Advice for rooting out and killing a brown recluse

Tek7

CGA President, Tribe of Judah Founder & President
Staff member
Well, my evening is shot.

I saw a brown recluse duck into the shadows near our laundry baskets about an hour ago. My wife and I have been shaking out laundry with tongs, researching homemade pesticides, and trying to not let our skin crawl since then.

Does anyone have any advice for rooting out and killing brown recluse spiders? If so, please share.

Oh, and if anyone posts a picture of a spider in this thread, I'll ban them for a week. Post an animated GIF of a spider, and I ban you for a month.

Seriously. I don't think spiders existed before the fall of creation. They just creep me out so badly.

/shudder
 
wow.... ur worse than my mom..........

either lysol or windex (cant remember which) can overwhelm bugs/spiders, thats abotu all i can think of
 
I read about those spiders in a Frank Peretti book... ugh.

Have you thought about fumigating the whole house? (There are no lengths too great to go to in the battle against spiders)
 
I saw a brown recluse duck into the shadows near our laundry baskets about an hour ago. My wife and I have been shaking out laundry with tongs, researching homemade pesticides, and trying to not let our skin crawl since then.

Does anyone have any advice for rooting out and killing brown recluse spiders? If so, please share.

Those buggers must be bad in apartments in MO. My wife and I had problems with them in both apartments when we lived in S. County.

Talk to your apartment landlord asap about having an exterminator visit. You can try to catch one if your landlord wants evidence, but essentially I believe that they could be held liable if one of their tennants is bitten. We found that the best way to catch one is to stick a glass over the spider, carefully move a piece of paper under the glass, turn the glass right-side up, place a plastic zip-lock bag over the glass, turn the glass upside down to transfer the spider into the bag, seal the bag and then stick it in the freezer for a few hours.

Additionaly, you could set off a bug bomb or two, but I really recommend buying some glue boards from Walmart. The glue boards are very sticky and are great at catching all kinds of pests like bugs, spiders, and even mice (we have an older home and managed to get a mouse this past winter :().

If you catch one, maybe you can try to feel a little more confident about checking to verify that it really is a brown recluse. There's a harmless brown spider that looks very similar to it. The adult brown recluse is dark brown and hairless with a violin shape on it's back. The neck of the violin points toward the body. If the spider has hair or if it has a brown stripe on the back instead of the violin shape, then it is not a brown recluse. Note also that brown recluse babies are very small, blonde, and just as dangerous as the adults.

The good news is that their name is a good description of their personality. They are reclusive and not aggressive. They have a tendency to come out at night to hunt and the like dark places and usually hunt near the ground. You also may see them around places where water collects. My wife and I would often find them in our bathtub around the drain.

Brown recluse bites usually occur from careless behavior. Shake out your clothes and your shoes before you put them on. Check the pipes going into the walls and make sure that the holes are plugged up. (our second apartment was missing the flanges around the pipes. we stuffed the holes up with paper towels and started seeing the brown recluses much less frequently)

Seriously though, the bites are nasty and can leave a big hole in your skin. My wife and I were fortunate and never bitten after living in two separate apartments that had them. Take consolation in that.
 
a quick search showed that most home that have a brown recluse spider infestation never get an actual bite and 90% of the bites result in little more then a normal spider bite, but those 10% of the people have real problems with the toxins in the venom... I would definitely want any potential bite looked at by and expert.
 
If it were one of those, I'd go with Lysol. Windex cleans windows.

I'd heard the windex because of the ammonia... but that was for flying bugs - something in the ammonia destroys their wings. not sure if it's true tho. It could just make them sticky or suffocate them. who knows.
 
