Have you ever seen a Green Lynx spider? I hadn’t until this morning when I saw this Godzilla-sized bright green monster watching me through the patio doors.

I took a photo and then calmly moved him to a safer (for him) location. Peucetia viridans, the Green Lynx spider, is bright green and usually found on green plants. That makes sense since he was right next to a young orange tree I have on the deck. It’s the largest North American species in the family Oxyopidae. The body was about and inch in length and the legs were more than THREE inches long. It was HUGE.
Green Lynx spiders are non-poisonous and rarely bite humans but the bite can be painful. Females, when threatened, are known to spit venom from their fangs (up to 8 inches). If venom enters the eye, it may cause irritation.
My DIL is deathly afraid of spiders, more so than anyone I’ve ever known. On a recent visit, my son and I were enjoying a quiet cuppa and some morning chat about the kids when we heard her screaming, I mean like blood-curdling screams, the kind that, if they heard, neighbors would call 911.
My Angel Boy ran up to see what was going on and I followed. Apparently, she had been on a Zoom call in AB 2.0’s bedroom when she noticed a VERY VERY large spider on his bedspread.
After we ushered her to another room so she could calm down and resume her call, we then searched high and low for the offending arachnid and couldn’t find a thing. I thought her screams might have scared him off, but my son said he actually had seen it before scurrying away and it was literally four inches in size.
We needed to keep looking because if there WAS still a spider in the little guy’s room, we needed to find and relocate it before bedtime.
I stripped the sheets off the bed, shook them out, and found nothing. We removed the top mattress and then the box springs and OMG, there it was, trying to make itself as small as possible in the corner of the bed frame. I didn’t have my phone to take a photo but you can trust me that it was one of the biggest spiders I’ve ever seen.
We ushered it into a box, clamped on the lid, and my son took it outside as far away from the house as he could, while I remade the bed and checked to make sure DIL hadn’t had a heart attack from fright.
I wonder what she would have thought of my Green Lynx with those scary, hairy legs watching her through the window?
I am definitely the same as your DIL. Because I’m sure your American Spiders are even bigger than our hugest English ones, I would have a similar reaction. I am a complete wimp when it comes to spiders!
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I failed to mention that my DIL is from the UK! I think I remember a story where a long time ago her mom actually called the police when she was home alone and saw a spider, so it’s generational fear. Not my son though, even though he was once bitten by a brown recluse and got VERY sick.
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Just looked up the Brown Recluse and looks very scary. Even more so if they bite. Kudos to him for not being afraid of them.
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He was 10 yrs old and got a blood infection!! Had a great pediatrician who was able to get the right antibiotics asap. Thank goodness he’s not as freaked out as DILl because there’d be real trouble! You really should have seen us pushing that spider in the box, def a good mom/son team effort.
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Ouch, not good to get a blood infection. Well done on dispatching that spider elsewhere!
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It WAS pretty scary to see that red line going up his arm, an indication of blood poisoning. Now we all know to look for that just in case.
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That’s good to know. X
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