The little farm house I was in in Princeton my last year in NJ- so humid that it was the only place I've lived where I had to worry about mold growing on my leather dress shoes. Tons of spiders. The big ones would eat the little ones, and my cat would eat the big ones. It was the web of life!
Matthew Bertone, an entomologist at North Carolina State University, said he was amazed at the variety of species found in what he stressed were “clean and normal” homes in Raleigh, North Carolina. [emphasis added]
The little farm house I was in in Princeton my last year in NJ- so humid that it was the only place I've lived where I had to worry about mold growing on my leather dress shoes. Tons of spiders. The big ones would eat the little ones, and my cat would eat the big ones. It was the web of life!
Spiders don't bother me.
The homes, on average, each had around 100 arthropod species. The most commonly found species were flies, spiders, beetles, ants and book lice.
Book lice. We can fix that.
<img src="https://media.giphy.com/media/CpE4gXoXpTdII/giphy.gif"/>
Matthew Bertone, an entomologist at North Carolina State University, said he was amazed at the variety of species found in what he stressed were “clean and normal” homes in Raleigh, North Carolina. [emphasis added]
So, white people have lice, too?