No, all I did was watch the video in the post and spend most of my 72 years outdoors. I don't read video comments, too many dumbasses on Screwtube. If someone said what I said they either copied me from here or also understand nature. As for your experience with spider webs, most people don't just start flailing away like a scared child simply because they walk through a spider web. But mainly, not all spider webs are the same. Some will separate easily and some are extremely strong. It all depends on the type of prey that species of spider targets. Some of them you can tear through leaving parts intact. The web in the video is an orb weaver's web, the large yellow Garden Spider is in the orb weaver group. That's the spider I grew up calling the "writing spider" because of the zigzag lines (stabilimenta) in the web. BTW, they don't make those lines so that people will see them and not walk into their webs.
No, all I did was watch the video in the post and spend most of my 72 years outdoors. I don't read video comments, too many dumbasses on Screwtube. If someone said what I said they either copied me from here or also understand nature. As for your experience with spider webs, most people don't just start flailing away like a scared child simply because they walk through a spider web. But mainly, not all spider webs are the same. Some will separate easily and some are extremely strong. It all depends on the type of prey that species of spider targets. Some of them you can tear through leaving parts intact. The web in the video is an orb weaver's web, the large yellow Garden Spider is in the orb weaver group. That's the spider I grew up calling the "writing spider" because of the zigzag lines (stabilimenta) in the web. BTW, they don't make those lines so that people will see them and not walk into their webs.