dozens of tropical eggs.

She immediately threw the fruit in the bin, but a few eggs dropped on her kitchen floor, which she vacuumed clean.

When she called Tesco's store in Colchester, Essex, staff said they would come round to collect the bananas. Later she received another call saying pest controllers would come round instead.

Mrs Woodgate said: "The pest controllers asked where the eggs were and I told them the bin and they said 'right, we'll take that'.

"Then they asked had anything else come into contact with the eggs, and I told them about my vacuum cleaner, so they said 'we'll have to take that too'. All they could tell me is they thought they were tropical spider eggs."
and...

Quote:

British supermarkets buy shipments of bananas from tropical countries including Brazil, Costa Rica, Ecuador and Colombia, home to some of the world's most venomous spiders.

The Brazilian wandering spider oftens hides in bunches of banana and occasionally stows away in shipments to foreign countries. The species are known to have some of the most toxic venom in the world, causing loss of muscle control and breathing problems, and eventually death.

In November last year, a Tesco store in Kent was forced to close for several hours after a Brazilian wandering spider was found under a box of bananas.

Daily Telegraph

Google News


A few months ago I was at the checkout at my local Tesco when a spider ran out of a bunch of bananas that was about to be weighed.
It shot along the conveyor with commendable despatch and disappeared down the hole where the cables for the card terminal are routed.
The lady on the till, who I know quite well, just smiled and wasn't in the least bit surprised. 'Oh, we get a lot of those' she said.
Now, I don't know if it was completely harmless or whether it had the potential to visit multiple deaths upon the local populace, but I noted that the bananas came from Costa Rica. See above. :eek:

glatt 09-12-2014 10:10 AM

They took the vacuum cleaner? If Tesco didn't buy her a new one, they should.

Sundae 09-12-2014 10:10 AM

The Brazilian wandering spider belongs in the Appropriate Names thread :)

Gravdigr 09-12-2014 02:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sundae (Post 909453)
The Brazilian wandering spider

What is that? A new trend in ladyscaping?

Gravdigr 09-12-2014 03:01 PM

Also, from Bruce's link:

Quote:

...and deadly tarantulas.
Aside from me killing myself trying to get away from one, I didn't know tarantulas were deadly.

xoxoxoBruce 09-12-2014 08:46 PM

I don't believe they are. There's hundreds of different kinds of tarantulas so maybe there are some, but I suspect the reporter was just wrapped up in his own sensationalist reporting.

Clodfobble 09-13-2014 08:03 AM

Wiki says no actual species of tarantula are anywhere near deadly, but several other big-spider species, including the Brazilian Wandering Spider, are often mistaken for tarantulas.

fargon 09-13-2014 09:11 AM

EEK, I'm scared of SPIDERS!!!

xoxoxoBruce 09-13-2014 11:42 AM

1 Attachment(s)
Scared of spiders? Well how about a cute little monkey?


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