Nina

Nina

@ninasch.bsky.social

She/her – Student Hobby naturalist and spider enthusiast based in Switzerland.

558 Followers 301 Following 373 Posts Joined Oct 2024
1 week ago

War is terrible for people, and terrible for the environment 🌍, which is, in turn, also terrible for people.

(Not that the rich and powerful give a rip.)

See also: www.forbes.com/sites/nilsro...

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1 week ago

I was wondering the same (about it beeing too large to balloon). I've never before seen a wolf spider do this.

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1 week ago
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What I witnessed here, I think, was an attempt of a Lycosidae (most likely Pardosa sp.) to balloon? Anyone willing to confirm?

*Ballooning refers to a type of locomotion where a spider takes flight.

#SpiderSky #inverts #spiders
#WolfSpiders

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2 weeks ago
A spider butt. A spider face.

Hobbies of Nuctenea umbratica also include cave diving.

All jokes aside, here, have a spider (cave diving stance included).

#SpiderSky #inverts

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2 weeks ago
Frontal view of a black and white striped jumping spider. Big primary eyes beautifully visible. It has made itself comfortable on a large rock. A lateral view of the same spider. A light brown pattern visible an the abdomen between the white stripes and a black backdrop. Dorsal view of same spider. Brown pattern between white stripes visible (abdomen).

Taking walks in nature is a blessing in it itself. But noticing my eight-legged friends emerging really brightens my day.

Here, a zebra jumping spider (likely Salticus scenicus, judging by size, time, pattern and environment encountered).

#SpiderSky #inverts #JumpingSpiders

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1 month ago

I hope you caught some sleep despite of those nightmares.

I understand. I also feel way more at home, here, on BlueSky. It truly feels more like 'social' media compared to other places 😅

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1 month ago

That folklore is super interesting.

And your experience with spider surely helped you appreciate them from a young age. What a blessing 🤗

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1 month ago

Thanks for the advice, will be further trying to make him more comfortable with the idea 😂

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1 month ago

Funny that you mention that! I used to be scared of them. But I feel like my fear was learnt more than inherented. My mother used to freak out whenever she saw a house spider and just straight up killed them.

I never had the 'guts' to do that and had learnt to hurl them outside with a glass 😅

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1 month ago

Thank you! It's honestly just a plce for me to share the little joys of nature (no matter if in- or outdoors). I also grew up with cats. Still got one too.

I love the idea of having a tarantula. My husband, not so much 😂
But he keeps 'our' house spiders out of harms way and that's a win for me.

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1 month ago

This is really something that actually baffles me. We are all part of an ecosystem. As we harm this system, we harm ourselves...

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1 month ago

I'm so sorry to hear that. I can understand what an insane loss that must've been. Especially because you shared a huge amount of time together...

I've seen people keeping new world species as pets. I'm slowly trying to get my partner to get used to the idea of a potential eight-legged tenant 👀

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1 month ago

Yes, I understand. The tiny AND fast attributes make them extremely difficult to capture on camera. (Trust me, I know 😭)

Also: Amazing collection of books!

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1 month ago

Absolutely! The biggest jumper we get in Switzerland is about 1.2cm in length. But the ones I encounter most often just measure a few mm's. Fascinating little creatures 😄

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1 month ago

-20°C is real though, I could never! Amazing how well they cope with such weather. I do worry about the climate and changes in extreme weather events...

Yes, we share some interests. I'm not that deep into tech though (compared to friends/partner). Fascinated by certain aspects for sure!

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1 month ago

Oh my! What a beauty!

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1 month ago

I know, right? I love to sit by my window and observe them whenever they come by 👀

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1 month ago

There are bigger and deadlier creatures out there 🫣

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1 month ago

Very nice! 😍

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1 month ago
Eurasian blue tit sitting on a clay tray filled with food for wild birds (at least, it was advertised to me that way). Same blue tit, head turned towards its observer (me).

#BirdsSeenIn2026

A visitor to my not-so-fancy bird feeder (it's just a clay pot tray with some bird food in it).

I believe they enjoy the additional food source.

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1 month ago

She's flowering!

Usually, I cut the inflorescence since resources are spent developing flowers instead of upkeeping the leaves.

However, I'm really curious to see how it turns out 👀

#houseplant #alocasia

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1 month ago

She's so photogenic! 😍

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1 month ago

Still one of my favourite pictures of an orb-weaver (Larinioides sp.) that just wanted to stay in our apartment to keep warm.

#inverts #SpiderSky #orbweaver

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1 month ago
Three-in-one pictures of Larinioides sclopetarius, an orb-weaving spider. Each picture shows a slightly different angle of the animal.

Look who I found crawling about:

Larinioides sclopetarius. A truly wonderful orb-weaving spider.

📍 Switzerland (03.01.2026)
🗝️ araneae.nmbe.ch

#spider #SpiderSky #arachnids #inverts #orbweaver 🕷️🌿

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1 month ago

reading about organisms that aren’t your specialty is like

margins of the quorbus eplungulate, ploobular processes bent posteriorly towards the foobulum

define term “eplungulate”
- lacking plungae. synonym: thubulous

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1 month ago

spiders are incapable of wrongdoing

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1 month ago
A large drone fly (most likely Eristalis sp.) looking over the inflorescense of a Melilotus albus. A small 'hi.' written in white font next to its head.

How your email finds me:

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1 month ago

What a cool find!

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1 month ago

Can't believe I have to say this but climate change is responsible for extreme cold snaps.

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1 month ago

What a dreadfully genius skeet.

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