My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

AIBU?

Aibu to ask which spider this is? (Photo attached warning)

27 replies

londonrach · 08/04/2016 07:27

Last night dh and i were in bed and looked up towards the ceiling to see a large spider on the ceiling. After some discussion dh ventured towards spider with trusted glass and cardboard. On nearerly said spider, spider jumped (And i mean jumped) into our bed. Two grown adult jumped out of bed. Dh managed to catch spider in glass and took to window. Spider jumped out of glass and landed up window ledge. Dh placed glass over and despite nervous checks spider still there. Ill take spider outside later today. However ive never seen a spider jump so looked up google and have no idea which spider it is. Its not stripped so cant be a zebra. Any ideas mntters. Im in uk.

Aibu to ask which spider this is?  (Photo attached warning)
Aibu to ask which spider this is?  (Photo attached warning)
OP posts:
Report
MrsUnderwood · 08/04/2016 07:33

Facehugger.

Report
londonrach · 08/04/2016 07:38

Sets fire to house! Thanks mrsu.....i never could stand the alien films for more than 2 seconds!

OP posts:
Report
DropYourSword · 08/04/2016 07:39

That would generally be called an Aaaaarghhh AAAARGHHHH get it, GET IT, smash it with your shoooooe, spider in our household. That's probably its technical name.

Report
BadDoGooder · 08/04/2016 07:40

Underwood Grin

I think it's a small house spider, they are not bitey, and in fact eat lots of other spiders and pests, so quite handy to have around!
I found one in the corner of my living room catching ants that were coming in the back door, so left him to it. Smile

Report
TheoriginalLEM · 08/04/2016 07:44

his name is simon

Report
BillBrysonsBeard · 08/04/2016 07:59

It's just a house spider, let it gooooooo! Grin I have several who have parked up in my light fittings catching midges, very helpful little chaps.

Report
londonrach · 08/04/2016 08:07

Simon is outside playing with his friends now. Slightly disappointed its only a house spider...it jumped very high compared to its size!

OP posts:
Report
TheoriginalLEM · 08/04/2016 11:56

is this Simon?

Report
acasualobserver · 08/04/2016 12:15

Sets fire to house!

Aibu to ask which spider this is?  (Photo attached warning)
Report
MrsDeVere · 08/04/2016 12:21

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

PurpleCrazyHorse · 08/04/2016 12:27

We had a house spider in our old flat that ran so fast you couldn't see it (or maybe it jumped). Either way, I had to anticipate where it was going to end up to catch it. Really freaked me out.

Report
LittleLionMansMummy · 08/04/2016 14:36

OK I'm showing arachnid ignorance here but do UK spiders actually bite? And if so, is it venomous (I mean I know we have no fatally venomous spiders in the UK, but this talk of biting has made me wonder what a spider bite looks/ feels like)?

Report
CockacidalManiac · 08/04/2016 15:19

I like to send spiders to Rainbow Bridge.

Report
whatsbehindthegreendoor · 08/04/2016 15:49

House spiders do bloody bite! My husband didn't believe that the reason I have such a massive fear of spiders is because one bit me when I was a child (after my brother threw it at me!). Served him right when he went to remove one for me and it bit him - actually I don't mean served him right because he's bloody brilliant at doing that job because there is no way I would be able to stay in our home if one was in here at the same time! He now believes that they bite!
Although, I think he was more annoyed that he didn't turn into Spiderman!

Report
Salmotrutta · 08/04/2016 16:28

Yes, some UK spiders do bite.

Isn't the Recluse Spider one of the biters?

Report
olrose · 08/04/2016 16:47

this is definitely called an 'OMG AHHHH' spider, i have come across similar ones before

Report
MrsDeVere · 08/04/2016 17:43

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Dollymixtureyumyum · 08/04/2016 18:50

I ended up in hospital after being bit by a house spider. I had an allegic reaction and was in for two days on a drip

Report
DropYourSword · 08/04/2016 19:10

LittleLionMan apparently ALL spiders are venomous! Just most of them don't have strong enough teeth to break our skin. So I've heard.

Report
TheoriginalLEM · 08/04/2016 20:12

You are right, all spiders are venomous and they all bite. Thankfully nothing really nasty in this country. The False Widow and Tube webs are about as bitey as they come and they do give a nasty bite, but most people will end up with a bite like a bee sting, although the FW can cause some nasty reactions. Neither of these spiders are indigenous species. The house spider and the wolf spider also have a bite on them but they are pretty unaggressive and generally only bite if squished.

Thankfully no recluse spiders here - their bite is NASTY and causes skin necrosis, although strangely often doesn't hurt and people don't know they have been bitten until their skin starts sloughing off They are a problem in america.

I have tube web spiders in my kitchen, they are fab, i don't have any flies.

Report
Ironfloor · 08/04/2016 20:23

Fuck, isn't spider season over?

Report
ShowOfHands · 08/04/2016 20:26

My neighbour was bitten by a ladybird and ended up in hospital.

Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

ShowOfHands · 08/04/2016 20:31

"When hungry, harlequin ladybirds will bite humans in their search for something edible. Ladybirds in houses, woken from dormancy by central heating, may bite people as there is no food available"

And you're worrying about spiders?

Report
FinallyFreeFromItAll · 08/04/2016 21:52

I have an invasion of those gits at the moment - I'm getting rid of 2-3 a bloody day! I don't have a dh to get them for me so I have to be the brave one Sad.

I don't like killing spiders - they eat other nasties. Plus they are better than the bloody ants that keep getting in the lounge. They are also 100x better than the wasps nest we had inside a house wall previously.

Report
FinallyFreeFromItAll · 08/04/2016 21:54

"When hungry, harlequin ladybirds will bite humans in their search for something edible. Ladybirds in houses, woken from dormancy by central heating, may bite people as there is no food available"

I swore blind a ladybird bit me once and nobody believed me.

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.