T O P I C R E V I E W |
Hatdiva |
Posted - Sep 08 2009 : 6:38:56 PM How on earth do you drive out spiders? My daughter is terrified of them. I've tried the sticky traps with no luck! Any ideas?
Everything is better when you wear a hat....
http://hatdiva.blogspot.com http://hatdiva.etsy.com
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25 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
loribeck |
Posted - Oct 06 2019 : 6:23:40 PM Sara, we are having a terrible time with spiders this year. I know they are good for some things but I just don't want them in the house. That is interesting that they call hedge apples horse apples in Texas. I will make sure to put them on something so I don't get a mess. Thank you.
Farmgirl 7774
Never miss a sunset
Lori Beck |
YellowRose |
Posted - Oct 05 2019 : 04:23:33 AM Here in Texas we call hedge apples horse apples. I didn't know they repel spiders but I do use them for roaches. They will ooze a sticky milky substance so put in plastic container or on a paper plate.
I grow and use pennyroyal for insect repellant. It's in the mint family but not edible.
Sara~~~ FarmGirl Sister #6034 8/25/14 FarmGirl of the Month Sept 2015. & Feb 2019
Lord put your arm around my shoulders and your hand over my mouth.
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loribeck |
Posted - Oct 04 2019 : 7:19:35 PM So glad I read this post as we are getting a ton of spiders in our house. I don't want to spray as the pesticides are harmful to humans and animals. I am going to try the hedge apples. There are some people I know that have some on the trees that they grow on so I guess putting a few around the house is worth a try.
Farmgirl 7774
Never miss a sunset
Lori Beck |
texdane |
Posted - Feb 25 2010 : 5:54:49 PM I appreciate that spiders are beneficial. But, word to the wise, be careful when they are in your house. Two months ago, we had snow. I put on my knitted winter cap, not knowing a spider was hiding in it. It fell down my face. I stepped on it. I did not feel it when it bit me. I ended up with a huge, nasty wound on my chin, swollen glands, and a bad, bad infection. I have had to go to the doctor more than once for that little critter. My face is scarred. All from a little spider. Some are poisonous, and even if they aren't can still give you a nasty infection if they bite you from the bacteria. Outside my house, is fine, but don't want them in my house! Now I check my hats, boots, and mittens before donning!
Nicole, Farmgirl Sister # 1155
KNITTER, JAM-MAKER AND MOM EXTRAORDINAIRE |
classygram |
Posted - Feb 25 2010 : 06:38:12 AM I have heard that the hedge apples are great for spiders. My daughers property has a ditch running though the far end and The hedge apples are very plentiful. I'm going to try putting them in each room. We get lots of spiders and I DON'T like them. Brenda |
Kidrae |
Posted - Feb 25 2010 : 06:04:46 AM Hi am new this is my first post. Here where I live we have a lot of different spiders. I am with not killing them and not spraying for them. But I am with not wanting them in my house. Most stay out but the daddy long-legs don't. But there are ways to try and keep them from coming in. One I have not tried yet but will this year is sprinkling penny-royal in the areas they frequent. For me I am going to try in window seals and doors that lead outside. Thanks for the fun RaeAnn |
melody |
Posted - Feb 18 2010 : 6:07:58 PM We live very close to the bay here in the north woods and every spring we have an exterminator come to the house and spray the siding; which I just hate doing! Goodness knows what he uses---it doesn't have an odor and looks just like rainwater.... We have yet to discover an alternative solution other than that.
It gets so bad you can't even sit out on the porch at night
Good luck!
"The best mirror is an old friend." - George Herbert
Melody Farmgirl #525 www.melodynotes-melodynotes.blogspot.com www.lemonverbenasoap.etsy.com www.longtallsallys.etsy.com |
Bugabee |
Posted - Feb 18 2010 : 5:44:53 PM Spiders are good!! Stop trying to kill them if they aren't posionous! They help control smaller pests. Here are some wonderful things about spiders that might shift your perception. Spiders are amazingly beautiful creatures. Go online and look at how many different shapes, colors,and sizes they are. I used to have all my students research at least one spider and the girls always freaked out! However, once they found out a little about them they began to feel more in control~meaning less afraid. Most spiders mouths are not big enough to bite you! In certain parts of the country like ours (South Carolina) we have two major poisonous spiders. One can eat a huge hole in your flesh and one can paralize you and kill you. These deserve respect by staying away and when you learn their habitat you can avoid these areas. In one day I found 9 Black Widow spiders in my sons outside toys. I learned that his toys must be put up every night and I got chickens(great spider control)to help out. The biggest thing I did was to teach my son about them. He is 9 now and totaly fascinated and very respectful of these creatures. He has taught all is friends to stay away from these spiders. You are only posioning yourself and family when you spray!!! Spiders walk in the tips of their legs. Sprays, unless sprayed directly on the spider, never reach the necessary organs to kill them. Their respiratory system does not work like ours. So, the only one breating the posion is you. I suspect your eyes are bulging and you have guffawed at least 3 times while reading this, but I swear by education. It seems to take the fear and mystery out of those who learn about them. Remember what you put out you get back in return. Would you like to be smashed by a newspaper?
