“Harlot’s Web” written with @benevolentspung (uncensored version on site: http://pbfcomics.com/comics/harlots-web/)
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

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YOU ARE THE REASON
AnasAbdin
Peter Solarz

Product Placement
trying on a metaphor
Show & Tell
hello vonnie

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if i look back, i am lost

JBB: An Artblog!
Misplaced Lens Cap
Sade Olutola
art blog(derogatory)

#extradirty

shark vs the universe
One Nice Bug Per Day
tumblr dot com
Cosimo Galluzzi

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@tarantula-keep
“Harlot’s Web” written with @benevolentspung (uncensored version on site: http://pbfcomics.com/comics/harlots-web/)
Dice spiders! (plus the rest of my spider collection)
I buy one of these every year at the Renaissance Festival, which was cancelled this year due to COVID. :(
The purple d20 is my favorite (I should have flipped her over because the underside of the dice is marbled with white but I DIDN’T THINK OF IT AT THE TIME sorry) but d12s are under appreciated and I love that they had a spider d12!
There are two red skull ones because my husband and I exchanged them at our wedding instead of rings. :)
my Mexican Red Knee sling, Marnie 🕷
So much eternal love for my little angel
To see more of whinnie (the gal in the teacup) check out my insta-the crying elf
Guess who just molted!? Baby Benatar!
Arachne
Ovide Moralisé, Paris ca. 1330
Paris, Bibliothèque de l'Arsenal, Ms 5069, fol. 78r
Sparklemuffin Peacock spider by Jurgen Otto
thinking about the guy on reddit that posted a pic of a giant water bug he put on his arm after flipping it over because it was on its back
the sequel: tarantula hawk in an open cup
girls night
so I read the article and the story is both less and more insane than it sounds.
basically, there's been an ants' nest near a vent shaft of this abandoned Soviet bunker for decades. the nest spilled over into the bunker itself at some point once it was abandoned and there was no way for the ants to make their way back up to the nest, no queen but a constant supply of new colony members raining down from above, and no source of food in the bunker other than the corpses of their fellow ants.
fast forward to some scientists looking for bats that stumble on what's basically a post-apocalyptic ant society. they go "holy fuck" start studying, and observe that, all things considered, the ants still pretty much act like regular ants doing regular ant things.
fast forward some more, and the scientists feel like they have enough data from observing the colony as-is, so they decide to try an experiment. they put a little walkway between the bunker colony and the og colony in the vent shaft so the bunker colony members have the option of leaving and rejoining the og colony.
spoiler alert: every single ant in the bunker immediately nopes the fuck back to the colony in the vent shaft. within days the bunker is completely empty. the scientists leave the walkway in place so when more ants inevitably fall back down the vent shaft they can just climb back up instead of starting up the cycle anew.
tl;dr it's not "oh noes evil ants are on a rampage", it's "ants forced into a horrible situation to survive get to go home"
She's emerged!! Only to promptly dunk herself in her water dish! #tarantula #aphonopelmachalcodes
https://www.instagram.com/p/B7GmJUMn00W/?igshid=gnwpfny5nk8m
New Family Members!
After a very long time of not having Tarantulas, we have finally been able to get some more! I'm so excited you have no idea. Say hi to my new babies!
A. Versicolor
B. Emilia
B. Boehmi
P. Cancerides
Lampropelma sp. "Borneo Black"
L. Violaceopes
The Violaceopes is not pictured as it is currently burrowed, but I will get photos as soon as I can.
Now all we need is names 🤔
Don’t know if I sent this one yet, but here’s this lovely tarantula I found that was sitting on a nice rock during a sunny day a couple of years ago. Almost looked like some roots pushing out of a crack in the rock. Found in Oklahoma.
A very large, fuzzy friend! You did not send it yet. This is a Texas brown tarantula, Aphonopelma hentzi. They’re also called Oklahoma brown or Missouri tarantulas. Did you know? Females can live as long as 40 years. There are tarantulas out there living their lives, older than I am. Holy cow. Thanks for submitting! As always, submissions don’t count towards the one (1) nice bug per day.
LOL!
Meet Charlotte! A couple years ago I was in a pet store with no intention of making a purchase and they had a tarantula that had lost a leg at some point- the regrown one was small, so she was marked down. Me being me I just had to have a look at her and the moment I opened the container she popped out, up my arm and on my head. We’ve been friends ever since. I don’t pick her up unless I have to but whenever I open her house for her to come out and walk around she inevitably ends up on me somewhere, (She still favors my head for some reason.) Because of this her nickname is “Hat.”
This is the best thing I’ve read all week please tell Charlotte I love her. What a great story. And glad to see she seems to have regenerated her leg just fine! I hope Hat lives a good long tarantula life. Thanks so much for sharing! As always, submissions don’t count towards the one (1) nice bug per day.
Arright so i saw something really cool in Texas, the kind of thing you read about but don’t expect to actually encounter
I flipped over a rock and found a tarantula sharing its burrow with a tiny narrowmouth toad
This is a symbiotic relationship where the tarantula provides protection and affordable housing, while the toad feeds on ants that could harm the tarantula or its eggs. Other small frogs, lizards etc. are just prey to tarantulas, but they instinctively recognize and welcome narrowmouth toads for their ant-eradication abilities.
Basically, tarantulas keep tiny toads in their home for the same reason humans domesticated cats. This sort of went viral as a piece of trivia a while back, but there’s not a lot of actual photos showing it.
This isn’t the only case of this I saw either. I saw two other burrows with toads in them, including a massive tarantula that had at least 4-5 toads, but they hopped deeper into the burrow before I could take pics.
Anyway here’s some better quality photos I took of both animals during the day. The toad is Gastrophryne olivacea and the tarantula is an Aphonopelma species (probably hentzi but their taxonomy is a clusterfuck)