Up my pant leg, that is…
I went out to the garage to get something, and after a few minutes back in the house I felt a sharp sting – the unmistakable feeling of something small defending its territory in my trousers. Ouch!
Pants quickly off and shaken, a teeny sandy, orangey scorpion trembled, terrified in the pile of the carpet. It was literally a half inch long, or less. Which is lucky for me. There are many varieties of scorpion inhabiting the southwestern desert. The Arizona Bark Scorpion, seen above, is venomous and can, in certain individuals, cause seizures. My little guy was either a baby or an altogether different species; we didn’t keep him around long enough to ask him. My heroic Captain whisked him away on a paper towel and set him free outside, where he belongs. The sting site got a little red, a little puffy, and was off and on sore for the rest of the night, but by the next morning I had forgotten I’d been stung.
There are scorpions in Italy as well. We frequently find small black ones in various parts of the house. Sometimes they are dead and dessicated, sometimes they are quite lively. For well over a year a little fellow lived under the baseboard next to Luciano‘s supper dish; we assume he came out at night to scarf down kitty scraps. During the day he hid in the safety of his baseboard with only his larger claw partly visible, like a child who thinks he’s hiding because he can’t see you. We got pretty fond of Blackie, especially after we checked with the vet and learned that in the off chance that he stung Luciano, there would not be any major trouble. Little Blackie stayed with us even after Luciano was gone, and in memory of our funny cat I sometimes put down a crumb of something for his baseboard buddy to eat. Then we had an infestation of ants, as sometimes happens in spring. Without thinking we spread poison along the ant trail which happened to lead along Blackie’s baseboard. That was the end of him. We felt pretty bad about that.
So, are scorpions dangerous? Clearly the Arizona Bark Scorpion can be, though Dr. Trisha McNair reports that of the 1,400 scorpion species worldwide, only about 25 have venom that can kill a person. European scorpions in general are a nuisance at worst, their sting being like that of a bee or wasp. There’s more on scorpions here from Dr. McNair. But toxic or not, I can tell you from experience you don’t really want them crawling around in your pants!


Just an FYI – the smaller they are, the more potent the venom is. The bigger, actually, the better for those who are stung.
I’m glad I didn’t know that when the wee critter stung me (I still have the sting mark!), but am glad to know it now. Thanks!
What an experience! I don’t think I would have been so calm-it would have been off to the ER for me! Norfolk is being itself today- we woke to an ice storm and now it’s snowing. It has not stoPped being cruddy all winter!
Good thing you are in Arizona even with scorpions!
Can’t say I much miss the ice storms, that’s for sure. It sounds like the whole East coast has been hammered this winter. Boo! Come to sunny AZ for a visit!
We get them as well sometimes but I certainly would not relish finding one in my clothing!
Nope. Not much fun.
I had a good look at your tiny critter when he tumbled from your pant leg and was surprised at how much he (?) seemed to resemble a lobster. Your images prove it! I wonder if at one time the lobsters of the deep could raise Their tails and do damage?
Well, he did look a bit lobstery, didn’t he. Lobsters are crustaceans, though, and scorpions, like spiders, are arachnids. I couldn’t find anything that suggested they were related in the dim long ago. I think lobsters have always used their tails for propulsion – and for buffet tables. But I’m no biologist…
The boys found a huge very pale colored one under a rock in Tanzania. They were fascinated. I was secretly freaked out.
Did it follow them home??
I have had them in my house and that freaked me out! In my clothes, ugh, I would lose it! So not cool!
Well, not pleasant in the clothes, I’ll admit, but this wee one wasn’t all that bad. Wouldn’t want a big one crawling up my leg though – or over/in my bed as Pat described.
I used to find scorpions in my print studio in Rome, hiding between damp sheets of printing paper. We lived together peacefully-I learned to be careful! In Turkey, on the digs, I would often see them on the ceiling above the bed in the little adobe house where I slept. They made me a bit more nervous. I find them fascitinating!
They’ve never bothered us much at all. Not sure I’d like to have one over my bed, though – it would be hard to fall asleep! Were they big in Turkey?