Never try to teach a pig to sing. It wastes your time and it annoys the pig! Old Folk Saying. |
Annika |
Posted - Jan 13 2010 : 4:40:08 PM *SHUDDER* Yuck..icky...spiders...squish the nasty things!
Annika Farmgirl & sister #13
Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication. ~Leonardo DaVinci
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cntry@heart |
Posted - Jan 13 2010 : 4:32:33 PM I have tried the hedgeapple thing myself - and it does work. I have hedgeapple trees on my farm so I can get them pretty cheeap! :-) |
Maggiemoo |
Posted - Jan 13 2010 : 1:09:06 PM http://www.gpnc.org/osage.htm
Please see the above website. It has a lot of information on the hedge apple (osage orange). They are not poisonous. Hope this helps.
Cowgirls are forever. |
Maggiemoo |
Posted - Jan 13 2010 : 11:47:29 AM Siobhan,
That is a good point...I honestly don't know about the safety of them and little kids. My kids are older, so it wasn't a concern for me. I will try to find out an answer to that.
Jennifer
Cowgirls are forever. |
Faransgirl |
Posted - Jan 13 2010 : 10:31:27 AM Well, I know alot of people don't like spiders and some kids are scared of them but, they really are the most beneficial beastie you can have in the house. The help keep down the other bugs. We live in South Texas where roaches are very plentiful. I seldom see one in my house because anyone killing a spider gets yelled at. I would lots rather have spiders than roaches and silverfish, etc. I never never banish a spider. My kids and sister have gotten use to the idea that spiders in our house are not killed. The cats don't even bother them much anymore. Just my opinion and not a popular one. LOL
Farmgirl Sister 572
May the force of the horse be with you. |
clothedinscarlet |
Posted - Jan 13 2010 : 06:03:44 AM
quote: Originally posted by twink
There is a fruit called hedge apples that we use to help with spiders. They are extremely expensive this year, however, at $1.00 each. Usually they are about 29¢. You are supposed to place one or two per room. They are green and all bumpy and ugly. I think some people call them ugly fruit, and it has many other names - horse apples, osage orange, etc. They are related to the mulberry, I think. After a month or so they can turn brown and look like a walnut, but apparently they keep working anyway. I've had luck with them in our lower level, but haven't tried them in the main part of the house yet. I just set one in each corner, on a piece of parchment paper to protect the floor. Seems to be working, and we have MEGA spiders around here because our house is surrounded by huge ponderosa pine trees and spiders love to hang out in the trees, ya know.
A little info about them: http://www.ehow.com/how_4513879_rid-spiders-poison-sprays.html
-Deb
http://healthtalk.6.forumer.com/index.php
Shoot for the moon. Even if you miss you'll land amongst the stars. - Anonymous
Yes, this. We have them at a local farm market type of store that sells produce and gardening stuff. They go by osage orange here and they're supposed to be great for keeping spiders away. I haven't tried them yet (we have tons of spiders too) because I'm afraid my boys will try to eat them and I don't really know if they're safe.
Siobhan, wife to my best friend, Trent, and mommy to Camden (11/28/05) and Bennett (7/11/07). and Truman (7/28/09) |
Maggiemoo |
Posted - Jan 13 2010 : 04:48:16 AM We have lived in the country for seven years now here in Licking county Ohio. The first two years we had someone spray for them because they were so bad. We were the first house to disturb the soil on this land. We had those big furry dark brown ones that everyone here calls wolf spiders. Year three someone told us about using hedge apples around the outside and down in our basement. We tried it and it really works! No spiders. I still can't believe it. They grow abundantly here, so I would be happy to send anyone who wants some next year. Don't pay for them. I place about eight of them around each year. I hope this helps.
Cowgirls are forever. |
Wildcrafter |
Posted - Nov 06 2009 : 06:55:50 AM
quote: Originally posted by Julia
Scream, step on them, and then do the "Icky, I just squished a spider!' dance.
