InquilineKea Posted June 14, 2011 Posted June 14, 2011 Yeah. Like, if I'm studying hard for a day, a single HORRIFYINGLY FAST spider can ruin it all. So.. how do you deal with them? Are there any spider zappers that work? Surprisingly, I do have Victor poison-free insect magnets that somehow work for spiders (I don't know how, but maybe they trap small insects, which the spider can't resist, so the spider ends up trapped too)
InquilineKea Posted June 14, 2011 Author Posted June 14, 2011 Do they work wonders on spiders though? =/ That's what I'm really wondering, since the Amazon.com reviews don't say
squaresquared Posted June 14, 2011 Posted June 14, 2011 I'm not sure if it works for spiders -- but I know baby powder deters other creepy crawlies. You could always spray along the edges of your walls with spider killer spray or even duct tape over all the corners. Use drain plugs when you aren't showering or using the sink because they sometimes come up that way. I also heard that strong floraly smells deter them, but not so sure why or how that would work.
eco_env Posted June 14, 2011 Posted June 14, 2011 So.. how do you deal with them? Shoes. mandarin.orange 1
StrangeLight Posted June 15, 2011 Posted June 15, 2011 Shoes. being an adult. squaresquared, MeanderingPhD, ogopo and 1 other 3 1
newms Posted June 15, 2011 Posted June 15, 2011 Do they work wonders on spiders though? =/ That's what I'm really wondering, since the Amazon.com reviews don't say They do. A rolled up newspaper works well too.
UnlikelyGrad Posted June 15, 2011 Posted June 15, 2011 Shoes. LOL. I was just going to say, "Squish w/ tissue--or hand if no tissue is handy"
kaykaykay Posted June 16, 2011 Posted June 16, 2011 A a big statistics book. I got very good in target throwing it, I should join the circus. I microwaved a spider once but I get very panicked from them especially when I do not have shoes on and they are not on ground level.
Phil Sparrow Posted June 17, 2011 Posted June 17, 2011 Let your spiders roam free. They will eat other insects! awvish and StrangeLight 2
rising_star Posted June 17, 2011 Posted June 17, 2011 Let your spiders roam free. They will eat other insects! That only works if they are non-poisonous. I killed a huge one in my bathroom last night, mostly because I didn't want to get close enough to figure out whether it was poisonous or not. psycholinguist 1
hopelesslypostmodern Posted June 18, 2011 Posted June 18, 2011 A Swiffer works nicely. The long handle gives you some distance and if you have a cleaning pad (or, in a pinch, paper towel) on it makes clean up easy.
Xanthan Posted June 18, 2011 Posted June 18, 2011 I microwaved a spider once Isn't that how Spiderman was created? pomodoro 1
vitaminquartet Posted June 20, 2011 Posted June 20, 2011 (edited) That only works if they are non-poisonous. Err, they're all poisonous (or rather, venomous) but basically none of them that a grad student in urban or suburban North America or Europe is likely to encounter in their homes will carry the venom that can significantly hurt a person. In any case Killing spiders and insects (apart from those like mosquitoes and others that actively feed on or attack people) is pointless and mean. Respect nature and be decent to the organisms we share our world with. I don't like spiders in my apartment either but I always get them to walk onto a paper towel or piece of paper and glass and then carefully let them outside (windows will probably be fine since, I'd guess, the terminal velocity of a small spider is probably low enough that I doubt they'd be injured) Edited June 20, 2011 by vitaminquartet awvish 1
StrangeLight Posted June 20, 2011 Posted June 20, 2011 get a cat. the cat will eat them. Aaron McDevitt 1
rising_star Posted June 20, 2011 Posted June 20, 2011 Err, they're all poisonous (or rather, venomous) but basically none of them that a grad student in urban or suburban North America or Europe is likely to encounter in their homes will carry the venom that can significantly hurt a person. Umm, we have both brown recluse and black widow spiders where I live. While you may say they can't significantly hurt a person, authorities seem to disagree with you. What I killed was probably a Wolf Spider, rather than a Brown Recluse, but you have to get pretty close to them to count the number of eyes and really be able to tell the difference. squaresquared 1
Owlie Posted June 24, 2011 Posted June 24, 2011 I ignore them. I live in Ohio, and while we're borderline in-range for brown recluses, I've never come across them. And that article says that most of the time, the bites are harmless. Personally, I find spiders interesting, and since my little wolf spider colony (and the colony of house centipedes) eat roaches--one of the few invertebrates that I hate--I like having them around. Now, if I found a black widow in my house, I'm not sure I'd be so good about ignoring it...
