So when we went to rent this house in San Felipe del Agua (SFDA) we asked about scorpions and other such dangers. The owners assured us they "rarely" saw scorpions and the deadly snakes stayed at the very bottom of the property. Deadly snakes? Excuse me? WTF!?!?
So when we arrived here in on August 16th we renewed our shoe smacking and clothes shaking practices. But days passed without any scorpion OR snake sightings.
What we DID see were other items to fear instead:
1) Mothra:
The moth on the left is a "normal" sized moth...like a typical Miller moth common to Colorado. The moth on the right startled us when it flew into a window screen of B's room one night. Sounded like a small airplane was running into our house.
Those first two photos are of a small "Wally" spider....at least that is what I call them as they seem to prefer walls, hanging there fang-down waiting for their next meal. They are VERY fast when they decide to move. They are very flat with black and white/grey stripes running across all parts of their body. Additionally they seem to be territorial, as each night we'd see the same Wallies pretty much hanging out in the same wall spots. They are gone when we wake up, but return every night. Or at least they did until we discovered our next spider type....
I came out of the bathroom late one night and found one of these guys crawling across the bedroom floor headed straight for Mer's shoes. These two following pictures came from the next one we discovered a few days latter during the day. It is smaller than the first one we found which was probably 150% the size of this guy.
Now I thought these were Wolf spiders, but now I'm not sure. They don't match this photo of a (Mexican) Wolf spider nor any of the others on the list: http://www.mexicovacationtravels.com/family-travel/commom-eight-legged-natives-of-mexico.html
The legs of the Wolf spider look much thicker than these guys. Anyway, the next night or so Meredith called me in to B's room where she had gone to check on him as he slept. There a few feet above his bed on the wall it's up against hung one of these big-assed spiders. Maybe 3.5 inches, oops, 9cm across. Mommy decreed it was to be an extermination not a relocation. SPLAT! Quite a mess it left on the wall.
So the next day we ask the housekeeper (in our VERY limited Spanish and her somewhat limited English) what level of the danger this spider poses. I'm afraid she misunderstood our concerns as the next few days saw the disappearance of all the Wallies plus many sites of chemical massacre (e.g. large areas scattered with hundreds of dead ants, more moth bodies than usual found in the morning in the areas under the porch lights).
3) Finally after almost a week here I went out one morning to carry the trash to the trash collection area (worthy of a post in its own right, I assure you). When I picked up the trashbag I found this underneath. I.e. a very sluggish and small scorpion. Once again that is a clothespin for scale. I was surprised how small, slow, and hard to kill this little guy was. The photo is out of focus...perhaps I was shaking. :-)