Spider Bite, Northeast

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Adios, no matter what you touch the artistic flair is present - nice bottle opener. Did you finish the class or is it still ongoing? Not sure how thrilled I'd be with cauterizing a bite. This year it would look like I was badly abused by a sadistic person....
 
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Adios, no matter what you touch the artistic flair is present - nice bottle opener. Did you finish the class or is it still ongoing? Not sure how thrilled I'd be with cauterizing a bite. This year it would look like I was badly abused by a sadistic person....
Thanks so much! My last class of this session is Sunday- I start the next course in August after my big show. I'm busy as heck- firing the kiln tomorrow and Friday, blacksmith classes, and our big 9 day summer show in a couple weeks. A magazine article about my work came out today, so hopefully it translates into biddnizz
 
Love it!
 
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As for the spider, Moore said: "I'm pretty sure the spider did not survive this fire."
I really wouldn't be too sure about that.

Oh, and I heard that line, "we really don't know what it is until we go in and look at it" from the surgeon. Is that a line all surgeons use? I've heard that line several times my past.

Just remember - a surgeons job is to cut.
 
Ever see these? They're called Tarantula Hawks. They lay their eggs on or in the Tarantula or other spider and their larva eats the spider.
We have a lot of them this year, they're about 1 1/2" long, they love the mint flowers, in the larva stage they love spiders.
On youtube there are videos of them taking on very large spiders.

Richard
 

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