Our world of strange and amazing creatures

A place where you can chat about anything that isn't to do with games!
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system11
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Joined: Tue Jan 25, 2005 10:17 pm
Location: UK
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Re: Our world of strange and amazing creatures

Post by system11 »

BIL wrote:
system11 wrote:4) THEY EAT HOUSE SPIDERS - which are big, ugly, fast, agile and frankly terrifying.
This unsettles me a bit. I grew up in the caribbean, where our common house spider still creeps me the hell out. Totally harmless but they hide anywhere imaginable and are often about a hand's span in size. Having moved to northern England the only spiders I've seen in my house over a decade or so could fit on a thumbnail. Maybe I shouldn't feel so complacent, as I do plan on moving elsewhere in the country when the time is right. Ugh. I'd rather deal with smaller poisonous spiders than the gangly skittering things we get back home.
Welcome to the UK.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tegenaria_domestica
^^ LOTS of these here.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tegenaria_parietina
^^ And sometimes their big cousins (more in southern areas)

They're among the fastest spiders in the world. We once caught one of the giant ones over 5 inches in diameter at my parents house. Avoid the south. If you see cellar spiders around, leave them alone and kill anything else - they will take over after a while and be the only thing you ever see.
System11's random blog, with things - and stuff!
http://blog.system11.org
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drauch
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Re: Our world of strange and amazing creatures

Post by drauch »

^Lucky!!!!
BIL wrote: "Small sack, LOTS OF CUM" - Nikola Tesla
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BIL
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Location: COLONY

Re: Our world of strange and amazing creatures

Post by BIL »

system11 wrote:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tegenaria_parietina
^^ And sometimes their big cousins (more in southern areas)
Gahh, that looks all too familiar. Interesting, I'd honestly thought you just don't get spiders like that here - a few times I've had one of our smaller ones scramble up the curtain near my desk, but they're so tiny it's hard to care much. I'd probably jump out of my chair if it'd been one like the above, as was a pretty common occurence back home...
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JBC
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Re: Our world of strange and amazing creatures

Post by JBC »

Image

This is a real fish called a 'Sarcastic Fringehead' (Neoclinus Blanchardi)

This is the kind of stuff we can find on Earth, imagine what we'll find in space :D

Here's a video of one being the honey badger of the ocean and then participating in the most disturbing inter-species combat I've ever seen.
Godzilla was an inside job
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BIL
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Re: Our world of strange and amazing creatures

Post by BIL »

Would fit right in with Fatty Glutton and Odious Trident!

W A R N I N G

A HUGE BATTLESHIP

"SARCASTIC FRINGEHEAD"

IS APPROACHING FAST
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JBC
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Re: Our world of strange and amazing creatures

Post by JBC »

Image

A Macropinna Microstoma or 'Barreleye'. So Metroids aren't so far fetched after all :)
Godzilla was an inside job
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ChainsawGuitarSP
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Re: Our world of strange and amazing creatures

Post by ChainsawGuitarSP »

Image
Anyone who has played Metal Black should recognize this guy.
Innovations in Recreational Electronic Media
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