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- Feb 18, 2003
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no, i usually don't handle any of my scolopendridscacoseraph said:do u pick stuff up like that a lot?
just wanted to try out that technique,...
but it's def. NOT efficient
no, i usually don't handle any of my scolopendridscacoseraph said:do u pick stuff up like that a lot?
Smith at work again:cacoseraph said:two things (2/23/06)
1) Centipede Game #1
i invented the most awesome centipede game. i have to make a vid of it. i had my trusty bluering (Ethmostigmus trigonopodus), Smith, out and about on my hands. i looked at roach motel. I looked at Smith.... i knew what i must do!
I took a little hisser nymph, about ~3/4" (2cm) put it on the same hand as Smith. The hisser ran up my hand directly towards Smith, who promptly knocked it off my hand. Drat. Try again... and again... long story short, i ended up actually having to pinch the hisser while Smith grabbed it!
I'm telling you Smith is a sweetheart! I think it's a he, but i'm not sure.
pretty sure not necrotoxic.... roughly a month later and there is virtually no evidence of any of the bites. oh well, i guess it is a good thing =Pcacoseraph said:yellowleg update:
edit: wow, four or five days after the fact 3 of my bites look like they are going VERY SLIGHTLY necrotic/cytolysic! how completely awesome! the only other time i had a necrotic reaction was to a Cheiracanthum mildei (yellow sac spider at any rate) bite!!! i'm very excited! 5 of the puncture wounds have turned into very small (1-2mm) open wounds, extending down into a few layers of my skin. they appear to have gotten larger since yesterday which leads me to believe there is a cytotoxic effect going on!
it's 2kool not too! i reckon i'm getting close to 2000 um, handling experiences and i've only been accidentily bitten maybe 5-6 timesBuggin said:Note to self:Never handle a Centipede.
Caco,cacoseraph said:it's 2kool not too! i reckon i'm getting close to 2000 um, handling experiences and i've only been accidentily bitten maybe 5-6 times
the funny thing is i think i'm getting close to being the foremost authority on centipede handling solely by virtue of doing it more than anyone else... but ppl who hardly have handled anything still see fit to tell me i'm doing something like, wrong.
ppl still see them as monsters, but hopefully after years of my antics a few ppl will perhaps listen to the only actual evidence being presented beyond "common knowledge"
oh well.
oh, and the semirant part of my post wasn't directed at Buggin in the least
thanksVoracious said:Caco,
Wanted to chime in here. I've always had a healthy respect for these reclusive creatures. The first time I ever saw one in real life was a 3" lithobiidae ssp. seen while cleaning construction debris. I was 14. It ran out of the wood pile. Provoked by my cousin kicking at it, it become extremely agitated, and attacked the first living thing it encountered - a hapless slug - drawing blood. I'd never seen a "bug" show such angry expression. Since, I've held these creatures in a sort of morbid curiosity, and probably speak for many reading these threads. Call it irrational fear if you will: to this day I will not handle even a small centipede (lithobiidae ssp.) that I find under a rotting piece of wood.
I won't render an opinion on a recommendation for or against handling (I sure won't ever touch one), but you are to be commended for overcoming the fears we all have of the unknown and demonstrating a noticeable difference in temperaments at least among individuals, and possibly along subspecial lines. For example, one may infer, perhaps correctly and perhaps not, that the bluering is less aggressive than s. subspinipes.
Unlike the silkworm or the termite, these bizarre creatures have little to no known economic impact and are therefore little studied. Your work has provided some nuance about these fearsome creatures, and I believe your claim about approaching status as the foremost authority is quite defensible, at least amongst the online community.
Prov. 27:2
oh, those mouse feeding vids aren't mine.Voracious said:What a sweet little pede! How much warning do you get if they are about to attack - assuming the pede has been safely extracted from its quarters and is crawling around on you?
Showed a friend your videos today of the black pede (Smith?) eating the mouse. Very impressive, esp. how quickly these animals can fling their heads around.
The S. Gigantea doing same is also impressive but not nearly as dramatic.
that is excellent man!GATORGAR56K said:i decided that id try handling my tanzanian blue-ring and i wasnt disappointed with it at all
everything you said about these guys was very true caco, this particular one wasnt aggressive at all and i even grabbed him and picked him up without any sort of defensive reaction whatsoever. the only time it got aggressive was when i dug it up, it got pissed off and struck at me, but it calmed down rather quickly
This is my brother, whom i love, and with am well pleaseddemicheru said:I almost forgot I had this one too - another pede from Caco.
I've got the second one as my wallpaper on my work computer, very visible to anyone walking in the hallway, and I get a LOT of questions about it. For some reason, the majority of the questions are along the lines of "is that really your hand?" I point out the wedding ring as proof, and most of them just walk away at that point. I am now the designated bug catcher for anything that gets in the building. I love my job.