When creatures invaded Sunderland - eels, jellyfish and sex-crazed spiders
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No it’s not a scene from a movie.
Sunderland really has seen killer flatworms, carpets of ladybirds, sex-crazed spiders and eels falling from the skies.
Freak weather has brought some creepy crawly tales to our neighbourhood and here are some reminders.
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Hide AdEels fell on Hendon
In 1918, hundreds of slippery creatures began to fall from the sky.
Eels rained down on their heads. The probable cause was a “waterspout” – a tornado that sucks water from the sea.
The year of the ladybird carpets
Ladybirds by the million became a part of daily life in Sunderland - and the rest of the UK - during the incredible heatwave of 1976.
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Hide AdLocals reported carpets of them as the sun belted down on Wearside for months on end.
Tell us if you remember that scorchingly hot summer and the ladybird swarms.
Killer worms on the increase
New Zealand flatworms got our attention 30 years ago this month.
The species arrived in the UK more than 50 years ago but this one was found in Sunderland in April 1994.
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Hide AdThe little worms are known for eating earthworms by wrapping their bodies around them.
Here is Dr Phil Gates of Durham University with one of the worms.
Sex-crazed spiders
Spiders with a deep desire were being reported in 2016.
A Sunderland Echo article at the time said that spiders the size of mice were driven into the open by their urge to mate, having spent much of the rest of the year hidden away.
Invasion of the jellyfish
A sudden surge in jellyfish numbers in the UK was reported in 2022.
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Hide AdA rise in sea temperatures was suspected to be causing the surge.
Caterpillars which looked like snakes
In reality, they were Elephant Hawk-moth caterpillars and the warm weather brought them out including in New Herrington.
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Hide AdOne local said at the time they ‘thought it was a small snake at first’.
Tell us about the strangest creatures you have had as visitors in your gardens - or even inside your house.
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