Oddly enough, the one panel I got the most comments on in this comic was the tarantula trying to escape the lariat. I actually liked the one of it scuttling off (that’s one of my better tarantula drawings…. and since I’ve only done a handful of them, that’s not saying much) and the hysterical one.
It’s starting to be bug season here in Texas — the crane flies are out now since it’s been a warm winter. The tarantulas are hiding until spring, when tasty invertebrates come out for them to eat.
Norman Horner, a biologist at Midwestern State University in Wichita Falls, once managed to put a radio collar on a tarantula. No, I don’t know how. The wranglers could tell you, though.
Oddly enough, the one panel I got the most comments on in this comic was the tarantula trying to escape the lariat. I actually liked the one of it scuttling off (that’s one of my better tarantula drawings…. and since I’ve only done a handful of them, that’s not saying much) and the hysterical one.
It’s starting to be bug season here in Texas — the crane flies are out now since it’s been a warm winter. The tarantulas are hiding until spring, when tasty invertebrates come out for them to eat.
Norman Horner, a biologist at Midwestern State University in Wichita Falls, once managed to put a radio collar on a tarantula. No, I don’t know how. The wranglers could tell you, though.