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Where Do Cobwebs Come From?

Hello Frugal friends,

I have a question for you all. Where do cob webs come from and HOW can I keep them from coming back all the time? I can clean them up today and by tomorrow they are back. I hate that, so any information you can share with me would be greatly appreciated.

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Thanks a bunch,
Teresa from VA

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August 19, 20060 found this helpful

Cobwebs are built by spiders. You have to get rid of them before the cobwebs will stop appearing.

 
June 21, 20170 found this helpful

I just read on the net cobb webs form from dust not spiders.

 
August 19, 20060 found this helpful

I was always told that they were caused by dust in the air settling on the walls and curtains, etc. Cob webs and spider webs are usually two different things.

 
Anonymous
November 2, 20150 found this helpful

They ARE from spiders. I already knew this but saw it in action. I went after a spider on my bedroom wall, it was running from me before dropping to the floor.

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Then I saw strings of silk on the wall that I'd never have noticed without the spider. When dust blows around it sticks to the silk.

 
By Ellie (Guest Post)
August 19, 20060 found this helpful

Cobwebs and spider webs are different things. Spiderwebs are spun from their silk, and you will usuallysee the spider at home in the web.
Cobwebs are a mixture of dust and whatever glues the dust together-sorry- I can't be more specific on that part. As dust is ever with us, really I think the only thing that can be done apart from sealing your house hermatically, no open windows or doors ever..
you just have to keep on knocking them down!

 
October 24, 20190 found this helpful

That makes more sense. I used to have tons of spider/cobwebs above my heater. I know there were not that many spiders.

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It may start out innocently as a spider web but dust & whatever adds on to it to make it so much bigger.

 
May 31, 20230 found this helpful

Thanks for your information. Looking into it now

 
Anonymous
August 19, 20060 found this helpful

I thought this was a very interesting question so did some research about it.

It appears that cobwebs are a form of spider web. A cobweb is basically a disorganized spider web. Some spiders like house spiders and black widows actually spin cobwebs. Other cobwebs are formed from stray spider lines left behind by spiders which descend from the ceiling or by jumping spiders. They may also be formed when spider eggs are sent adrift using webbing as a kind of parasail. And, cobwebs might also be formed when you clean webs out of other places in your house and some of the web material gets set adrift, collecting naturally in the corners.

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To answer the original question you can get rid of cobwebs by cleaning regularly. You only see cobwebs because they are covered with dust. If you've walked through spider webs in your garage or in the forest before you know that they are usually nearly invisible. Dust the upper corners of your rooms periodically whether they appear to have cobwebs or not. This will help get rid of any nearly invisible webs that are forming up there, before they get covered with dust.

Here are a couple articles with more information.

Mad Sci Network - <www.madsci.org/.../859695397.Zo.r.html>;

The Straight Dope <www.straightdope.com/.../mcobweb.html>;

 
April 9, 20170 found this helpful

You just have to vaccume regularly and have a good hvac system filter. Keep your fan or a.c. on while you clean so all the loose dust gets sucked in the filter.

 
August 20, 20060 found this helpful

Teresa
I go with Tedsmom on this, cobwebs are spiderwebs that have collected dust and other debrie. The spider may have abandoned it and made a new web elswhere if it can or when you remove it the spider will come back from its hiding place and spin a new one. The answer then is to get rid of the spiders, but you may then be plagued with flies and other insects that the spiders feed on.

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Hard choice! But I would remove the cobwebs on a regular basis and put up with the spiders that spin their webs 'out of site'. After all they do us a service.

 
By Dean (Guest Post)
August 20, 20060 found this helpful

Spider webs and cobb webs are two different things and are unrelated.Cobb webs form from dust only have nothing to do with spiders.Dusting and vacuuming will prevent them from forming.

 
June 20, 20170 found this helpful

I have always heard that cobwebs aren't spider webs, but I am deathly afraid of black widows. Do you think they are in my house? And do the female or male black widows spin their web?

 
By myrna gibbens. (Guest Post)
April 8, 20070 found this helpful

I have a new home and two large dogs. My house has dust and cob webs
but never spiders.
I have spiders outside and can watch them spin a web over my coffee cup.

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Being new my house is sealed well and if I had as many spiders as cob webs I would have to move out.

 
By Dari (Guest Post)
August 12, 20070 found this helpful

To Teresa from virginia. I have the same problem! It may appear to others that youve been lax in your housekeeping. I dont have the time to knock the cobwebs down every day but it seems to me that when the humidity level is higher, the cobwebs appear more frequently. Just an observation. would appreciate anyone else's opinion on this. How to prevent them? Besides dusting every day. I dont have time for that! Anyone? Thank!

 
By Charlene (Guest Post)
September 22, 20070 found this helpful

My mother-in law said that she sprays house bug spray in the corners of the selling and around the walls. I too thought they were from dust.

