Showing posts with label Scorpion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scorpion. Show all posts

There's a scorpion in my suitcase! Family return from holiday in Spain to find four-inch Deathstalker in their luggage

By EMMA REYNOLDS

Venomous: The poisonous Deathstalker scorpion found in a suitcase after a family holiday to a Spanish village

A family were shocked when they returned home from a holiday to Spain and found a deadly scorpion hiding in their suitcase.
Hollie Jayes, 18, found the Deathstalker scorpion - the second most poisonous species in the world - crawling inside her mother’s luggage at their home in Skegness, Lincolnshire.
Theresa Jayes, 43, had emptied the suitcase of her clothes and left it in her bedroom without noticing the 10cm-long (four-inch) creepy crawly inside.
It was only when her travel agent daughter went to borrow her mother's suitcase for a trip to see a friend on Saturday that the creature was discovered.

Roommate from hell: Holly Jayes and her mother Theresa were horrified when they found the 10cm creature, which had been hiding in their luggage for a month

'I thought it was a spider so I screamed and slammed the case shut.
'After I calmed down, me and my friend picked up a coat hanger and opened the case and we realised it was a scorpion.
'We both screamed and slammed the case shut and threw it into the bathroom, there was a lot of shouting and shaking.
'I called my dad and shoute

'He didn’t believe me at all but I insisted.

'When him and my mum came home, we straightened out the coat hanger and nudged open the case and they saw it and jumped as well.
'My dad threw the case into the garden and for some reason my mum decided the best thing to do was call London Zoo.
'They said they couldn’t do anything, so eventually we called the RSPCA and they came and picked it up. They told us eventually it was called a Deathstalker.
'I was terrified when I opened the case, I’ve never seen a scorpion before.
'The RSPCA gave us the case back and told us to make sure it hadn’t laid any eggs in it.'
Mrs Jayes, who sells window blinds, added: 'My husband was at the fish counter in Morrisons buying some mussels and he got a phone call from two girls screaming about a scorpion.
'He said to me "we can’t go home, there’s a scorpion in the house" and laughed because we thought it must be an earwig or something.
'When we got home we found my son David stood on the landing with an empty wine bottle ready to bop it on the head if needs be.
'When we saw it we were quite naive because we thought it must be some common thing, not dangerous, but it turns out it’s the second most deadly in the world and there’s no anti-venom in this country.
'It’s quite scary to think back - I put my hand in that case 20 or 30 times while unpacking, I must have been so close to it.'

source: dailymail

Midnight feast: Incredibly patient photographer uses own hunter's instinct to capture bat swooping down on a scorpion

By DAILY MAIL REPORTER

Hunting sting: This fantastic photo captures the very moment the hungry bat swoops in to capture this scorpion


As it majestically swoops down to capture its scorpion prey this incredible picture shows the sheer power and stealth of this bloodthirsty bat.

Celebrated U.S. photographer Tom Whetten, 64, spends hours each night working in his 'studio in the wild' patiently waiting for the perfect moment to capture these creatures of darkness.

Using skills he has picked up while hunting other animals he painstakingly plans each of his shots to get the perfect wildlife picture.

Mr Whetten has developed his own stealthy system using four flashes and a laser beam, which triggers a camera and flash guns when broken by one of the bats.

Set up at his home, he has produced some amazing results, showing bats swooping at its prey, or simply taking a dip or drink in a pond surrounded by his equipment.

He said: 'I'm a hunter so I use the same skills I learned from that - it's exactly the same thing.


Scientific: Celebrated wildlife photographer Tom Whetten uses several flashes and a laser beam to capture the beautiful bat shots


'The skills, the understanding what wildlife does - I take time to learn about what they are doing and what they might do next before I start trying to take my pictures.

'I was hunting for 25 years. I just started walking around as a young kid studying their movement which then went to the next level when I was hunting.

'All I have done is transfer the knowledge of wildlife it taught me into my photography.

'When I got my first camera as a middle-aged guy I decided to give up hunting and became a full time photographer - it was a pretty seamless transition.'

Tom Whetten is from the U.S. city of Tucson, Arizona, and uses his lengthy research and experience to help plan his set-up in the wild.


Graceful: The bat, photographed in the heart of the Arizona desert, is captured using the hunting instincts of the photographer


He added: 'For these shots it can take several nights of work to get the ones I want.

'I will get 10 shots a night maybe, but because I pre-focus the camera if the bats don't fly through the trigger at the right angle the shot is out of focus.

'I have just a thin white line beam so if one flies through it a little too high then it isn't sharp.

'I might get a good picture but not a great picture, and a great picture is what I strive for.


Thirsty work: The bat washes down his scorpion dinner with a drink of water from this pond


'Part of my work is to create a mini studio out in the wild with four flashes and a photo trap triggering device to get it at the right moment.

'These kinds of pictures cannot be staged or corrected afterwards so it's a long, hard process, but when you get home and you realise you nailed the shot it's amazing.'

He now takes groups of amateur photographers on tours everywhere from his local haunts all the way to Africa.

He said: 'If I can pass on some of the unique skills I learned over the years to help them take brilliant pictures it's just as good a feeling as getting a great picture myself.'


source: dailymail