At first glance it looks like the fields have been blanketed with snow – but this ghostly white landscape in Australia is the work of millions of spiders.As flood waters raced past the town of Wagga Wagga, in New South Wales, the spiders were forced to clamber up trees and bushes, spinning their webs as they climbed.The result was this amazing panorama – glistening sheets of web covering just about everything in sight. Branches were cocooned in the sticky webs, while tall grasses appeared to be enrobed in silk.The scenes are reminiscent of the coat of spiders' webs that were spun in Pakistan after last year's floods turning trees into what appeared like giant sticks of candy floss. Residents of Wagga Wagga, returning to their evacuated homes as flood waters raced towards them after torrential rain turned rivers into raging torrents, were astonished to find the fields surrounding their houses transformed from green to white.But while the town's residents are breathing a sigh of relief that they have escaped the threatening dangers of the floods, fears were growing today for the safety of two teenage men who have gone missing in a flood-affected part of Queensland.
At first glance it looks like the fields have been blanketed with snow – but this ghostly white landscape in Australia is the work of millions of spiders.As flood waters raced past the town of Wagga Wagga, in New South Wales, the spiders were forced to clamber up trees and bushes, spinning their webs as they climbed.The result was this amazing panorama – glistening sheets of web covering just about everything in sight. Branches were cocooned in the sticky webs, while tall grasses appeared to be enrobed in silk.The scenes are reminiscent of the coat of spiders' webs that were spun in Pakistan after last year's floods turning trees into what appeared like giant sticks of candy floss. Residents of Wagga Wagga, returning to their evacuated homes as flood waters raced towards them after torrential rain turned rivers into raging torrents, were astonished to find the fields surrounding their houses transformed from green to white.But while the town's residents are breathing a sigh of relief that they have escaped the threatening dangers of the floods, fears were growing today for the safety of two teenage men who have gone missing in a flood-affected part of Queensland.
At first glance it looks like the fields have been blanketed with snow – but this ghostly white landscape in Australia is the work of millions of spiders.As flood waters raced past the town of Wagga Wagga, in New South Wales, the spiders were forced to clamber up trees and bushes, spinning their webs as they climbed.The result was this amazing panorama – glistening sheets of web covering just about everything in sight. Branches were cocooned in the sticky webs, while tall grasses appeared to be enrobed in silk.The scenes are reminiscent of the coat of spiders' webs that were spun in Pakistan after last year's floods turning trees into what appeared like giant sticks of candy floss. Residents of Wagga Wagga, returning to their evacuated homes as flood waters raced towards them after torrential rain turned rivers into raging torrents, were astonished to find the fields surrounding their houses transformed from green to white.But while the town's residents are breathing a sigh of relief that they have escaped the threatening dangers of the floods, fears were growing today for the safety of two teenage men who have gone missing in a flood-affected part of Queensland.
Spiders Cover Entire Fields in Cobwebs to Escape Flood Waters Australia Wagga Wagga
Spiders Cover Entire Fields in Cobwebs to Escape Flood Waters Australia Wagga Wagga
Spiders Cover Entire Fields in Cobwebs to Escape Flood Waters Australia Wagga Wagga
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