Previously I cleaned the house thoroughly about once a week. There was no particular day or anything. I just did it when I could. I decided to make a schedule to break the duties down so that I only had to do certain tasks each day. Today was "thorough vacuuming day". This included vacuuming the cracks along the ceiling. This is particularly important as we seem to have daily influxes of ladybugs and flies that
congregate upstairs. Upon getting to one of the upstairs rooms I found this little present:

Now you have to understand that being from Arizona I have seen my fair share of scorpions and know that the smaller they are, the more poisonous. Not expecting to find such a creature in our home in MN surrounded by 32 degree temps, I was taken aback. You might have thought my first reaction was to squash the thing but I decided I wanted to blog about it so I ran to get my camera. Upon returning it had vanished. (the weird thing is there was nowhere for it to go anywhere near and I ran for the camera!) The thing that struck me was the size of this thing. It was only 1/8 to 1/16 of an inch. (no longer than the width of my wedding band!) I also noticed quickly that it did not seem to have a tail anymore. This, I supposed, was a good thing. I quickly got on the
Internet and searched for bugs that looked like a scorpion and trusty google came through again (which is where I got the above photo). It is a
Pseudoscorpion. There are 3 types:

The one I saw looked like the one on the far right, color:dark brown. What really got me was how the thing kept opening and closing its pincers. Upon reading on I found that these things "hitchhike" on the legs of flies. THAT must have been how it got in because as I said before, we have an abundance of flies... They do contain poison in their pincers but it is only effective against very small bugs. Apparently they do have silk glands with which they make
cocoons to spend winters. Also it seems that
Pseudoscorpions are considered beneficial to us since they are aggressive predators on clothes moth larvae, carpet beetle larvae,
booklice, ants, mites, small flies and even small earthworms. Here are some pictures to help you understand the size:



Well there is your homeschooling lesson for the day:)