As printed in Florida Wildlife Magazine
Illustration by Mike Wright - freelance artist from Longwood, Florida
(Go to bottom of page for links on Florida snakes and spiders.)
They tell me those
gigantic wolf spiders are completely harmless, but I don't believe it. How can
anyone say such a thing when people must be tripping and breaking their necks
trying to get away from them?
I'll never forget
my first encounter with one. I had just moved back to Florida from Los Angeles,
after losing everything in the Northridge earthquake. As I sat on the floor
of my condo, the light from a lone, shadeless lamp at my side, I saw a movement
from the corner of my eye. I don't think mere words can describe the terror
I felt when I saw that foot-and-a-half-wide creature creeping along my wall.
The fact that it was actually a five-inch spider whose shadow was being projected
did little to quell my fear; I had never seen such a sight in my life, outside
of a 60's horror flick, that is.
I don't like to
kill things, so I used a broom to encourage it toward an open door. Unfortunately,
a palmetto bug big enough to beat me up flew in while I was trying to get the
spider out. During the next few months I found that spiders and palmetto bugs
weren't to be my only uninvited guests, so I had to learn other techniques for
removal as well.
My
brother-in-law taught me how to catch mice with a broom and a paper sack.
He's pretty good at it; over the past 18 years, he's caught most of the
20 snakes in his Merritt Island home that way. I'm sure my neighbors thought
I was some kind of nut as they watched me, once or twice a week, run out
my front door wearing knee-high suede boots and elbow-length rubber gloves,
a brown paper bag clutched warily in my hand. I sealed up all the holes
around plumbing and any other possible means of entrance for the rodents,
and that seemed to take care of the mice--the little field mice, that is.
If it hadn't been
for my neighbor George, I probably would have moved back to LA, earthquakes
and all. He was on hand to chase out the huge black tree rat that ran in through
my open back door. Even my 17-pound cat was scared of that critter. Usually
quite a rodent-hunter, she took one look, dashed through the front door and
hid under the car. George was also there to catch the brown thrasher that flew
in and took refuge behind the entertainment center. Brooms aren't too handy
in a case like that. And just try using a broom to help a wild rabbit back out
the door. I'm here to tell you that a baby rabbit can jump seven feet in any
direction--including straight up, even if you are standing directly over him.
My sister
Kim says I must have some special attraction for the wildlife because
I'm the only one having these adventures, but that's not true. What about
the baby alligator she found under her car, or the opossum that moved
into her garage? Then there was the goose that flew down her chimney and
into the family room, bringing a terrible mess with it. And surely she
hasn't forgotten about the hundreds of bats she found cohabiting her very-short-term
rental in Rockledge?
But in my
case, Kim might be right. Who else comes home to find that a flying squirrel
has taken up residence in the stove? Unfortunately, the squirrel decided
to stay and nest in my oven batting, popping her head up through the burner
hole every now and then to see what was going on. The
gas man had to come out at midnight to unhook my stove and move it into
the woods, and I'm sure he thought I was a nut, too. He kept looking up
into the trees, saying, "I don't see anything flying...." I've often wondered
what he thought my real reason was for hauling my stove into the woods
at midnight. I took the stove apart and removed the dirty batting. Even
so, for the next two years, every time I baked brownies, there was the
faint smell of urine in the air.
When I recount
these tales to my Los Angeles friends, their sympathy is overwhelming;
they can't imagine living in such a "wild" place. But when I think about
the strange and sometimes annoying animal encounters I've had since my
return to Florida, I remember the wildlifeless years I spent in LA, where
the smog was so thick that I couldn't see the sky, let alone the birds,
and where I never had the occasion to see a five-foot wing spread on a
great horned owl as it took off in flight ten yards from my door. And
I realize that these adventures have brought an inner peace to me that
I never had in LA, because for me, true quality of life is all about enjoying
nature--both human and animal. So I'll take Florida any day, critters
and all.

Florida Spider and
Snake Links:
Common Florida Spiders
Florida Spiders
Florida Venomous Spiders
Snakes of Brevard County, Florida
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