Having trouble keeping up and I am a bit late on this one as the subject has changed already but .....
Don't laugh, my fear/freak out = moths! They give me the shivers, ugly little things and I hate the way they flutter around you, makes my skin crawl. A close second - Christmas Beetles. So called because they are in abundance around Christmas. Not unheard of to have 100's all over the screens, peering in at you, clicking. In the morning, when you go outside, there can be heaps of them on their backs struggling to turn over .. eew!
We have poisonous spiders, the most famous being the Red Back about which songs have been written .... 'Red Back on the Toilet Seat'.
The man bitten in this song was bitten by a female red-back. The male does not bite.
The red-back spider (Latrodectus hasseltii) one of Australia's most venomous spiders. It's found across Australia including Tasmania and is often found in outdoor dunnys (toilets), letter boxes, under logs and rocks and other dark areas. The red-back spider is most active at dusk and during the night.
Since the poison attacks the nervous system, it only takes a small amount of venom to cause serious illness. The red-back spider's painful bite can be fatal, especially to the young and elderly. An effective anti-venom was developed in 1956 and you should seek medical help immediately if bitten.

Don't laugh, my fear/freak out = moths! They give me the shivers, ugly little things and I hate the way they flutter around you, makes my skin crawl. A close second - Christmas Beetles. So called because they are in abundance around Christmas. Not unheard of to have 100's all over the screens, peering in at you, clicking. In the morning, when you go outside, there can be heaps of them on their backs struggling to turn over .. eew!

We have poisonous spiders, the most famous being the Red Back about which songs have been written .... 'Red Back on the Toilet Seat'.
The man bitten in this song was bitten by a female red-back. The male does not bite.
The red-back spider (Latrodectus hasseltii) one of Australia's most venomous spiders. It's found across Australia including Tasmania and is often found in outdoor dunnys (toilets), letter boxes, under logs and rocks and other dark areas. The red-back spider is most active at dusk and during the night.
Since the poison attacks the nervous system, it only takes a small amount of venom to cause serious illness. The red-back spider's painful bite can be fatal, especially to the young and elderly. An effective anti-venom was developed in 1956 and you should seek medical help immediately if bitten.