How does the spider catch its fly?
By Rhiannonw
- 714 reads
Little fly that flits around
bumps into a web and bound
by the glue, with silk wound round
when by hungry spider found;
but your mind it would astound
if you really knew the structure
of its steel-strong silk elastic –
all the types, and manufacture,
how extruded, flung far, woven
by the little bug fantastic!
[IP: a sticky situation]
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Comments
I knew you'd come up with
I knew you'd come up with another good IP response - well done!
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"Little fly that flits around
"Little fly that flits around
bumps into a web and bound.."
Spider's webs are a marvel of nature, aren't they? Remarkably strong. I enjoyed this, Rhiannon. Very nicely done. Paul
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spider webs
I have heard spider web strands are so incredibly strong, of course taking in account to how thin and light they are. They say the tensile strength is higher than any man-made material steel tungsten namit.
It is amusing that you had the recent heatwave, because we had a cold front now, I mean with us getting closer to summer and you nearing winter.
Thank you Rhiannon! Very interesting & Nolan
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