FIREFIGHTERS are called to plenty of accidental blazes but this is probably the first one they’ve been to that was started by a spider.
Emergency services rushed to an apartment fire in the northern California city of Redding on Sunday after a man’s spider-killing abilities went haywire.
The fire started, according to witnesses, when a man had been attempting to kill a “huge” wolf spider with a blowtorch.
When the spider caught on fire, it scurried to a nearby mattress, which quickly went up in flames.
Despite trying to put out the fire with a garden hose, it quickly spread to curtains and a flag collection, forcing the evacuation of the entire building.
Crews responded quickly to the fire, containing it in 20 minutes and saving the rest of the building from damage.
But the apartment was left in a bad state.
Battalion Chief Rob Pitt told the Redding Spotlight that residents of the apartment where the blaze began would have to move out.
“They are going to have to find another place to live. The unit they were living in is uninhabitable,” Mr Pitt said.
Officials said the fire caused more than $14,000 worth of damage.
Wolf spiders aren’t poisonous but can inflict a painful bite if feeling threatened.
They are especially common in California and more than 200 species of the arachnid live throughout the country.