Recently I noticed several garden spiders lurking in the tomato plants, their intricate webs spanning several branches and in some cases several plants. The largest of them, pictured above, was rather imposing at 2 inches in length and had a curious zig-zag pattern woven into its web. At first I didn't like them being there. I'm not freaked out by spiders, but I generally don't like them to be lurking in the dark, shaded places where ripe tomatoes sometimes hide - and where I must reach to harvest them. They were detracting from our overall enjoyment of the garden. It occurred to me that the spiders were colonizing the tomatoes in response to the plentiful supply of tasty grasshopper food, but I still wasn't sold on having them there. I contemplated several methods of killing them, such as smashing them between two 2 x 4's or attacking them with a fly swatter.
| Spiderpig does whatever a spiderpig does. |
Inspiration struck: let's catch a grasshopper and put it on the web and see what happens. The results were incredibly awesome. Words can't do it justice, check it out in the video below.
I've come full circle. These guys are my friends - my spider buddies. The protectors of tomatoes, the guardians of gourds, the champions of chard. Whenever I'm in the garden I have to check on them to make sure they're doing alright. Perhaps I will bring them more treats - but not too soon - they need to stay hungry. This fall the big spider momma will build an egg sac, and with a bit of luck spider babies will emerge next spring to build their webs and wreak havoc on unsuspecting grasshoppers. This is ecological pest control at its finest.
Who needs pesticides? Not this guy. Not with friends like these.