awwh should of clicked that link first:D I was assuming that link was just a link to the site where he found the picture...oh well.Quote:
Originally Posted by Lily420
Printable View
awwh should of clicked that link first:D I was assuming that link was just a link to the site where he found the picture...oh well.Quote:
Originally Posted by Lily420
man i freak when i see small spiders now i see this...as i was watchin it my cat crawled over my foot and i got wanted to shit my pants
that pic is actully a pic of two spirders together there are two many legs. my tech teacher showed me that last year. its 2 spiders. look at the video and you will see
right when i started reading this thread again out of the corner of my eye I cought a good size cricket walking towards my drum set. It started to try and climb up the rim of of the front of the bass drum, it looked like it was trying to get a headstart run and get up there, did it a couple times and gave up...
icky, now I won't get no sleep tonight. I should not have looked at that picture of it eating the lizard. Ewe, gross, gag. Nasty.
He is beautiful i would love it for a pet
Camel spiders be not real spiders, they be a type of non-spider arachnid, the Solifugae.
Me too, I freaked out because i could feel something on my arm, but nothing was there.Quote:
Originally Posted by Porkchop913
Spiders frighten the living piss out of me.
yeah i read somthing about them not actually being arachnids...but they might as well be...Quote:
Originally Posted by dirty raider
Here's a link for ya. Even shows vidio on the lil' monster!!
Giant Camel Spiders in Iraq!!!
The photo below reportedly comes from a soldier, stationed in Baghdad, who was bitten by a camel spider that was hiding in his sleeping bag. Fortunately, these critters aren't venomous... but they're BIG and FAST (they can run around 10MPH).
The photo shows two spiders attached together, and the camera angle makes them look a tad larger than they really are (they're about the size of an adult's hand). They also tend to seek out shade during the daytime, so it's not terribly unusual to see them charging across the desert at you -- only to come to a screeching halt when they reach your shadow
http://www.gophergas.com/funstuff/camelspider.htm