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Safe way to eliminate "Arachnophobia" quality spiders?

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Unfortunately, the brown recluse is not a shy spider. They swarm our house every fall when the weather cools down. If you cross paths with one scurrying across the carpet they can be very aggressive. To the point where I've had them jump on me just for walking to close to them. In the house I use a good old fashioned shoe to be rid of them. Outside, I douse them with bee killer. They die. My son has a pet tarantula, and I don't really mind spiders, but these little nasties are the worst! With 2 small children, I have to be dilligent about checking everywhere for them. I've found them under the covers in my bed, and even curled up in my clothes inside my dresser. I kill every widow and fiddleback I see around here. At least the black widows stay out of my house though. Oh, and I was always told wolf spiders are poisonus as well, not that I'm going to get up close and personal with them either. Good luck, and please be careful.

Most all spiders are "poisonous" to some extent, at least to their prey. Wolf spiders do bite and do have venom, but do not usually cause bad reactions in humans.

I guess I'm skeptical to the "swarms" of brown recluse spiders I hear about because if you see pics, they are rarely brown recluse. Even Billy the Exterminator called a bunch of house spiders recluses. And the distribution is mainly central US, so an infestation in Virginia would be highly unusual. OP in MO, so this much more likely. Here in FL, very unusual to see them as they are not endemic here. But most people believe every brown spider is a brown recluse.

They are called recluse, because they are shy and hide in dark places and usually only bite when inadvertantly mashed. But you don't die from the bite. Just get a nasty wound that may not heal. I hear about "spider bite' frequently and they are usually just staph infections.


http://www.ca.uky.edu/entomology/entfacts/ef631.asp
 
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We're up in the Central part of the state and they're all over the place (bites by Wolf spiders passing through in the night - can gauge by distance between fang marks - but no Recluse bites of consequence). We only concern ourselves with the Black Widows (grew up with these nasties in So.Cal. and the Midwest variety is no less aggressive when web is messed with).

Best bet is to broom out the corners, etc. regularly and keep everything as dry as possible (they congregate around the drain in our bathtub).

Some more info:

In its native range, the brown recluse is a very common house spider. A colleague in Missouri found 5 in a child's bedroom one night, a person in Arkansas found 6 living under his box spring in his bedroom, during a cleanup at the Univ. of Arkansas, 52 were found in a science lab that was being used everyday, a colleague found 9 living under one piece of plywood in Oklahoma, a grad student and I collected 40 of them in a Missouri barn in 75 minutes, and would have collected more, but we ran out of vials to house them. One amazing story is an 8th grade teacher in Oklahoma checking up on his students avidly collecting material by some loose bricks around a flagpole on an insect collecting trip. In about 7 minutes, 8 students collected 60 brown recluses, picking them all up with their fingers and not one kid suffered a bite. An even more amazing story is that of a woman in Lenexa, Kansas who collected 2,055 brown recluse spiders in 6 months in 1850s-built home. This family of 4 has been living there 8 years now and still not one evident bite. (see Vetter and Barger 2002, Journal of Medical Entomology 39: 948-951). When you find brown recluses in an adequate environment, you do not find one, you find dozens.

http://spiders.ucr.edu/myth.html

As was mentioned, the Wren nest is a potential mite infestation waiting to happen.​
 
Had a problem with spiders at a rental property one time. Call in a pest control company and they told the renters that spiders are the easiest of all pest to control. If you have nothing else other than hair spray, that will kill them. I would just let the chickens have at them or use DE.
 
Lots of good info, thanks everybody. My decision is to let the wrens fledge and then completely clean the shed with a high pressure nozzle . I'll get my son who isn't an arachnophobe to help. He's the only one of my 5 kids who isn't terrified of spiders. Does DE really work on spiders? I read somewhere that because their bodies are elevated and don't drag through the powder it wouldn't help.
 
Quote:
Unfortunately, the brown recluse is not a shy spider. They swarm our house every fall when the weather cools down. If you cross paths with one scurrying across the carpet they can be very aggressive. To the point where I've had them jump on me just for walking to close to them. In the house I use a good old fashioned shoe to be rid of them. Outside, I douse them with bee killer. They die. My son has a pet tarantula, and I don't really mind spiders, but these little nasties are the worst! With 2 small children, I have to be dilligent about checking everywhere for them. I've found them under the covers in my bed, and even curled up in my clothes inside my dresser. I kill every widow and fiddleback I see around here. At least the black widows stay out of my house though. Oh, and I was always told wolf spiders are poisonus as well, not that I'm going to get up close and personal with them either. Good luck, and please be careful.

I really dislike spiders, I'm glad we don't have many bad ones up here! This post is making me shudder and itch! We can get brown recluse, but they are not very common here. We do have some big wolf spiders that still scare me, although they are not usually a threat unless you accidentally grab one or get real close. I try to leave them alone as long as they are not in my house because they do help with pest control.
 
I live in the Up and i seen a wolf spider Literly crossing the road on the way home from work.. it was the biggest spider i have ever seen and I'm not fond of spiders at all. i tried to run it over but missed it and i could see it still crossing in the rear view mirror. i wanted to back up and try again but it was already crossed.. :-( if it wasnt a wolf spider it was a species that doesnt belong here
 
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