Posted on 06/10/2015 12:02:26 AM PDT by nickcarraway
Clear case of stand your ground.
First, you don’t feed spiders. You kill them. Especially big fuzzy ones. With fire. Or a Daedric bow. At a distance. From Orbit. To be sure.
No exceptions. Ever.
What’s cannibalistic got to do with it? That might be a good thing, right?
Hes been feeding them?
I guess all British have a thing for feeding things that will bite you and drink your blood.
Got one in my room that catches skeeters, why bother it?
Because it’s existence is an affront to God and all his Angels. And it’s a spider.
These sound scary too.
lol. at a summer house I had with friends 20 years ago, someone set a spider on fire that was so big, it didn’t die for about 10 minutes.
If you are feeding spiders, you are going to get more spiders.
This is the lesson of the welfare state's 'war on poverty' and open immigration (and tolerance of illegal immigration).
Some people, more adventurous than I, enjoy owning pets that shock, animals that make your blood run cold. I’m fine with the basics of dogs, cats, tropical fish and caged songbirds.
You won’t see a family of caged , winged, giant roaches in my living room, I guaran-damn-tee it.
Dear Mike,
If you were smaller than the spider, do you think it would be feeding you? Or feeding on you?
A spider the size of a car would feed on most people easily. Look at the Goliath Bird Eaters in the Amazon.
Edit. The size of a C A T
cannibalistic implies these spiders eat their own kind
like illegals
lol
Yes, a car-sized spider would definitely be eating people every day.
Most spiders possess eight (yes, 8!) eyes, though the majority cannot see very well with them. Web-spinning spiders are nearly blind, navigating their world mostly by touch and smell. Some spiders, such as those in the family Sicariidae, have only six eyes. Cave-dwelling species, and those which live their entire lives in the soil, may have no eyes at all. There are also some spiders that fall between these extremes, but always with an even number of eyes. Those spiders which hunt their prey on foot can have very keen eyesight. Among those sharp-eyed hunters are the jumping spiders (family Salticidae) and the wolf spiders (family Lycosidae), both of which have at least one pair of very large, forward-facing eyes.
lol
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