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Camel Spiders...Holly Sh!t

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The JaCkAl
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Camel Spiders...Holly Sh!t

Post by The JaCkAl »

Now i'm an aracniphobic (spelling) to a fairly large degree. And I can't sleep in a room with a living spider. But I can quit safly say guys and gals that my phobia would be justified if you were out in the Iraqi desert with the lads...Check this freaky sh!t out....

From someone stationed in Baghdad. He was recently bitten by a camel spider which was hiding in his sleeping bag. I thought you'd like to see what a camel spider looks like. It'll give you a better idea of what our troops are dealing with. Enclosed is a picture of his friend holding up two spiders. Warning: not for the squeamish!

This picture is a perfect example of why you don't want to go to the desert. These are 2 of the biggest I've ever seen. With a vertical leap that would make a pro basketball player weep with envy (they have to be able to jump up on to a camels stomach after all), they latch on and inject you with a local anesthesia so you can't feel it feeding on you. They eat flesh, not just suck out your juices like a normal spider. I'm gona be having night mares after seeing this photo!

Image

Origins: It's hard enough for those serving in our country's armed forces to be sent halfway around the world, away from home and family. It's even worse to be stationed in some bleak desert outpost. But nobody should have to deal with creepy-crawlies the size of small cats in the bargain! We don't yet know the origin of this photo or what it's supposed to depict, other than to note that the picture is generally circulated with text proclaiming it to be an image of some U.S. soldiers with camel spiders.

Camel spiders, also known as wind spiders, wind scorpions, and sun scorpions, are a type of arthropod found (among other places) in the deserts of the Middle East. They're technically not spiders but solifugae (although, like spiders, they belong to the class Arachnida). Camel spiders are the subject of a variety of legendary claims, many of them familiar to Americans because they were spread by U.S. servicemen who served in the Persian Gulf War in 1991, and re-spread at the beginning of the Iraq War in 2003:

Camel spiders can grow to be as large as dinner plates.

Camel spiders can traverse desert sand at speeds up to 25 MPH, making screaming noises as they run.

Camel spiders can jump several feet in the air.

Camel spiders eat the stomachs of camels, hence the name "camel spider." (Legend includes the detail that camel spiders eat camel stomachs from either the outside in or the inside out. In the former case they supposedly jump up from the ground and grab onto camels' bellies from underneath; in the latter case exactly how spiders allegedly as large as dinner plates get into camels' stomachs intact remains unexplained.)

Camel spiders are venomous, and their venom contains a powerful anesthetic that numbs their victims (thus allowing them to gnaw away at living, immobilized animals without being noticed). U.S. soldiers were said to have been attacked by camel spiders at night but remained completely unaware of their plight until they awakened in the morning to find chunks of their flesh missing.

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AC
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Post by AC »

Do you reckon my local pet shop would sell 'em? They'd certainly keep the cats out of the garden. :wink:
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Post by dootybooty »

I remember the buggers from Aden, we used to catch them and try and make the fight scorpions. We had a golly walk into Dahla once with half his face eaten away by one. They could grow very large, you had to use an entrenching tool spade to pick them up.
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Peds
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Post by Peds »

what, you mean these (theres two of them) adorable little critters? :lol:

http://www.gophergas.com/funstuff/camelspider.htm#photo
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Post by GhostBear »

Sorry mate but this turned out to be abit of an "Urban Legend". :cry:
Urban legends about the camel spider (properly termed a solpugid or solifugid) are as old as the proverbial hills, but they made a huge resurgence when vectored by American troops in Kuwait during Desert Storm. They're not quite as big as your hand (unless you're a five-year-old), and very shy and secretive. They do like to hide in the shadows, and they do run very, very quickly for a critter (they can reach about 10 MPH, the fastest known non-flying arthropod). They make no noise whatsoever, they have no venom whatsoever, and they do not eat flesh--they eat small desert arthropods like crickets and pillbugs. The rumors of their attacking camels, or crawling onto sleeping GIs' faces, apparently stem from one of two things, both of which may be true to some extent: (1) they may use hair to line their burrow when they are about to lay a batch of eggs, said hair being clipped from dead camels or other dead mammals (and a sleeping GI is not much different), and/or (2) dead camels are covered with flies, and crawling over a camel corpse may make for a convenient way to get a good meal of flies.