 
By Simon (Guest Post)
October 9, 20070 found this helpful

I beleive the scientific explanation for them is that rising dust particles are ''Charged'' by static electricity and they then are attracted to settled lumps of dust or ''cob webs'' in the corners and crevices of the room you may find that large electrical appliances like tvs create them with ease due to the heightened static field around it... but thats just one idea!

 
November 12, 20071 found this helpful

In my home in Seattle Cobwebs probably come from the cellar spider. It is a spider with very long thin legs that is harmless but hard to see. It hides in dark places and wanders along the ceiling at night leaving its web behind as a trail. It likes to hide in the corner of the ceiling and wait for insects to come along for food. Check out an online dictionary for pictures and information on that spider. Hope this helps!

 
July 28, 20162 found this helpful

Yes! We call them "Harvestmen", here in Massachusetts. I'm on a dairy farm, in an old house with a fieldstone cellar, on a dirt road. Where there are flies, there are spiders.

Not just the houseflies, cow flies and horseflies. Tiny midges come in through the screens on humid nights to eat you, and the Baby Harvestmen are there waiting. They are very tiny and invisible when young, but you can always find evidence of the Big Long Leg Momma.

By looking on the floor in corners to find her little "spider poop spots", like fly spots, you find her lair. You may find fly mummies. Look up, and there she is. Vacuum her kindly with your thanks, and then give that whole ceiling perimeter a good going over with the vacuum to eliminate her progeny...

Where there are spiders AND dust - whatever kind of particulates there are in your air, that's when you notice the presence of tiny spiders eating flies of appropriate sizes for supper. Spider webs of all kinds are sticky, that's how they catch flies. They'll catch every tiny particle of dust until you get rid of them, or they fall of their own weight.

A burning candle or lantern that needs its wick trimmed often has the same effect in winter, showing you those "Christmas spiders" that wake up in December and go wandering around looking for Santa.

They are a nuisance, but DEFINITELY not worth spraying a bunch of carcinogens all over yourself, your spouse, your pets, and whoever.

The UP-cleaning wand is your friend, and good bright sunlight.

Face it - Mother Nature always wins, and you will NEVER EVER get every single cobweb. NEVER! EVER!!! Hahahahaaaa! ;8^)

 
September 1, 20160 found this helpful

Thanks for that great answer! In the eastern part of MA (Cape Cod and the Islands) we call them "Daddy Long Legs". (At least I think they're the same... :) )

 
February 27, 20220 found this helpful

Cellar spiders and Daddy long legs are two different species. The Harvestman/Daddy long legs are of the genus Leiobunum. They have a
body that appears as a single object and they are actually not spiders. They do not spin webbing. Cellar spider in contrast (genus Pholcus) do spin webbing. They also appear as a true spider that is with distinct segments.
Although they both are referred to as Harvestman or Daddy Long Legs, those are colloquial names for both.

 
By Donna from Va (Guest Post)
March 26, 20080 found this helpful

I have to say that cob webs come from spiders AND dust...I live on a farm, and I have a terribly dusty house....I only get the cob webs in the corners and upper area....If it were just dust, then I would have them all over my house, but I see these really long legged spiders from time to time, on my ceiling, and I believe they are responsible for the cob webs....along with the dust....

 
By Janette (Guest Post)
August 29, 20080 found this helpful

HaHa. My boss told me to look up cob webs because I saw some by the stereo and I made him knock it down because I cannot stand them. I had a spider crawl on my head and almost walked into a spider making a web. And yes my boss was right spider webs and cob webs are two different things. THANK GOD FOR MY BOSS BEING SMART. I just hate spider webs. Like everyone said on here, clean your house daily and you don't have them.

 
By Brian (Guest Post)
December 29, 20080 found this helpful

I have just finished witnessing cobwebs coming into existence, and I was able to observe this event in a controlled environment that is absent of any and all spiders and insects. As Simon observed they are chains of charged particles of dust.

The particular web I observed formed in a supply room off of my Computer Room. What caught my attention was what appeared to be about 1 dozen hairs sticking up from a container. Upon closer examination the hairs were actually lengths of dust strands. They were all being "Attracted" in the same direction.

After a day, the strands had grown, some had fallen right down, others had fallen into other strands, and now the "Web" effect was beginning. After 2 days some additional branches had formed off the main strand, and by the end of day 3 had reached the supporting cabinet wall they were being "Attracted" to, thus completing the web. No spider was involved.

I looked at it through a fairly high powered magnification lens, and in fact you can see the individual particles, most lining up end for end, but some of them sideways. Much the same effect if you formed a chain of small magnets.