MoJingly Posted June 29, 2011 Posted June 29, 2011 I ignore them. I live in Ohio, and while we're borderline in-range for brown recluses, I've never come across them. And that article says that most of the time, the bites are harmless. Personally, I find spiders interesting, and since my little wolf spider colony (and the colony of house centipedes) eat roaches--one of the few invertebrates that I hate--I like having them around. Now, if I found a black widow in my house, I'm not sure I'd be so good about ignoring it... My skin in crawling.
awvish Posted June 30, 2011 Posted June 30, 2011 I scoop it up in a cup and put it outside. Or in a houseplant. But, then, I'm an entomology-type person...and I just don't like gratuitous killing. YMMV
runonsentence Posted July 4, 2011 Posted July 4, 2011 (edited) I trap them in a cup and wait for my partner to come over to my apartment and let them outside for me. And then the feminist inside me cries. I also live in Ohio, and in an area with a large roach population at that, and I think the one I trapped in my bedroom last spring was a wolf spider. I nearly died [figuratively]. Edited July 4, 2011 by runonsentence
eco_env Posted July 5, 2011 Posted July 5, 2011 I scoop it up in a cup and put it outside. Or in a houseplant. But, then, I'm an entomology-type person...and I just don't like gratuitous killing. YMMV If you are an entomologist, don't you kill a lot of bugs? I kill more bugs for my research than for any other reason, but I guess it's not really gratuitous.
awvish Posted July 5, 2011 Posted July 5, 2011 If you are an entomologist, don't you kill a lot of bugs? I kill more bugs for my research than for any other reason, but I guess it's not really gratuitous. Yeah, I do end up killing a bunch of insects for research...in making that statement I was assuming that it wasn't gratuitous, which is inaccurate in some interpretations. Sorry.
HyacinthMacaw Posted July 22, 2011 Posted July 22, 2011 I, too, share this concern as I'll be in a place with brown recluse spiders (the "Green Berets of the spider world" according to one site). I guess I'll be dusting my linens every time I'm about to use them for the next 5 years. Prevention first, right?
TheSquirrel Posted July 23, 2011 Posted July 23, 2011 (edited) *shudders* I'm arachnophobic... So far I've had spiders only twice in my apartment, and luckily it happened when my mom was visiting -- she took care of them. If forced to, I'd probably just use a shoe or a slipper to kill the poor thing.. as long as it's not too big... if it's big, I'd probably try to spray it with those Raid insecticide stuff, and hope it works... but it's not just the killing part that scares me -- it's also the getting-rid-of-the-body part. I'd probably put on latex gloves and then use a combination of paper and tissue to carry and throw it into the trash, and then quickly throw away the trash into the garbage chute. Yes, seriously, that's how much even the tiniest spider scares me. It has nothing to do with growing up, I'm afraid. Edited July 23, 2011 by TheSquirrel
Bonkers Posted July 28, 2011 Posted July 28, 2011 (edited) I have two cats---granted, one is useless in the field of hunting. However, the cat that is not afraid of bugs does a great job. I have never ever seen a cockroach or mouse in our apartment--and I am in nyc, which is the capital of pests. Cats! Edited July 28, 2011 by Bonkers
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