They seem to spin some kind of silk everywhere they go. They seem to be no longer than about 4 mm. I noticed them crawling up things and then dropping down on a line of silk. I’ve started catching them by putting little sticks up in the air attached everywhere that I find them. They tend to gather at the top of the stick for easy rapture by vacuum.

  • @[email protected]
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    1510 months ago

    It’s a larva of the Laugher moth, they are spinning the silk so they can go from their caterpillar form into their moth form.

  • @pete_the_cat
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    710 months ago

    Probably some sort of caterpillar.

  • @Voyajer
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    610 months ago

    My first thought is that it looks like a house centipede. Not sure about if they can make silk though. They hunt other bugs in your house.

    • @AFaithfulNihilistOP
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      310 months ago

      That was my first thought too but they don’t look like the larvae of how centipede since those usually have some longer hairs at the front and back.

  • @ganksy
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    510 months ago

    I think we always called them “thousand leggers” but I don’t remember any silk or webbing.

    • @AFaithfulNihilistOP
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      10 months ago

      They look kind of like house centipedes but they don’t look like house centipede larvae. They don’t have the long hairs just all their hairs are the same length.

      Also the silk is not something I have heard of the house centipedes doing.

      • @aodhsishaj
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        110 months ago

        Looking closer, maybe it’s a hunting mohican(sic) terrible name but cool bug.

  • @VubDapple
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    -710 months ago

    Burn it with fire!