Redback spiders are relatively common, they’re unlikely to actually kill anyone but very young children, but you’re going to have pain and swelling like you’ve been hit by a very angry truck. There’s antivenom available for serious cases. However, they’re small-grape-sized, non-aggressive and just want to be left the hell alone and are unlikely to bite unless directly messed with - they hang out in little sheltered semi-outdoor spaces in your garage / mailbox / behind the lawnmower / etc, and they’re the main reason you never put your fingers anywhere you can’t see.
Funnelwebs are distributed right across the greater Sydney area. They’re aggressive bastards, body the size of a man’s thumb, look like a Firefly class transport designed by H. R. Giger, and a bite will absolutely kill you unless you get the antivenom. They live in holes in the ground, but they’ll wander around and into your house if it’s in their path. However, in over 40 years of living here, I’ve never ever seen one. Which is good, because they terrify the shit out of me.
Snakes, you’d honestly need to get out into at least semi-rural areas (or deep into a national park) to encounter. I don’t think I’ve ever come across one in the wild, but then I’m a city-dweller. They’re a fact of life out in the sticks, but that’s only a small percentage of the population, and seriously dangerous snakes are a relatively small percentage of the varieties out there.
Cone shells and blue-ring octupus are only way up on the north coast away from most of the population centres, so it’s mainly tourists that deal with them.
There’s sharks in the ocean variously, but most places you’d risk encountering them, they net the beaches. There’s probably three or four surfers encounter them a year, kind of thing.
The spiders people are going to get freaked out by, like I say, are hunstmen (which gallop across your ceiling, and can get huge) and orb-weavers which make big showy webs in trees, and look like something out of dark souls. However, they’re no threat to anyone but cockroaches.
Also yeah, most of this continent is desert - it’s only really habitable round the very edges.
Yep.
Redback spiders are relatively common, they’re unlikely to actually kill anyone but very young children, but you’re going to have pain and swelling like you’ve been hit by a very angry truck. There’s antivenom available for serious cases. However, they’re small-grape-sized, non-aggressive and just want to be left the hell alone and are unlikely to bite unless directly messed with - they hang out in little sheltered semi-outdoor spaces in your garage / mailbox / behind the lawnmower / etc, and they’re the main reason you never put your fingers anywhere you can’t see.
Funnelwebs are distributed right across the greater Sydney area. They’re aggressive bastards, body the size of a man’s thumb, look like a Firefly class transport designed by H. R. Giger, and a bite will absolutely kill you unless you get the antivenom. They live in holes in the ground, but they’ll wander around and into your house if it’s in their path. However, in over 40 years of living here, I’ve never ever seen one. Which is good, because they terrify the shit out of me.
Snakes, you’d honestly need to get out into at least semi-rural areas (or deep into a national park) to encounter. I don’t think I’ve ever come across one in the wild, but then I’m a city-dweller. They’re a fact of life out in the sticks, but that’s only a small percentage of the population, and seriously dangerous snakes are a relatively small percentage of the varieties out there.
Cone shells and blue-ring octupus are only way up on the north coast away from most of the population centres, so it’s mainly tourists that deal with them.
There’s sharks in the ocean variously, but most places you’d risk encountering them, they net the beaches. There’s probably three or four surfers encounter them a year, kind of thing.
The spiders people are going to get freaked out by, like I say, are hunstmen (which gallop across your ceiling, and can get huge) and orb-weavers which make big showy webs in trees, and look like something out of dark souls. However, they’re no threat to anyone but cockroaches.
Also yeah, most of this continent is desert - it’s only really habitable round the very edges.