Want / Don’t Want

The first pieces of flair I added to the garden early last year was a collection of bird and bee houses that I affixed to the left front side of our ramshackle shed. Recently, high winds have been knocking them off and when putting them back up I happened to notice a few stray baby yellow garden spiders (Argiope aurantia) and a big egg case affixed to the back of one of the houses.

Since then I’ve been watching eagerly to see if there was any movement. And look what I discovered today…

…a massive cluster of brand new baby spiderlings! They are all stuck together in a tight ball with just a few that are beginning to break out of the pack. Before long I will be finding them all over the garden so I was glad to catch them while they are still so new.

Some organic gardeners are conflicted about inviting spiders into the garden. Yes, they are fantastic pest deterrents, unfortunately they kill rather indiscriminately, preying upon both insect pests as well as other beneficials. Still, I consider any help good help, and I believe that it all balances out in the end. They are always welcome in my garden and even inside our home. While I do not encourage spiders in the bathroom or bedroom (there are limits), we have welcomed another species in the kitchen since late last summer. His name is Spidey and he does a pretty good job keeping the fruit fly population under control.

When we first moved in, the yard was a bit of a wasteland with few inhabitants. It makes me so pleased to see how busy the garden is this year with so many pollinators, butterflies, birds, and other insects finding their way here to partake in the healthy habitat we are trying to create.

Of course, as I write this I can’t help but see the paradox in that statement as it applies to the unpleasant feelings I harbour towards some of the less helpful wildlife that have also found the garden appealing: namely the squirrel menace whose enthusiastically inflicted damage I spend hours attempting to undo or protect against over the course of the growing season.

Cue a rousing singalong to the Facts of Life theme song.

The end.

Gayla Trail
Gayla is a writer, photographer, and former graphic designer with a background in the Fine Arts, cultural criticism, and ecology. She is the author, photographer, and designer of best-selling books on gardening, cooking, and preserving.

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7 thoughts on “Want / Don’t Want

  1. I wish I love them that much! since I have the vegetable garden Im getting use to their presence, but they still give me tre creeps! where I live we have big tarantulas, they are harmless but scary.

    kiss

    Carola

    • I feel the same about tarantulas. Interesting to see, but I don’t want them on me. We caught one in the house while in St. Lucia a few years back. It was in my friend’s pants when he went to put them on!

  2. I have a kitchen spider as well! I have two dogs, and frequently leave the back door open so they can come in and out as they please. In North Carolina, our bugs have been our and about for a while, so she’s definitely a welcome guest.

  3. I’m glad to know I’m not yes only one who sees the benefit of spiders in the house. I even let them in the bathroom and bedroom as long as they stay out of the bed

  4. How wonderful is that?! Wow. That ball is beautiful! I just adore golden garden spiders, and would be thrilled to find one in my garden. Maybe in another year or two when I get some of my little plants to settle in and start thriving.

  5. I absolutely get the appeal of spiders in the garden but this photo gives me so much heebie jeebies!! I hope I get over it!

  6. You’re right about the trouble makers, my mother in law loves planting vegetables and an evil squirrel ate the tops of half of them! we don’t know how to repel them.
    I have arachnophobia so i avoid all spiders lol

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