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#1
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Our docks are just loaded with spiders, so of course the come and take
over our boat each weekend, does anyone have some clues as to what might keep this from happening? Maybe a way to keep them out of our cockpit at least? Thanks -BB www.boatersbasement.com |
#2
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In article . com,
Captain B wrote: Our docks are just loaded with spiders, so of course the come and take over our boat each weekend, does anyone have some clues as to what might keep this from happening? Maybe a way to keep them out of our cockpit at least? Thanks -BB www.boatersbasement.com Gross. I've heard that Dr. Bronners soap works. I'm sure there must be other organic compounds that would help... -- Capt. JG @@ www.sailnow.com |
#3
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![]() "Captain B" wrote in message ups.com... Our docks are just loaded with spiders, so of course the come and take over our boat each weekend, does anyone have some clues as to what might keep this from happening? Maybe a way to keep them out of our cockpit at least? Thanks -BB www.boatersbasement.com Bring your boat to Marinette Wisconsin, and I'll let my spiders duke it out with yours. ;-) |
#4
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On Tue, 29 Aug 2006 22:08:17 -0500, "KLC Lewis"
wrote: Bring your boat to Marinette Wisconsin, and I'll let my spiders duke it out with yours. ;-) Or bring it to Florida and let them duke it out with my geckos. |
#5
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Wayne.B wrote in
: Or bring it to Florida and let them duke it out with my geckos. I gotta ask....Do your geckos sell boat insurance?....(c; -- There's amazing intelligence in the Universe. You can tell because none of them ever called Earth. |
#6
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"Captain B" wrote in
ups.com: Our docks are just loaded with spiders, http://www.uky.edu/Ag/Entomology/ent...ruct/ef631.htm Here in SC, the Brown Recluse, noted to be the most poisonous spider on the planet, has failed to read the Entomologist's map confining them to southern midwest states and there are millions of them, everywhere. They're probably worse in the map's colored in part, but the map is DEAD WRONG. The poison eats flesh and CONTINUES. A friend of mine had to have his HAND CUT OFF to stop it. Everyone in the South or coming to the South needs to recognize this little brown, unobtrusive little beast. They are not aggressive until you put your hand under something they've chosen for home or press them up against something, like rolling over on one in bed.... They are MUCH harder to spot than our other nemesis the Black Widow.....which my churches are just FULL OF! I got bit when a Black Widow took a dim view of my pulling the pedal clavier out from under a Hammond organ to repair it. There were THREE Black Widows sharing the pedal habitat, right under the organist's feet. OUCH! This entomologist's site mentions glue boards as a way to trap them. (See the pictures). Might be a good idea in the nooks and crannies spiders love on your boats. My pest control man says spiders are the hardest thing to kill with pesticides. You just about have to drown them in it. Just one of the next generations of dominant species to take over when the current humans have blown themselves to hell with their weaponry......after the nuclear winter. -- There's amazing intelligence in the Universe. You can tell because none of them ever called Earth. |
#7
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On Wed, 30 Aug 2006 00:46:16 -0400, Larry wrote:
I gotta ask....Do your geckos sell boat insurance?....(c; The ones that talk will try to sell you anything. |
#8
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In article . com,
"Captain B" wrote: Our docks are just loaded with spiders, so of course the come and take over our boat each weekend, does anyone have some clues as to what might keep this from happening? Maybe a way to keep them out of our cockpit at least? If you find another solution other than killing all you find, please tell us as my lady is using up her karmic balance on the ones she finds on our baby each time we go out. At first, she simply showed them where "out of the boat" was, but she's become quite predatory of late, to her dismay. If she sees one, it soon becomes so much mush. -- Jere Lull Xan-a-Deux ('73 Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD) Xan's Pages: http://members.dca.net/jerelull/X-Main.html Our BVI FAQs (290+ pics) http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ |
#9
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![]() "Captain B" wrote in message ups.com... Our docks are just loaded with spiders, so of course the come and take over our boat each weekend, does anyone have some clues as to what might keep this from happening? Maybe a way to keep them out of our cockpit at least? Thanks -BB www.boatersbasement.com Keep a (large) tarantula om board, and don't feed it! |
#10
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Hi, Wayne, and group,
Wayne.B wrote: On Tue, 29 Aug 2006 22:08:17 -0500, "KLC Lewis" wrote: Bring your boat to Marinette Wisconsin, and I'll let my spiders duke it out with yours. ;-) Or bring it to Florida and let them duke it out with my geckos. While we don't seem to have an infestation, we've noted the occasional state bird aboard (most likely blown in, as one of them was struggling, inverted, on the saloon sole before I did a Schwarzenegger on him), and, lately, more occasional tiny cousins (way less than 1/4", but very cockroach-y looking in shape) most likely brought aboard in beer case bottoms my misguided contractor's wife uses to "clean up" (she cleans off the surfaces I've been using to stage stuff by piling it into said box bottoms, making it impossible to find anything when I return) in the times when I was gone, before Lydia moved aboard. I'm not the least bit squeamish, but I'd rather be bug free, just as I'd rather have a dry bilge. So, to the question: Do your geckos keep the boat bug-free? I've often thought, once we splash and actually depart, that it would be a good thing to have a couple of geckos aboard. Much less intrusive than iguanas, and don't get so big as to be troublesome later. Once they run out of bugs to eat, I expect they'd look peckish and we could put out food and water for them. In our boatyard, there are legions of small lizards from 2" to perhaps 6" head to tail, and Lydia observed one of the larger (none aboard, sadly) stalk, catch, and eat a palmetto bug (cockroach from hell to transplanted northeasterners, state bird to Floridians), so the concept is sound. I'm just wondering if any of you have successfully utilized geckos in an environmentally friendly insect control program? L8R Skip and Lydia, sweltering without even Ernesto to cool us down in the St. Pete Hete Morgan 461 #2 SV Flying Pig KI4MPC See our galleries at www.justpickone.org/skip/gallery! Follow us at and "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover." - Mark Twain |
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