seedcorn
Garden Master
With or without the spider? Jbaymule said:Cobweb applied over a cut will stop the bleeding.
With or without the spider? Jbaymule said:Cobweb applied over a cut will stop the bleeding.
seedcorn said:With or without the spider? Jbaymule said:Cobweb applied over a cut will stop the bleeding.
Yes it works !!! The only use of a spider is to make the web. I learned about it from an old Scottish sheepman. I use it when I dock tails, castrate or treat cuts on lambs, calves, horses, etc., and whenever there may be some extra bleeding for several decades now.seedcorn said:With or without the spider? Jbaymule said:Cobweb applied over a cut will stop the bleeding.
There once was a use for black widow filament. In WW2 when the Norden bombsight was invented one of the problems was that they needed a filament that was very fine and yet strong enough to take abuse. They tried many man made items but nothing known at that time could be drawn thin enough without being too fragile for combat use. Finally someone thought of the black widow who spins filaments that are very even in size and stronger than steel of the same diameter.marshallsmyth said:I sure get some spider webs around here in the forest. I can tell Black Widow webs by their strength. Those don't break apart very easily. When working under an old cabin there are some places where Black Widow webs are still very much intact after who knows how many decades. They clump up too when you push them out of the way. I've always thought there'd be some use for them. Stuff it onto a fresh sore to stop bleeding? Didn't think of that. I caught my hand on part of a heavy pump yesterday. That would have been a good test for it.