I would like to know the same thing. I walk into one every morning when I leave the house. I think it's time for a spy cam :)
2006-09-16 11:08:42
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answer #1
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answered by gator girl 5
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She attaches the silk to he upwind bush, and spins out a long strand in the wind, riding it over to the other bush. Once she has a connection between the two, she can run back and forth building her web.
2006-09-16 11:02:09
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answer #2
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answered by Dave 4
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It climbs up to a tall branch on one bush, then drops down on a sticky web thread, then it waits for the wind to blow and swing it up to a branch on the other bush. Once it has one thread anchored on both bushes, it starts building the web off it from there.
2006-09-16 11:02:48
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answer #3
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answered by David S 5
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those solutions are all close, yet no longer precise. generally grownup spiders are too heavy to balloon. the way the spider accomplishes it relatively is to permit the silk to glide on the wind because it produces it from the spinnerets. The silk attaches to the object and the spider is in a position to then pass to the object, on a similar time as reinforcing the thread with yet another because it is going during.
2016-10-01 01:20:45
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answer #4
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answered by wichern 4
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By eating a plate of beans , and waiting for the wind to blow them across.If you go into your garden at night and keep really still you can hear this for youself.
2006-09-16 11:29:53
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answer #5
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answered by LordLogic 3
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by firing a web out across the gap just like spider man :)
2006-09-16 11:01:12
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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More to the point who draws the plan ?
2006-09-16 11:06:05
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answer #7
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answered by Bill L 5
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just like knitting start in one corner and zig-zags his patent not stupid enough to fall
2006-09-16 12:52:49
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answer #8
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answered by dude_port 3
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