 
December 29, 20080 found this helpful

I have just finished witnessing cobwebs coming into existance, and I was able to observe this event in a controlled environment that is absent of any and all spiders and insects. As Simon observed they are chains of charged particles of dust. The particuar web I observed formed in a supply room off of my Computer Room. What caught my attention was what appeared to be about 1 dozen hairs sticking up from a container. Upon closer examination the hairs were actually lengths of dust strands. They were all being "Attracted" in the same direction. After a day, the strands had grown, some had fallen right down, others had fallen into other strands, and now the "Web" effect was beginning. After 2 days some additional branches had formed off the main strand, and by the end of day 3 had reached the supporting cabinet wall they were being "Attracted" to, thus completing the web. No spider was involved. I looked at it through a fairly high powered magnification lens, and in fact you can see the individual particles, most lining up end for end, but some of them sideways. Much the same effect if you formed a chain of small magnets.

 
By Brian (Guest Post)
February 20, 20090 found this helpful

Now if cobwebs are made by spiders, they wouldn't be scared of them. I had a fairly long one from the roof to a wall. There was a spider, I used a broom and dustpan to herd the spider to the cobweb, no matter what I did, it would not go onto the web.

So my opinion is, "Dust Particles" Also why don't you ever find a spider on or making one, traveling dragging the web etc. Or See a fly etc stuck to it?

 
March 13, 20090 found this helpful

Here's another "Straight Dope" entry for an interesting read about cobwebs:
www.straightdope.com/.../are-cobwebs-made-by-spiders

 
March 14, 20090 found this helpful

The key is understanding that these are structures formed from CHARGED dust motes. I have not heard anyone say anything about how they get charged, and how you can arrange things at home so that the rate of dust mote charging decreases, and with it the frequency of the cobwebs.

Is there a way to remove the charge from free-floating dust?

Or even better, promote the charging of dust already in the air, then using that charge to attract the dust where you want it for easy disposal. Haven't I seen something like that on an infomercial?

I wonder if the aerosol (bugspray) was working for Charlene's mother-in-law by de-ionizing free-floating dustmotes in the region of the room near the corners. Or perhaps frequent sprays just knock down strands in the early stages. If cobwebs form in ways like snowflakes, it would mean that aggregation happens all the faster around existing strands.

How does all this dust usually get charged anyhow?

This sounds like a dream middleschool science project! Can you imagine tenns over and declaring half the house as "no dusting" zones! As a supportive parent, what would you do?

 
May 26, 20090 found this helpful

I live in the South East I've lived all over the world and never had cob webs or spider weds as I do here. I clean them away in the morning, or when I see them and in some places they're back in an hour! Yes, I vacuum. But what I find strange is that lately I have a cob web appear on the door knob of the outside of my kitchen door, in between the kitchen door and the storm door, right on the door knob! Now I, we, must use that door 25 times a day with family coming in and out and I have 2 cats that can never decide where they want to be, so we're letting them in and out 10 times a day.
Can anyone explain why a cob web would keep reappearing a couple of times a day in the same place, the door knob? Thanks.

 
July 2, 20150 found this helpful

If cob webs are spider webs then they are the weakest spider webs ever.
They are not spider webs but charged particles collecting other charged particles.

 
Anonymous
October 19, 20150 found this helpful

No one has mentioned electromatic fields present. Such a field attracts particles magneticly, holding them in suspension until they appear as a strand. If you look closely you will see the nature of a cobweb and spider silk.

 
Anonymous
October 30, 20150 found this helpful

Cobwebs I believe come from spiders. I have the same freakin problem. I vacuum them up and 6 hours late they are back. And there is always a spider with it. I've had my house sprayed multiple times. I clean and dust and vacuum my house regularly and nothing has worked. Getting so tired of it.

 
February 13, 20170 found this helpful

This question is what brought me to this site. I have looked at many answers and still do not know if cobwebs are the same as spider webs. I don't think they are because I have cobwebs and never see spiders. I think they are from dust and I think they are worse if you have carpet. The best you can do is just use one of those long dusters and clean every month or so.

 
Anonymous
March 4, 20170 found this helpful

First of all good to know that I'm not the only one to have to this unusual question in mind. After reading the above comments and doing some research on the net here's what I found:

"Cob" is another word for spider, in Middle English coppe. So by definition, a cobweb is a spiderweb. Some people differentiate spiral or orb webs, which they call spiderwebs, from other forms that they are familiar with. ... Evidently the main difference between the two is that spider's webs are still in use.

Yep, Spiders! As it turns out, the majority of cobwebs are actually formed from abandoned spider webs! That's right, these home-abandoning spiders, mainly those of the species Theridiidae, build these sticky webs for catching prey (spiders also use their silk to make cocoons for their eggs).

 
March 7, 20170 found this helpful

There actually dead skin cells falling off your body. And sticking to the ceilings and walls making you think its just dust or spider webs.

 
April 3, 20170 found this helpful

Cobwebs are nothing more than abandoned spider webs that have collected dust as the spider was not at home to do the dusting, and keep the place clean. Lol

 
October 16, 20171 found this helpful

Cob webs are, believe it or not, spun by microscopic creatures called cobs. These webs are very sticky and the dust made up of dead skin cells is naturally attracted to these webs and sticks to them! Don't try to look for cobs though. They are hundreds of times smaller than an eyelash mite! :-)

 

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