PS - Renee it's been 4 months since you blogged. Hurry.up. I enjoyed your blog until you quit!![]()
LOL! I'll try to catch up after the kids are back at school.

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PS - Renee it's been 4 months since you blogged. Hurry.up. I enjoyed your blog until you quit!![]()
I hate spiders. My method to get rid of ones I see, even in the house is; Go grab a chicken. I just lift my rock, Omelet, up and she'll dispatch any pest. I've thought about having a house chicken just to have one inside to take care of invaders.
Yeah gotta be careful I think its the Hobo's that have a neuro toxic venom. Which means if it bites you and goes untreated it can cause necrosis and limb loss. Let me know what they say.Thanks!
I finally found this link, too... it has links for both the Avian Laboratory and the Plant and Insect Laboratory: http://www.puyallup.wsu.edu/services.html
LOVINCHICKYPOOS: If you have hobos, be careful! My neighbor has a very bad scar from the huge ulcer that the hobo bite gave her. DH and I did a bunch of research tonight. We are *hoping* they are giant house spiders (a relative of the hobo) and not the hobo. Here's a PDF that can help you identify them: http://pep.wsu.edu/pdf/PLS116_1.pdf
I'm still going to pay the $25.00 and have the one we killed checked out. We have way too many of them. If they are giant house spiders, I won't bother to spray - I guess the giant house spider will kill hobos. I hope to verify the appropriate action to take when I talk to the people at the lab in Puyallup. When my neighbor took her two spiders in, they were confirmed hobos. She said it took about 2 days to get the results back.
If that was an open invitation how much are you asking?
Yeah gotta be careful I think its the Hobo's that have a neuro toxic venom. Which means if it bites you and goes untreated it can cause necrosis and limb loss. Let me know what they say.
If that was an open invitation how much are you asking?
I hate spiders. My method to get rid of ones I see, even in the house is; Go grab a chicken. I just lift my rock, Omelet, up and she'll dispatch any pest. I've thought about having a house chicken just to have one inside to take care of invaders.
Hobos have hemotoxic venom. A bad bite will cause necrosis in a small area, which may lead to sloughing off flesh that has died. Nobody has ever lost a limb to a hobo, although it is possible someone could to an untreated infection. (I know it's splitting hairs, but as someone who likes spiders I feel it's an important distinction.) The bites are only really dangerous if you are bitten near something important, like a joint or your spine. They certainly aren't pleasant, but they aren't in the same class as widow spiders, which have neurotoxic venom.
Jennifer
My little ones are very funny when they fight. They'll lock eyes from about 40 feet away and charge toward each other. One might jump and the other barrels right under, then they turn and fluff their neck feather "frills." They might get one or two pecks in but I've never seen any bad injuries, only very minor comb/face wounds. I do think that letting them out every day helps (if you have the ability to do so) and having a larger run if you can't let them out fairly often is important.I think injuries are par for the course with chickens. Mine are STILL pecking it out and figuring out their places in the order; that means that many of them have comb/wattles injuries like that one, though smaller for sure. Looks like they scuffled pretty good but not like you can do anything about it. I know your run is small; how small again? Perhaps they're just sick and tired of being cooped up and started getting upset? Maybe they just need to be let out in the morning and locked back up at night? That's what we are doing on days DH isn't home; he hates the poop everywhere. They are much happier and have less fighting when they are out and about in the yard.
Hobos have hemotoxic venom. A bad bite will cause necrosis in a small area, which may lead to sloughing off flesh that has died. Nobody has ever lost a limb to a hobo, although it is possible someone could to an untreated infection. (I know it's splitting hairs, but as someone who likes spiders I feel it's an important distinction.) The bites are only really dangerous if you are bitten near something important, like a joint or your spine. They certainly aren't pleasant, but they aren't in the same class as widow spiders, which have neurotoxic venom.
Jennifer