What? Have you been spying on me? What do I do about spiders? I moved! I lived in this 50s ranch house and every blasted September, big huge hairy spiders moved in for about 2 weeks. I tried sticky traps, yelling at them, sprayed poison inside and outside my house twice, put those things in the electrical outlets that supposedly put out some kind of sound that spiders don't like.....nothing worked. So, I told my husband this year that we were moving before September. I found us a place in August that was bigger, newer by 40 years!, well insulated with 3 1/2 acres. No big hairy spiders this year! I found a couple in the garage. One, my friend got out with a broom and one of my chickens ate it! The other, I got my big manly husband to kill for me. I just scream. He comes running, calls me a baby (and?) and then he kills them. My hero. We put sticky traps out in the garage and they work for out there. I watched my chickens peck at dead bugs in the sticky traps and eat them. Goofballs!
---------------------------------------------------------- I woke up on January 1st and it was 2009. And it's been that way ever since!
www.goodnaturedearthling.com Cedar Mountain Herb School http://goodnaturedearthling.wordpress.com/ Become a fan! http://www.facebook.com/pages/Good-Natured-Earthling/85786527923
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Diane B Carter |
Posted - Nov 05 2009 : 1:04:46 PM My SIL said she used a spider grapefruit to get rid of spiders, I am lucky so far I don't have any here. I never knew there was fruit that would get rid of them Good luck!
Hope all your days are Sunnydays. dianebcarterhotmailcom.blogspot.com |
Libbie |
Posted - Nov 05 2009 : 11:39:52 AM We have bunches of spiders here, too - farmland, big elm trees and a woodstack-fence - and I'm afraid of the poison stuff, because we also have a very large preying mantis population (isn't that weird?) so, in desperation, I've gone outside when nobody's around and tried to reason with the spiders, telling them that they can live wherever on the farm, the woodpile, etc., but they must NOT harm my little boys, and any of them that enter my home or vehicle can be squished by me with no retaliation by other arachnids. I know - y'all probably will think I'm nuts by now, but we really have very few spideys inside, and nobody's been bitten by one yet (knocking on wood...)!
XOXO, Libbie
"Farmgirl Sister #10," and proud of it!!! |
Julia |
Posted - Nov 03 2009 : 9:10:44 PM Scream, step on them, and then do the "Icky, I just squished a spider!' dance.
For tomorrow and its needs I do not pray, but keep me, guide me, love me, Lord just for today. St. Augustine
#440
http://www.myfeetaredirty.blogspot.com/ |
Cycling Farm Girl |
Posted - Nov 03 2009 : 11:27:50 AM I looked at this website ..they have good suggestions like eucalyptus leaves disbersed throughout the house...and there are other natural ways as well, like getting a cat as they are great spider hunters! I like that suggestion! Great site, and I've learned a little about keeping spiders out!
http://www.ehow.com/how_2125846_repel-spiders.html
Carrie - Victorian Urban Farmgirl
For with the measure you use, it will be measured to you. Luke 6:38
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twink |
Posted - Nov 03 2009 : 07:03:28 AM There is a fruit called hedge apples that we use to help with spiders. They are extremely expensive this year, however, at $1.00 each. Usually they are about 29¢. You are supposed to place one or two per room. They are green and all bumpy and ugly. I think some people call them ugly fruit, and it has many other names - horse apples, osage orange, etc. They are related to the mulberry, I think. After a month or so they can turn brown and look like a walnut, but apparently they keep working anyway. I've had luck with them in our lower level, but haven't tried them in the main part of the house yet. I just set one in each corner, on a piece of parchment paper to protect the floor. Seems to be working, and we have MEGA spiders around here because our house is surrounded by huge ponderosa pine trees and spiders love to hang out in the trees, ya know.
A little info about them: http://www.ehow.com/how_4513879_rid-spiders-poison-sprays.html
-Deb
http://healthtalk.6.forumer.com/index.php
Shoot for the moon. Even if you miss you'll land amongst the stars. - Anonymous |
DaisyFarm |
Posted - Sep 10 2009 : 11:07:01 AM Not if you put an old sock on the end of the hose! |
Diane B Carter |
Posted - Sep 10 2009 : 10:29:17 AM The vaccume cleaner is good as long as you know they are dead or empty it into the garbage when done vaccumming, those little guys do live sometimes and crawl out of the vaccume even meaner and dusty. Or that is something I grew up beliving and it could be wrong. But thats what I was told.
Hope all your days are Sunnydays. dianebcarterhotmailcom.blogspot.com |
DaisyFarm |
Posted - Sep 09 2009 : 7:21:29 PM Can't step on them here, but the vacuum cleaner works!! We have tons of spiders here, especially this time of year. Many people swear by putting chestnuts around your house. I haven't tried it myself tho. |
dutchy |
Posted - Sep 09 2009 : 5:44:19 PM Scream and THEN step on them., lol
Hugs from Marian/Dutchy, a farmgirl from the Netherlands :)
My personal blog: http://just-me-a-dutch-girl.blogspot.com/
Almost daily updates on me and mine :)
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