Gardening Magazine

Ain't Nature Wonderful – Part #89778965

By Gardenamateur

Here's the nature-loving equivalent of a *spoiler alert* ... warning to arachnophobes, this post is about spiders...

They've all gone? Good, on with the show.

The good news is that he or she is back. Our net-casting spider. Pammy spotted the tell-tale web this morning, in exactly, precisely the same spot as last year, and the year before, etc etc. These spiders know their real estate. The net-caster loves the spot just in front of our murraya hedge, just to the left of the big wooden post which holds up our front verandah. If you're a net-caster, this is prime position.


Ain't nature wonderful – part #89778965

A small but perfectly formed little net, a bit over an inch (2-3cm)
across. It'd be a nice food cover for a couple of peas.

Ain't nature wonderful – part #89778965

It goes without saying that all spider webs are marvels of
nature. Somewhere within each net-casting spider's little brain
is all the software it needs to design and build this web.


Ain't nature wonderful – part #89778965

Now here's the scary bit for arachnophobes: an actual spider
at work, trying to catch a very tiny human. No, I tell a lie, it
actually catches insects... but how it does it is remarkable.
Unlike other spiders, the net-caster holds its web in its "hands"
as an old-style fisherman holds a net, then throws it over the
first insect wandering by, wrapping it up in its net. Nifty, eh?


Ain't nature wonderful – part #89778965

To give you an idea of the scale we are dealing with here, this
is an ordinary biro.

The other excellent thing about net-casting spiders is that they are surviving and coming back each year. I like to think that having an organic gardening policy plays its own tiny part in creating an environment where everything from worms in the ground to net-casting spiders up in our murraya hedges have a healthy, natural, pesticide-free place in which to go about being wonderful in the way that nature intended.

*end of spoiler alert* 

Want to read more about them? The Australian Museum, as always, has an excellent page on them. 
http://australianmuseum.net.au/net-casting-spiders

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