Not sure if I should exterminate?

Dreminen169

Well-Known Member
Got a couple daddy long legs living in my grow closet not sure if I should get rid of them or not? this one picture below made its home under my humidifier. They seem to have caught all the gnats though which is why I am not sure if I should exterminate I’d much rather have the daddy long legs than the gnats feeding on my plant roots. Any disadvantages to having them around?
C0EE4516-387C-4C7A-96C4-A46F1F7497F8.jpeg
 

Green_Alchemist

Well-Known Member
I’d leave them personally. They’re a great pest deterrent, and will not affect your grows/plants.
I get jumping spiders inside my tents quite a bit, (There’s a lot in my local area)
I just name them and leave em be.

at the end of the day it’s your space, so If you want you can clean em out and continue on.
I like the extra company when I do some plant work but that’s just me lol.
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
I have a few different species of real spiders living in my grow room including black widows and we get along just fine. Don't know how they survive but they seem to do OK. Sometimes when sweeping up I'll see one in the dust and wait for it to get back to the the wall and safety of the cracks. I never see any bugs in my sticky traps but maybe the spiders get them first.

Daddy Longlegs can bite but only if you mess with them and unless allergic it won't do any harm.

:peace:
 

Dreminen169

Well-Known Member
I have a few different species of real spiders living in my grow room including black widows and we get along just fine. Don't know how they survive but they seem to do OK. Sometimes when sweeping up I'll see one in the dust and wait for it to get back to the the wall and safety of the cracks. I never see any bugs in my sticky traps but maybe the spiders get them first.

Daddy Longlegs can bite but only if you mess with them and unless allergic it won't do any harm.

:peace:
I’m pretty sure I heard somewhere that daddy long legs are the most poisonous spider in the world however their mouths are too small to bite humans so they do nothing to us unless they somehow get into our bloodstream
 

Dreminen169

Well-Known Member
I have a few different species of real spiders living in my grow room including black widows and we get along just fine. Don't know how they survive but they seem to do OK. Sometimes when sweeping up I'll see one in the dust and wait for it to get back to the the wall and safety of the cracks. I never see any bugs in my sticky traps but maybe the spiders get them first.

Daddy Longlegs can bite but only if you mess with them and unless allergic it won't do any harm.

:peace:

Damn, Black widow! That’s where I draw the line, if I saw a black widow in my house I might consider moving LOL. Bombing the house @ very least. Luckily I don’t have to worry about that up north
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
I’m pretty sure I heard somewhere that daddy long legs are the most poisonous spider in the world however their mouths are too small to bite humans so they do nothing to us unless they somehow get into our bloodstream
I got bit by a Daddy a few years back but nothing bad happened. Got in the edge of my glove and bit me on the inside of my wrist. Bit of a welt and itchy for a few days but I get a worse reaction from mosquitoes these days.

Damn, Black widow! That’s where I draw the line, if I saw a black widow in my house I might consider moving LOL. Bombing the house @ very least. Luckily I don’t have to worry about that up north
I live 7 hours north of Edmonton and not sure where those widows came from but they're up here too. I caught one in a little glass vial and could see the hourglass mark on her belly. One thing we don't seem to have up here is fleas which is nice as we have 3 cats to keep the mice down and a dog to keep the coyotes away from our chickens. No gophers for target practice either tho. :(

:peace:
 

Northwood

Well-Known Member
I live 7 hours north of Edmonton and not sure where those widows came from but they're up here too. I caught one in a little glass vial and could see the hourglass mark on her belly. One thing we don't seem to have up here is fleas which is nice as we have 3 cats to keep the mice down and a dog to keep the coyotes away from our chickens. No gophers for target practice either tho. :(
Hope that you enjoyed the meals that those gophers gave you. I really liked porcupine, even better than snowshoe hare.. It really doesn't have the crazy "wild" taste you'd expect for a creature that eats bark and branches for much of the year. lol
 

PJ Diaz

Well-Known Member
I’m pretty sure I heard somewhere that daddy long legs are the most poisonous spider in the world however their mouths are too small to bite humans so they do nothing to us unless they somehow get into our bloodstream
Yeah, I heard that too way back when I was a kid. I remember one day watching a daddy long legs slowly walk to my foot, but I wasn't worried because it couldn't bite me, in theory. Well guess what? That fucker bit me hard! It hurt for a week, but I didn't have to go to the hospital or anything, so not too sure about that whole theory. I dunno, maybe it was a big mouthed mutant?
 

SmokeyExcursion

Well-Known Member
Ive got a rule with spiders in my house. No bigger than a large coin and no more than a few feet from windows and unused corners. Outside those parameters they die. Everytime I move its an agreement they [the spiders] understand within 6 months. It keeps the pests out. And keeps exterminator chemicals away.
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
Hope that you enjoyed the meals that those gophers gave you. I really liked porcupine, even better than snowshoe hare.. It really doesn't have the crazy "wild" taste you'd expect for a creature that eats bark and branches for much of the year. lol
Not into eating rodents much. We'd shoot a bunch then the magpies and crows would show up to fest on them and become target practise in their own right. Then the coyotes . . . . :) Never shot a coyote even the ones trying to get into our chicken coop.

Tempted to poach a deer or a moose when they come around tho. Had to chase moose out of my woods in the middle of the night to get the dog to shut up. Don't even run from a warning shot. lol

:peace:
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
I have to keep the spiders out or I won't get any help from my girlfriend. lol
Sounds like my stepdaughter. Lots of cobwebs in the stairwell to the basement so never had to worry about her going down there and snooping around when she was younger. 28 now and still shrieks when she sees a spider. Same thing with moths for her mom. Fine with butterflies but hates the crap out of moths. We get these huge ones here too. Bigger than a Monarch butterfly and really cool looking. Phobias must suck but I don't seem to have any other than mites and thrips. ;)

:peace:
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
Yeah, I heard that too way back when I was a kid. I remember one day watching a daddy long legs slowly walk to my foot, but I wasn't worried because it couldn't bite me, in theory. Well guess what? That fucker bit me hard! It hurt for a week, but I didn't have to go to the hospital or anything, so not too sure about that whole theory. I dunno, maybe it was a big mouthed mutant?
I've been bit by them too but never heard about them being particularly dangerous. Bad one is the Brown Recluse mostly on the west coast US. Get like a flesh eating thing going on radiating out from the bite that can eventually kill you without treatment. Met a lady in Oregon back in '92 that had a silver dollar sized scar on the back of her arm from one. Nasty.

:peace:
 

GrassBurner

Well-Known Member
I get fishing spiders in my cabin. Fuckers get HUGE. Ive seen them where each body section is the size of a quarter :shock: They're my all natural exterminators, they eat everything.
 

PJ Diaz

Well-Known Member
I've been bit by them too but never heard about them being particularly dangerous. Bad one is the Brown Recluse mostly on the west coast US. Get like a flesh eating thing going on radiating out from the bite that can eventually kill you without treatment. Met a lady in Oregon back in '92 that had a silver dollar sized scar on the back of her arm from one. Nasty.

:peace:
Yeah, I've heard about them. Not really sure how to identify them, should prolly find out.
 

Dreminen169

Well-Known Member
I've been bit by them too but never heard about them being particularly dangerous. Bad one is the Brown Recluse mostly on the west coast US. Get like a flesh eating thing going on radiating out from the bite that can eventually kill you without treatment. Met a lady in Oregon back in '92 that had a silver dollar sized scar on the back of her arm from one. Nasty.

:peace:
Here’s mine
image.jpg
 
Top