The Horrifying Creature That Returns To West Virginia Year After Year
Camel crickets, also known as spider crickets, are silent, destructive insects that can invade homes and basements, especially in winter.
If you're terrified of creepy bugs and spiders, you may want to skip this one. This bug looks like a disturbing cross between an insect and a spider, and there may be some living in your basement right now.
These insects are called "Camel Crickets" because of their distinctive hump on their backs.
They are also frequently called "spider crickets" or "sprickets" because of a resemblance to spiders from a distance.
And let's face it, you probably don't want to get too close!
These creatures normally live in caves, but they tend to make their way into homes and basements as winter approaches.
They can find their way into a home through even the smallest of cracks.
The crickets can be destructive once inside, gnawing on wood, carpet, and fabric.
Unlike the common cricket, they don't attract mates by chirping; rather, they are perfectly silent. Instead, they advertise their location by emitting a strong smell, which attracts even more crickets.
If you do find a swarm of these invaders in your house, they can be removed by an exterminator or captured in glue traps.
However, the glue traps reveal another horrifying attribute of these bugs... when they smell their family members dying, they swarm to the traps with the intention of cannibalizing them. Scary, right?
Perhaps most horrifying of all, these bugs have a tendency to jump towards anything that frightens them, including people. Although they don't jump with the intention of attacking humans, if one lands on you, it may start gnawing with its strong mandibles.
Here's a video of a cricket jumping from YouTube user Josh Pappas.

Have you ever found these creatures in your basement at home?
Camel crickets aren't the only creepy critters in our state. Here are 12 more bugs found in West Virginia that will send shivers down your spine.
Subscribe to our newsletter
Get the latest updates and news
Thank you for subscribing!

















