In my office there is the most glorious house centipede.
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@futurebird well, I live in the basement level apartment of a row house built in 1880 in Amsterdam, NL. My apartment sits about half underground, such that my only window in the living room, is at my eye level, which is the street level outside. You have to go down a few steps to get in, so we always deal with moisture issues. Amsterdam has swamp like conditions during the non-winter months, and it's only gotten worse as climate change has worsened. The silverfish and ants have been here from day 1 since I moved in 5 years ago. I've alerted the landlord from day one and they have sent exterminators, which have put poison everywhere and it typically results in the visible ones no longer being visible for a few months before both come back stronger than ever.
We mostly see them around the bathroom, and the vent broke about a year ago and the landlord still hasn't fixed it, so maybe that's been worsening the problem? Last year was the first year we finally broke down and bought a heat pump that can also do dehumidification, but that only works in the living room, and doesn't reach the back of the apartment where the ant problem is the worst. Next to the bathroom is also where the little laundry nook is where we have one of the combined washer dryer units where it's a single machine that has two settings for wash/dry. Maybe the whole area is just too damp? The ants and silverfish are both only really a problem during the warm months, so for the past 4 or 5 months, I have only seen a couple of very baby silverfish, and otherwise not found any ants, but just yesterday, our bathroom sink had 6 ants and I tracked them down to a little hole outside of the bathroom door.
A basement will always have a few such creatures, that they are ants in silverfish rather than roaches means that as a tenet you're doing what you can in keeping things clean and not basically feeding them with food waste. It sounds like the building needs some deep work. If the landlord wants to avoid very expensive future repairs they need to invest now or pay more in the future. This isn't really your problem to solve.
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I need to let the other people in the office know about this centipede, who lives on a diet of spiders, who live, in turn, on smaller arthropods— it speaks of a complex ecosystem the size and elegance of this creature: deadly, delicate, a muderous chandelier with racing stripes. (for those of you in tropical climates please rest easy, this is not one of those snake like creatures it can’t hurt a human)
At the bottom of the ecosystem are messy middle school students.
@futurebird My middle school students *Flipped out* whenever a house centipede made an appearance. Oh, the screaming! And they just won't believe you if you tell them that the poor things are harmless.
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@futurebird well, I live in the basement level apartment of a row house built in 1880 in Amsterdam, NL. My apartment sits about half underground, such that my only window in the living room, is at my eye level, which is the street level outside. You have to go down a few steps to get in, so we always deal with moisture issues. Amsterdam has swamp like conditions during the non-winter months, and it's only gotten worse as climate change has worsened. The silverfish and ants have been here from day 1 since I moved in 5 years ago. I've alerted the landlord from day one and they have sent exterminators, which have put poison everywhere and it typically results in the visible ones no longer being visible for a few months before both come back stronger than ever.
We mostly see them around the bathroom, and the vent broke about a year ago and the landlord still hasn't fixed it, so maybe that's been worsening the problem? Last year was the first year we finally broke down and bought a heat pump that can also do dehumidification, but that only works in the living room, and doesn't reach the back of the apartment where the ant problem is the worst. Next to the bathroom is also where the little laundry nook is where we have one of the combined washer dryer units where it's a single machine that has two settings for wash/dry. Maybe the whole area is just too damp? The ants and silverfish are both only really a problem during the warm months, so for the past 4 or 5 months, I have only seen a couple of very baby silverfish, and otherwise not found any ants, but just yesterday, our bathroom sink had 6 ants and I tracked them down to a little hole outside of the bathroom door.
They are both hibernating in the winter, so you would see fewer then. That this is a basement makes this a little less alarming... it really depends on if it feels like they are coming in from the surrounding soil OR if it seems like they have set up shop in the walls, which is what the seeing bits of sawdust like bits sounds like. If you can show me the sawdust I can tell if it's from ants or termites. If it's termites your landlord might get alarmed enough to really do something.
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@futurebird My middle school students *Flipped out* whenever a house centipede made an appearance. Oh, the screaming! And they just won't believe you if you tell them that the poor things are harmless.
I have worked so long and hard to get our students to be less excitable in that way. It's a multi-year project but it is possible. I start with pointing out that screaming won't do anything to help us calmly move the creature back where it belongs.
Having them look at macro photos of common creatures where you can see their *eyes* and when they are doing something calm, like eating or cleaning themselves helps a LOT.
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I have worked so long and hard to get our students to be less excitable in that way. It's a multi-year project but it is possible. I start with pointing out that screaming won't do anything to help us calmly move the creature back where it belongs.
Having them look at macro photos of common creatures where you can see their *eyes* and when they are doing something calm, like eating or cleaning themselves helps a LOT.
@futurebird @valen1 My kid LOVES bugs right now and I hope they keep that attitude as they get bigger and older.
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The more legs they have the older they are.
@futurebird The only time we see our centipedes is when there is torrential rain and they come upstairs from the soggy basement. They're so fast!!
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@futurebird The only time we see our centipedes is when there is torrential rain and they come upstairs from the soggy basement. They're so fast!!
Do you put up a little tent for them and hand out MREs like when there's a hurricane?
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Do you put up a little tent for them and hand out MREs like when there's a hurricane?
@futurebird No, but I do keep the kitties away!
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Did you know that house centipedes can live to be 7 years old? It takes them 3 years to reach adulthood, depending on how much food they can find. So, when you see an adult they have lived a long life and seen many mostly basement-themed things.
@futurebird "I've seen crazy things down here in the dark. It's black to you, but to me it is a writhing, crawling, dripping phantasmagora. I've seen photoluminescence where no fire fly should be, vampire beetles dying of thirst, giant beasts marching to and fro in flashes of lightning... all lost now, like ant trails into the washing machine."
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@futurebird No, but I do keep the kitties away!
I suppose, to a kitty, a cellar centipede is kind of like a very exciting MRE.