Upper Hutt Leader

Upper Hutt’s creepy crawlies are rising fast

- JARED NICOLL

‘‘Raining spiders’’ is how a pest control expert has described spraying one house while fighting an influx of creepy crawlies this summer.

Warm, dry days mixed with mild nights typically mean more juvenile rodents and bugs survived to adulthood and an abundance of food meant they lived longer – and grew bigger.

Wash Rite Wellington coowners Tim Beale and his partner Baylee are waist-deep into their first summer season running the pest control and cleaning company.

At a home in the hilly bush of Akatarawa north of Upper Hutt, washing the nasties off a home was ‘‘like raining spiders’’.

‘‘Oh my goodness,’’ Baylee Beale said. ‘‘The creepy crawlies were coming out of the weatherboa­rds as soon as the water hit the home. My heart couldn’t handle it.

‘‘As soon as he went to the next part of the house, it was just like raining spiders. There was like centipede-looking things. It was awful. They live in the most beautiful dream location, but I couldn’t live there because of the bugs.

‘‘They don’t just get flies, they get big fat blow flies that latch onto you.’’

Neither she or their daughter would have a bar of it. Beale usually sticks to balancing the books.

But for 48-year-old former glazier Tim ‘‘there’s no fearfactor for him; it doesn’t faze him’’.

‘‘Things fall on him and he just shakes it off like it’s nothing.

‘‘And now with the earthquake­s as well, people are talking about ants. Since the earthquake­s, they have been saying the ants have been crazy - phenomenal amounts in their pipes and everywhere.’’

She became ‘‘10-times more scared’’ of white tails after seeing the effect of a bite from one on her friend’s thigh.

‘‘It was just eating his flesh’’ and he was hospitalis­ed.

Te Papa’s resident spider expert Phil Sirvid said the warm conditions this time of year encouraged more spiders to come out of the woodwork.

White tails, like other spiders, would also be more abundant but to classify them as a threat would be ‘‘overstatin­g the case’’ as their venom was not particular­ly dangerous to most people - unlike their bite.

‘‘Venom alone will not necessaril­y accomplish that and the damage from forcefully deploying their fangs will help kill what is very dangerous prey.’’

In general, there was only a couple of species known to be genuinely dangerous in NZ: the katipo and the closely-related Australian redback.

‘‘For me as a Wellington­ian, the real summer spider is the native black-headed flax jumping spider.

‘‘They’re not considered dangerous to people, although they may sometimes cause a start when they jump on someone unexpected­ly.’’

 ?? WASH RITE WELLINGTON ?? A white tail.
WASH RITE WELLINGTON A white tail.

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