At least you didn't swallow it.
Actual footage:
http://photos1.flickr.com/679890_72ed289678_m.jpg
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At least you didn't swallow it.
Actual footage:
http://photos1.flickr.com/679890_72ed289678_m.jpg
That's ShlupQuack?Quote:
Originally Posted by Doomsday
http://thingsofstuff.homestead.com/f...lintonDole.jpg
FOR WHAT? :aimmad:Quote:
Originally Posted by TasteyPies
The swelling hasn't gone down at all... I wonder if people think I'm just mutated. Haha.
*stares at Raine's post*
*never sleeps again*
*is looking around the student cafe in fear, almost FREAKING OUT but not quite*
seriously.
SERIOUSLY! THAT IMAGE SHOULD BE PUT IN A SPOILER TAG IF THAT'S EVEN POSSIBLE DON'T ASK ME I'M JUST SITTING HERE TWITCHING SLOWLY LOSING THE CAPACITY TO BREATHE MY GOD WHAT IF THE SPIDERS ARE INVISIBLE AND I'M INHALING THEM RIGHT NOW AND THEY'RE BUSY SUFFOCATING ME WITH THEIR TINY SPIDERWEBS AND THEY PLAN TO MAKE SPIDER BABIES AND THE BABIES WILL SCURRY AROUND MY NERVOUS SYSTEM AND EAT ME ALIVE?
You're lucky you're not in Iraq...imagine waking up with this thing hugging your face, it's a Camel Spider...two unusually big Camel Spiders.
http://www.washingtondispatch.com/cu...s/spider65.jpg
does it eat camels?
I'M NOT OPENING THIS THREAD ANY MORE!
Haha, someone posted that at Fool's Gold a few months back. Everyone was freaking out and I said something and then someone quoted me. :cool:
do the camels eat them?
:shoot:
If your going with the whole pirate look don't forget the parot. He might eat the spiders! Or a monkey! Some monkeys eat insects.
This incident reminds me vaguely of the time I woke up and thought a spider had nested on my face.
Boy, I had to change my sheets that day.
I'd say quite the opposite.Quote:
Originally Posted by shadow 13
:DQuote:
Originally Posted by eestlinc
Camel spiders, also known as wind spiders, wind scorpions, and sun scorpions, are a type of arthropod found (among other places) in the deserts of the Middle East. They're technically not spiders but solifugae (although, like spiders, they belong to the class Arachnida).Quote:
Originally Posted by eestlinc
Camel spiders (so named because, like camels, they can be found in sandy desert regions) grow to be moderately large (about a 5" leg span),; they can move very quickly in comparison to other arthropods (a top speed of maybe 10 MPH); they make no noise; and they capture prey without the use of either venom or anesthetic. Camel spiders rely on speed, stealth, and the (non-venomous) bite of powerful jaws to feed on small prey such as other arthropods (e.g., scorpions, crickets, pillbugs), lizards, and possibly mice or birds. They use only three pairs of legs in running; the frontmost pair (called pedipalpa) is held aloft and used in a similar manner to the antennae of insects. Camel spiders shun the sun and generally hide during the day, coming out at night to do their hunting.
Editors Note: They're f**kin fugly. Luckily in Ireland our spiders are tiny & not one is dangerous. We have no venomous or dangerous-to-humans type animals or insects/arachnids....what a boring little island.