A black widow awaits its fate after being trapped in a jam jar by Kimberly Warner of Provo, who found the spider in her container of grapes grown in Bakersfield, Calif.
Mike Terry, Deseret News
PROVO — Kimberly Warner was chatting on the phone and washing the red grapes she had just purchased from the Orem Costco on Monday afternoon when she spotted it: a big, black spider.
"I thought it was just a big, monster grape spider," the Provo homemaker and mother of three said.
Then Warner saw the hourglass shape on the spider's back.
She ran to tell her husband, who didn't believe her at first. But after looking it up on the Internet, he determined it was a female black widow.
"I called my family and a bunch of my friends and told them to check their containers," Warner said. "I normally just grab one grape after another."
Warner trapped the spider in a jam container, along with a grape for the spider to eat, while she and her husband decided what to do with it. She described the spider as "shiny and pokey with long front legs." It was a little larger than a quarter, with a body about the size of two peas put together, Warner said.
She called Costco on Monday night, and by Tuesday morning, a manager from Costco called her to apologize. He then went to her house to retrieve the spider and information on the container about where the grapes were grown.
On Tuesday night, Warner got a call from the grower based in Bakersfield, Calif., who apologized and wanted to make sure Warner wasn't bitten or harmed in any way.
Jeff Warner, manager of the Orem Costco, said if another customer reports finding a black widow, the warehouse wholesaler will take further action.
"Costco is one of the best for pulling product if there is any concern," said Jeff Warner (no relation to Kimberly Warner). "This is just an isolated case right now. Insects are just about everywhere you go. That's why it's so important to clean your produce."
Growers use pesticides, he said, but they don't want to overdo it.
If bitten by a black widow, a person should go to the hospital to be treated, said Shawn Clark, insect collections manager at the Monte L. Bean Life Science Museum at BYU.
Usually, bite victims are treated and then released, Clark said, though some bites can land a person in the hospital for a few days.
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