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Only about 3cm long but moved like a tarantula. Maybe a young one.

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I recall a story about a guy in Sydney, Australia that didn't check his shoes and when he put his foot in one he said he felt a sharp pain and he yanked his foot out. Then he observed a funnel web spider crawling out. He was an elderly guy and lucky to've survived the bite, thanks in great part to the antivenom.Growing up in Spain, these were common place, there a few species you wouldn't want to get too close to, but the Tarantulas always seemed plenty placid, a friend of mine kept one as a pet.
One thing you did in the morning was to check your shoes, as you never knew if anything had crawled into them.....
I read in the book Amazing ArachnidsNice! Of course I'm a little biased as I keep tarantulas as pets. I can't tell what species that is but there aren't any tarantulas in the new world (Americas) with medically significant venom. There are some with 3/4" long fangs and horrible urticating setae though......
There's something like five or seven (I forget exactly how many) different types of setae depending on tarantula species; each type of setae targets a different predator such as rodents, mammals or birds.I read in the book Amazing Arachnids
That new world tarantulas have urticating setae as a defence against grasshopper mice
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Grasshopper mouse - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org