>P.S. I've seen something advertised before that you plug in
>and it creates a sound wave or something that keeps bugs away.
> I don't know what it's called or where you can find it, but
>I'm sure a quick search on the web or in your local store's
>pesticide aisle will turn something up.
>
I had one of those in my basement. It doesn't seem to work on spiders because there are webs all over!
There are special "bug vaccums" that you can use to trap and release them (spiders actually do have a good job to do in the ecosystem...it's just better that they do it elsewhere!).
I usually catch and release most insects (mosquitos, flies, tics, fleas, roaches and japanese beatles would be the exceptions). Last year, when I was cleaning my office, there was a spider web in a corner (the "Building Service Workers," AKA "janitors" obviously don't think it's part of their job to clean there), I caught the spider and put it in a box to take outside. I kind of forgot about it, but later, he must have bit me, because I suddenly felt a burning on my hand and when I looked, there was a pink spot. Well, over the course of the next couple of days, that spot grew into a very nasty-looking mess, and I had to get meds to deal with it (though the Dr. said it didn't look like brown recluse bite). Some gratitude there, huh?
There are some huge, furry spiders (I thought they were Wolf spiders) that hang around my compost--and they are most welcome to do so (I even transported one in a paper bag when I moved, and moved the compost with me!!). One time, one must have gotten in the house (in the basement) because I came home, and right in the middle of my living room was a dead one, all curled up like the remains of an "Alien" face hugger. One of my cats obviously found it somewhere and "played" it to death.