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Captain, there's an incy wincy problem - spider on a plane causes chaos at Edinburgh Airport

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Published Date: 21 October 2009
IT WOULD have been an arachnophobe's worst nightmare. A passenger on an Edinburgh-bound flight yesterday told the aircrew he had seen a tarantula spider crawling between his legs.
The alert aboard a British Airways service from Heathrow led to the aircraft being grounded while a specialist was flown in to fumigate the cabin.

However, the mystery remained unresolved last night after no sign of the spider was found.

BA said the male passenger, whom it declined to name, raised the alarm shortly before the Airbus A319 reached the terminal at Edinburgh airport.

None of the other 82 passengers reported seeing anything – at least three of whom, statistically, are likely to have been scared of spiders.

Tarantulas have hairy legs and bodies and grow up to 1ft long, but move more slowly than common house spiders.

A specialist firm was flown in from Gatwick to fumigate the plane.

An insecticide was sprayed inside the aircraft to kill any insect possibly still on board, while engineers checked other areas of the aircraft, but to no avail.

BA said the Airbus was flown back to Heathrow last night without passengers, but was due to resume normal service today.

The airline said the passenger, who had been seated in the middle of the plane, had been credible and it been forced to act.

However, it said there had been no corroborative proof there had been a spider in the plane.

A spokesman said: "A male passenger claimed he had seen what he believed to be a tarantula on board the aircraft. He saw it walking between his legs.

"On arrival, he drew this to the attention of the cabin crew. He did not give the impression of being particularly upset.

"A specialist team was sent to fumigate the aircraft."

Those on board included a handful of passengers who had transferred from other flights into Heathrow – a possible source of the spider.

However, experts said tarantulas were not habitual stowaways.

Matt Shardlow, chief executive of Buglife, the Invertebrate Conservation Trust, said while house spiders would be happy living in clothes in a suitcase, tarantulas preferred burrows.

He said: "Fear of spiders is the commonest phobia in the UK and people react wildly to it, particularly in scary circumstances such as on a plane.

"But if it was a tarantula, why did no-one else see it? Although they are quite large spiders, there are some very large house spiders, too."

BA said insects were found in planes "from time to time", especially those arriving from warmer climes. BA's A319s do not operate outside Europe.

The spokesman said: "There is the odd spider that comes in cargo such as fruit, but it is very unusual to have such a report on a UK flight."

The incident forced the cancellation of the fully booked 9:05am Edinburgh-Heathrow flight, whose passengers were transferred to later services or flights to Gatwick or London City airports.

Tarantulas can give a painful bite but their mild venom is weaker than that of a typical bee and is not usually fatal.


Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 21 October 2009 8:47 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Scotland's airports
 
1

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 21/10/2009 01:04:19

I wonder if the 'passenger', was sound of mind at the time he saw the creepy-crawly.?

2

Pomodora,

Gravesend 21/10/2009 04:42:53
#1, the airline reports that he was credible and it was forced to act; or did you miss that part of the story in your hurry to sensation?
3

Julian.,

edinburgh 21/10/2009 05:36:03
#2 Did they have a psychiatrist at hand to carry out a full assessment then?
4

Richard Taylor,

Aberdeen 21/10/2009 06:58:03
A Web of intrigue??
5

,

21/10/2009 07:29:14
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
6

Ham Mei Si,

Hong Kong 21/10/2009 07:56:04
There was no spider! You imagine yourself sitting in an aeroplane while on a flight to somewhere and you see a spider at your feet! You would be up and out of your seat in a flash pointing at the creature, and warning everybody around you! Everyone of us is bomb conscious and quietly aware of invisible dangers that could confront us when we fly! We are not totally laid back, and anyting like this happening would not be passively remembered a reported later. Agree?
7

McNasty,

Edinburgh 21/10/2009 07:56:12
This story is creepy.
8

Graeme M,

smithfield plains 21/10/2009 07:56:48
Sair fair wee timoris beastie, aw whit a panic in thy breastie, I widna rin awa say hastie, ye hiv nae paid yer airfare yet!....
9

TREV,

Poland 21/10/2009 08:22:48
I wonder why they used insect killer... spiders aren't insects.

Personally this story reminds me a little of the Red Dwarf scene where Lister has what he thinks is a tarantula crawling up his leg.
10

Douglas,

Bathgate 21/10/2009 08:24:25
Looks like the moderator's Brazilian.
11

tomoh,

21/10/2009 08:27:21
Is this today's main story in the Scotsman? On a par with the Sun.
12

Ben Thehoose,

21/10/2009 08:44:44
Somewhere out there there's a tarantula on the loose. A flight will never again be just a flight. I expect National Express released it to drum up rail travel. Now we await BA's retaliation. What would you hate between your legs?
13

Astarte,

Giffnock 21/10/2009 09:04:51
#2 Pomodora...why do you bother with this. Charles and Julian both from Edinburgh..there must be somehing in the water which stunts their reason.
14

