If you're scared of spiders then you should probably stop reading now.
Because if the thought of coming face to face with a deadly black widow spider is enough to bring you out in a cold sweat, you're not going to want to hear about what happened to workers at an factory in Barton-upon-Humber.
Earlier this week, two black widow spiders - including a deadly female - and one less dangerous brown widow, were discovered at the engineering firm after they made their way to the UK in US-imported aircraft engines.
Unaware that the spiders could be lethal, workers captured them by trapping them inside glasses from the canteen and are now keeping them alive in jam jars, feeding them with flies and other spiders, while they try to find a suitable home.
The spiders travelled to TC Power from Kansas, on a KLM flight and a North Sea ferry.
When the the engines arrived, workers climbed underneath them and got to work with spanners - and that's when one of them saw an unusual spider scuttle out just inches from his colleagues head.
One of the men, Dave Holden, said: "We got a glass from the canteen area of the workshop and put it over it with a piece of card underneath it and tied some cloth around it."
Later that day, a male spider emerged, followed by the slightly less poisonous brown widow, which was found the next day hanging from its web off the side of one of the engines.
The team then searched the engines for more webs or spiders and workers were kitted out with thick overall and gloves to protect them from bites.
Managing director Stuart Elliott told the Daily Mail: "It is quite scary when you think we have had three or four people lying around underneath the engines, working within five or six inches of the frames where we found the first female black widow.
"We are quite eco-friendly here. They put paper tops on so they could breathe, put wet cotton wool in and fed them flies and other spiders. They have made webs and have got them there for after dinner."
A bite from the black widow, especially from the female, can be very serious - but if a healthy person was bitten they would probably survive if they received swift medical attention.
However children, the elderly or anyone with a heart or respiratory problem would be at much greater risk.
The black widow is usually only found in the US, in tropical areas, Australia and several countries in Europe.
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