When will Spider Season Reign End

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/spiders-bigger-and-more-numerous-this-fall-1.4880720

‘People panic:’ Expert says massive spider season upon us

CBC Meteorologist predicts when this season’s frightful reign will end

Cathy Kearney · CBC News · Posted: Oct 28, 2018 1:00 PM PT | Last Updated: 7 hours ago

Larger than normal hobo spiders have been seen darting around rooms and getting caught in people’s hair in Metro Vancouver this fall. (Sam McCann/SFU)

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It isn’t just your imagination. Scary sightings of larger-than-usual spiders are on the rise in Metro Vancouver this fall.

Pest control specialist Randy Bilesky has seen a 50-per-cent increase in calls to his service this season over last.

“People panic … we get the phone call after someone has walked through a spider web,” said Bilesky. “They are sure it’s still in their hair, especially if it is one of the big hobo spiders.”

Spider season is usually over by the end of September. But the long, warm summer has these uninvited guests overstaying a barely-there welcome, says Bilesky.

“Spiders are huge right now, larger than I’ve ever seen before,” he said.

The giant house spider, also known as the wolf spider, and its relative the hobo spider are common in Metro Vancouver and throughout B.C.

They are typically brown with a chevron pattern on their abdomen with a leg span that might seem, to some, like it’s a metre wide, but is actually closer to eight centimetres.

Arachnologist Catherine Scott says there’s no need to kill spiders. Instead, they should be relocated to the great outdoors. (Sam McCann/SFU)

“They are quite hairy and they are really, really fast,” says arachnologist Catherine Scott. “You can actually hear their little feet running across the room.”

People typically see the creepy crawlers in their homes in the fall because the males have left their web and are out searching for mates.The likelihood one is within a few feet of you right now is high. But Scott says fear not, these spiders are completely harmless, and are actually good for your home because they eat other pesky insects like mosquitoes and flies.

“Spiders don’t come into your bed at night and bite you, that’s not a thing they do,” she said.

But Bilesky, an exterminator with Go Green Pest Control, is seeing plenty of fear right now. His company has had 39 calls so far this season, compared with 26 last year.

And while his first step is to caution his clients on prevention — like filling cracks in ceilings and baseboards, and keeping doors and windows closed — all he hears from the front steps of his petrified client’s homes is fear.

“I usually get the blank look [that says] ‘I prefer something that’s going to kill them now. Or yesterday.'”

For the less squeamish, Scott advocates relocating the hairy behemoths with what she calls the cup-and-card technique, where you put a glass over the spider, then slip a paper underneath it and deliver it back into the wild.

Terrified to talk spiders

We’ll soon see fewer creepy-crawlies trying to scare the daylights out of us, as the first frost spells the end of another spider season.

CBC Meteorologist and scaredy-cat Johanna Wagstaffe said she’s too terrified to discuss spiders, but predicts their reign will end when that first frost arrives in early November.

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