Now thats a web...
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- Stonegiant
- Uber-Grognard
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Now thats a web...
Look what they found outside Dallas LINK if it was closer to Houston I would probably blame either Myth or North for LARPING 
I want to hear what you did in the dungeon, not the voting booth. Politics and rules minutia both bore me in my opinion.
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The Stonegiant's Cave- Old school hand drawn maps and illustrations. I am taking commissions. Check me out on-
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This summer I went to pick up one of my sons from camp, and got to see something similar ... a huge arching system of webs with spiders about three inches across all over them. We walked under this thing for about twenty feet before my other son freaked out and I had to take him back to the car. It was pretty spooky - definitely an Aragog's Lair sort of thing, if you read Harry Potter.
The webs we went through weren't so tightly packed as the ones in Dallas - they weren't like blankets, they formed an archlike shape that was still recognizable as spider webs. Actually, even though the one we saw wasn't maybe as unusual as the one in Dallas, it was actually cooler and more frightening precisely because it was still web-like.
The webs we went through weren't so tightly packed as the ones in Dallas - they weren't like blankets, they formed an archlike shape that was still recognizable as spider webs. Actually, even though the one we saw wasn't maybe as unusual as the one in Dallas, it was actually cooler and more frightening precisely because it was still web-like.
- Gentlegamer
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Me too.TheRedPriest wrote:This area is only available to Wal-Mart Connect Members. Please sign in.
I've seen pics of this in other places... it's pretty creepy.
Walk amongst the natives by day, but in your heart be Superman.
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It has nothing to do with me until it has something to do with me.
- Stonegiant
- Uber-Grognard
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Sorry about the bad link
Here are the pictures-




This is what the article had to say-
Everything really is bigger in Texas. Even the spider webs. An eye-popping monster spider web has been spun by enterprising arachnids along a 200-yard stretch of trail in Lake Tawakoni State Park, which is located about 45 miles east of Dallas. The sprawling web blankets several trees, shrubs and the ground.
The Associated Press reports that entomologists from the United States and Canada are debating the origin and rarity of the web that has become a massive mosquito trap. "At first, it was so white it looked like fairyland," Donna Garde, superintendent of the park, told AP. "Now it's filled with so many mosquitoes that it's turned a little brown. There are times you can literally hear the screech of millions of mosquitoes caught in those webs."
Experts think the gigantic web was either made by social cobweb spiders that work together or is the result of a mass dispersal in which the spiders spin webs to spread out from one another. No matter it's cause, most entomologists think it is very rare. "From what I'm hearing it could be a once-in-a-lifetime event," Herbert A. "Joe" Pase, a Texas Forest Service entomologist, told AP. The web is expected to stay intact until fall when the spiders start to die.
Here are the pictures-




This is what the article had to say-
Everything really is bigger in Texas. Even the spider webs. An eye-popping monster spider web has been spun by enterprising arachnids along a 200-yard stretch of trail in Lake Tawakoni State Park, which is located about 45 miles east of Dallas. The sprawling web blankets several trees, shrubs and the ground.
The Associated Press reports that entomologists from the United States and Canada are debating the origin and rarity of the web that has become a massive mosquito trap. "At first, it was so white it looked like fairyland," Donna Garde, superintendent of the park, told AP. "Now it's filled with so many mosquitoes that it's turned a little brown. There are times you can literally hear the screech of millions of mosquitoes caught in those webs."
Experts think the gigantic web was either made by social cobweb spiders that work together or is the result of a mass dispersal in which the spiders spin webs to spread out from one another. No matter it's cause, most entomologists think it is very rare. "From what I'm hearing it could be a once-in-a-lifetime event," Herbert A. "Joe" Pase, a Texas Forest Service entomologist, told AP. The web is expected to stay intact until fall when the spiders start to die.
I want to hear what you did in the dungeon, not the voting booth. Politics and rules minutia both bore me in my opinion.
The Stonegiant's Cave- Old school hand drawn maps and illustrations. I am taking commissions. Check me out on-
Blogger: https://thestonegiantscave.blogspot.com/
Deviant Art: https://www.deviantart.com/stonegiant81
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Thestonegiantscave
Also you can email me at: stonegiant81@gmail.com
The Stonegiant's Cave- Old school hand drawn maps and illustrations. I am taking commissions. Check me out on-
Blogger: https://thestonegiantscave.blogspot.com/
Deviant Art: https://www.deviantart.com/stonegiant81
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Thestonegiantscave
Also you can email me at: stonegiant81@gmail.com
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Mordenkainen
- Member
- Posts: 92
- Joined: Sun Apr 22, 2007 12:16 am
The 2nd pic kinda reminds me of 'bag-worms', a species of caterpillar that feeds on the leaves of fruit/nug-bearing trees/shrubs. Very ugly. They haven't been that bad this year, but some years....WOW!
Big, humongous spider
went up the water spout
down came the rain and...
well, it didn't wash him out; it just made him mad!
Big, humongous spider
went up the water spout
down came the rain and...
well, it didn't wash him out; it just made him mad!
Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!