AJ Fife,

21/10/2009 09:20:51
Too mucho vino collapso methinks!:)
15

barclaythedragon,

Ripon 21/10/2009 09:24:26
No I agree no. 9: in the phylum Arthropoda there are several classes, two being Insecta, insects, and Arachnida, spiders. This means that spiders and insects are related, but they are not the same and spiders are not a type of insect. Spiders and insects are in the same level of classification. There are several differences in insects and spiders. The first and easiest way to tell is that insects have 6 legs, and spiders have 8. Insects also have three body segments, head, abdomen, and thorax, while spiders have just two, cephalothorax and abdomen. Adult spiders are always wingless, but most adult insects have wings. There are a few exceptions such as walking sticks, fleas, silverfish, springtails, thrips, and in some species just one gender is wingless, such as the velvet ant. This is not a good way to tell the difference between spiders and insects, because there are a few adult insects with out wings, and all immature insects are wingless, they don't get wings until they are adults.


16

Billy the Fish,

Glasgow 21/10/2009 09:33:48

Did the man who reported the spider sighting work for Virgin per chance?
17

Deadpan,

London 21/10/2009 09:37:54
#15 Walking sticks are insects? I'd better call my granddad.
18

Eustace,

/ 21/10/2009 09:39:59

There are exceptionally large spiders living in the Heathrow area which if seen as a shadow have the appearance of something similar to a creature from a Horror Film. There have also been a number of businesses selling exotic pets including newts, spiders, fish etc.
19

Nellie,

Liverpool 21/10/2009 09:50:04
I saw a spider the size of a dog last night on my way home from the pub. I was so frightened I had to go back for another drink to steady my nerves. When I came out of the pub I saw it again, only this time it was bigger.
20

Anton,

Porto Sant'Elpidio 21/10/2009 09:53:39
#9, TREV:
Uh, I gather they are still stuck with Linnean taxonomy.. from what I remember from kindergarten, Mammals, Fishes, Birds, Insects, Reptilians, Anphibians and Worms. It was Lamarck who split off the arachnida... Or maybe it's just the airline's or the journalist's mistake :)
21

Ken S.,

Reading 21/10/2009 10:08:27
"Five times has the spider failed," said Bruce. "That is just the number of times the English have defeated me. If the spider has courage to try again, I also will try to free Scotland!" He watched the spider. It rested for a while as if to gain strength, and then threw its slender thread toward the beam. This time it succeeded. "I thank God!" exclaimed Bruce. "The spider has taught me a lesson. No more will I be discouraged."

'Twould seem that the spirit of Robert the Bruce was not possessed by passengers on the plane!
22

DirtyDeeds,

21/10/2009 11:18:53
I wonder if Spidey had already booked his seat and found that the person in the seat was of the larger human variety and just wanted to point out that he (Spidey) did not want to read the Telegraph as well as his own copy of Invertebrate Monthly.
23

Gordon Smiths 364,

Tunisia 21/10/2009 11:44:05
#12

"What would you hate between your legs?"

Susan Boyle!
24

Jo Public,

21/10/2009 12:13:09
Did the spider book it's seat using the web?
25

Gordieboy,

Musselburgh 21/10/2009 12:36:41
#17 - LOL, and thank you for a rare outbreak of genuine humour on here...
26

Sparts,

21/10/2009 13:51:33
I'm betting the mystery passenger went by the name O'Leary...
27

BenH,

Aberdeen 21/10/2009 14:19:53
Enough is enough! I have had it with these muthafeckin spiders on this muthafeckin plane!
28

westview,

Looking up at passing planes. 21/10/2009 15:58:26
At least this tale was not spun by a stranded passenger . Perhaps if it had been told by the captain of the plane then it was told by a fly man? I liked the Bruce and a Scots spider reference. Good one S. Kenn, *21*.
29

MattyMat,

Cali 21/10/2009 17:30:12
I'm confused-- did the spider walk between his legs or walk between his feet? If you're sitting down, wouldn't it be physically impossible for a spider to walk "between" the legs?? And how do we know it was walking? Could have been skipping, or jogging for all we know!

There must be a full investigation!!-- Scotland Yard should be on it's highest alert by now!
30

Steve Foley,

Reading, England 21/10/2009 17:58:01
Could it have been a Crane-fly, aka a daddy-long-legs? This is the season for them and some can grow quite big. Often they are thought by some people to be flying spiders although spiders do not have wings. They are a dipterous fly of the family Tipulidae, and the largest at this time of year is T.Maxima
31

Martyk,

21/10/2009 20:49:06
I saw a spider on the way home from the pub as big as the moon. It was shiny and hanging by a thread up in the sky.
32

Jo Public,

21/10/2009 22:06:39
Was the pub as big as the moon, shiny and hanging from a thread in the sky? You must have been drinking moonshine?
33

mark mccann,

22/10/2009 00:18:08
Simple; Spider crawls into somebody's bag, bag taken onto plane, spider goes for a walk down the plane, climbs into someone elses bag... climbs out again in the car home... need I go on?

 

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