We have camel spiders in the sandy parts of the southwest U.S. and Mexico (in Mexico they are called matevenados), considerably smaller than the Middle Eastern types, but of the same shy, unassuming habits. Completely harmless and beneficial critters, like the desert equivalent of a praying mantis.
http://www.straightdope.com/mailbag/mcamelspider.html

It still looks damn scary though :) .
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Post by El Prez »

Gentlemen, I refer to the title of this topic. Camel spiders, yeh, ok so far; but Holly Shit. Now where in confoundeddandgedtarnationdome (as GW Bushy) would say do I get some of that? 8)
You should talk to somebody who gives a f**k.
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Post by Guest »

Your Presidentialness,
Referring to Holly Shit...I suggest trying
c/o Mr Claus
Lapland
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I'm sure he must have plenty that he could stick in a bucket, courtesy of Rudolf, and drop off with you on the night of 24th December.
Just make sure you are a good boy for the rest of the year, and don't forget to post your letter up the chimney in good time. :P
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Post by owdun »

Woke up one night, whilst residing in a bivvy, on a beach in the Gulf of Suez, pissed as a cricket as usual, with one of these b'stards sitting on me bare chest. Immediate panic stations, much effing and blinding, flailing around with a pin mallet, result, one dead thing (no,not me!). Took the remains to the Quack, as was the rule in those days, him being the fount of knowledge on all things queer, to be told that it was completely harmless, unless you had a weak heart and woke up to find one on your bare chest. :o :P :P


Aye Owdun.
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Post by Spannerman »

:o

You always remembered to shake all your clothes before putting them on, checking your shoes and the like. I recall one guy getting a broom to one of these beasties and it ran straight up the handle at him, he ran around like a headless chicken.

Read about them here and a photo

www.frgnews.com/spider.htm
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Post by Jordiman »

Passed PRMC 17th December 2003

Started Basic 5th July 2004 880 Troop, Jan 2005 886 Troop, June 2005 893 Troop, July 2005 895 Troop

Got MD 3rd November 2005

Our greatest glory is not in never failing, but in rising up every time we fail. ~Ralph Waldo Emerson
Chappy
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Post by Chappy »

Dam those are nasty looking things!! Anyone ever ate one? Wonder what it would taste like :roll:
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Post by Andy O'Pray »

dootybooty wrote:I remember the buggers from Aden, we used to catch them and try and make the fight scorpions. We had a golly walk into Dahla once with half his face eaten away by one. They could grow very large, you had to use an entrenching tool spade to pick them up.
I just wish to confirm what dootybooty has written. Regardless of what you see written, probably by someone who has never been in the Middle East. The buggers do exist, they are that big, they do eat flesh. Next time you watch camels in the desert on TV, look at the scabs on it's underside.

Aye - Andy.
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Post by Wholley »

I'm more concerned about the Brown Recluse and Black Widows
we get here.As we've had such a wet spring the little sh*ts are getting
in the house.Checking clothing,boots and bed is a must.The Tarantulas can swim so they stay outside where the dogs can get them.
The snakes have mostly drowned as they like to winter deep down in the ground.
Had a Black snake get in the house last year.It was trying to bonk the vacuum,heard scream from the boss"PAAAUUULL,THERE'S A f@#k
GREAT SNAKE WRAPPED AROUND MY KIRBY!!!KILL IT KILL IT!!!!
As Black snakes are not venomous I bravely unwound it from the vacuum and put my foot on it's head,then tried to guage it's size by holding it's tail above my head,I'm six one,that snake was at least two feet taller than me.
Well,thats my creepy-crawly story.
Wholley.
:o
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Post by El Prez »

"PAAAUUULL,THERE'S A f@#k
GREAT SNAKE WRAPPED AROUND MY KIRBY!!!
I've heard it called Beaver, Pussy etc but never a Kirby. Ho Hum, always something new around here. :lol:
You should talk to somebody who gives a f**k.
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Post by Wholley »

El Presidente.
A Kirby can suck and blow,has many interesting add-ons and can vacuum the drapes at the same time.It has the power to ingest a small dog.
Unfortunately it's only available in 110volts,so not much use in Truro.
Although I believe invertors are commercially available to convert to the needed current.
Wholley the Fuller Brush Man.
:P 8) :P
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