Have you thought about fumigating the whole house? (There are no lengths too great to go to in the battle against spiders)
We live in an apartment complex. I think the property managers have to handle all pest control services.
wow.... ur worse than my mom..........
Can't help it. Spiders aren't natural, man. They really, really creep me out. Snakes creep me out less than spiders.
Those buggers must be bad in apartments in MO. My wife and I had problems with them in both apartments when we lived in S. County.
Aye, we've had the same problems in past years. The property managers even sent out a pest control service, but the service didn't seem to have any impact. Only the change of season seemed to help.
Talk to your apartment landlord asap about having an exterminator visit.
Aye, we'll likely do that this weekend or next.
Additionaly, you could set off a bug bomb or two, but I really recommend buying some glue boards from Walmart.
Wal-Mart, eh? Are they sold any where? I hate Wal-Mart only slightly less than spiders. :p
There's a harmless brown spider that looks very similar to it.
My wife said she was sure it was a brown recluse, but I only saw it for a moment and I'm not familiar with types of spiders. My first impulse when I see a spider is to reach for a shoe and squish it.
The good news is that their name is a good description of their personality. They are reclusive and not aggressive. They have a tendency to come out at night to hunt and the like dark places and usually hunt near the ground.
I've heard horror stories of people being bitten in their sleep and not even feeling it, so it's good to hear a more reassuring report.
Brown recluse bites usually occur from careless behavior. Shake out your clothes and your shoes before you put them on.
Yep, we're doing that again. We know the seasons are changing when we have to start shaking out our shoes.
a quick search showed that most home that have a brown recluse spider infestation never get an actual bite and 90% of the bites result in little more then a normal spider bite, but those 10% of the people have real problems with the toxins in the venom... I would definitely want any potential bite looked at by and expert.
That is good to know. Happen to have a link to your source? (Not that I'm doubting you, mind you; I just would like to send a link to my wife so she can be reassured as well.)

Thank you, all, for your advice and information. :D
 
Hey Tek, you should see the scar on my uncle's leg from a brown recluse bite. Its about 2inches in diameter and is slightly sunken. He is in his late forties and this happened I think in his teens. Nasty spiders for sure.

Your best bet to resolve all your bug problems are to buy a few geckos and let them roam free in your apt. They will take care of any and all bugs you may or may not have.

On another note, you should see some of the Black Widows I find around my house. Mostly in the garage, but I have found them around some of my azalea bushes as well. Most of the ones I find have bodies the size of dimes, not including legs. Ill try and catch one this year and take a picture of it. They are very pretty spiders, and I dont like spiders either.

Growing up in Florida we had spiders called "Jimmy Spiders" those will freak you out. Average size for one is 4-5 inches in diameter, legs included. I did say average size, meaning I have seen bigger.

Anyways good luck with your bugs, buy a gecko and treat it well.
 
I know a gecko looking for an owner:

geicogecko.jpg


Nice little guy, isn't he. :)
 
You two want Tek's house to look like a warzone, don't you...

:rolleyes: Hand grenades. Works everytime.
Allow me to put up a picture of the destruction of three tarantulas using this method:

nagedeppo.jpg


(Spider legs flying through the air edited out of the picture to avoid being banned by Tek)
 
Seriously. I don't think spiders existed before the fall of creation. They just creep me out so badly.

Same with poison ivy/oak/sumac. And germs. *shudders* I keep the wet wipes around just in case.

That sucks about the spiders though. I would definitely get a gecko like Arkanjel said.
 
glue boards can be purchased any any store that is similar to Walmart (k-mart, target, etc). You might also try a store like Lowes or Home Depot. I'm telling you, they work great for pest control!

As for people being bitten in their sleep, chances are very good that the spiders were already there when they went to bed. I forgot to mention, check and shake out your sheets. While you're at it, shake out the towels in the morning before you dry off after your shower. My wife and I had a couple close calls with the towels.

We really didn't have a lot of luck with the exterminator when they came too, which is why we did the bug bomb thing. The bombs did help, but it was always temporary since we were sure that the spiders were living in the walls.

If you and your wife ever think about moving, houses in IL are much cheaper than in MO and it's only a 30-45 min drive for me to get to work. We're also only paying about $700/mo on house payments and our rent for the apartments was $600 for our first and $650 for our second apartment. The best thing of all is that we don't have brown recluses in our house!!! ;)
 
I'm quite confident they're brown recluses because my invertebrate zoology prof in undergrad was pretty obsessed with them. I'm pretty sure I could go my whole life without seeing another. :) Granted, I don't always get close enough to be 100% certain anymore...but once I've seen a few confirmed brown recluses, I pretty much assume the rest are the same and scramble for the nearest shoe or heavy book.

I've heard most people get bitten in the shower or while sleeping. That's what really freaks me out. We are careful to shake out our clothes and shoes.

I want a gecko. Or two. Or five.
 
Well to make sure, it's usually between 1/4-3/4 inch and has a distinctive "violin" shape on its cephalothorax. PMing Ember the picture since Tek would ban me to pieces if I posted it here or sent it to him :P
 
Pfft, did you really need to send me that. I said I know what they look like. :p And yep that's it. The one we saw last night was the biggest I had ever seen (>1"). *shudders*

I think CS was just itching to post a pic but didn't want the ban. ;)
 
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