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Fauna · Wells-next-the-Sea, Norfolk, United Kingdom

Mass Spider Migration — UK Autumn

The money spider (Erigone atra and related Linyphiidae) autumn ballooning migration across England from August through October — millions of tiny spiders simultaneously climbing to the tips of grass stems and fence posts and releasing silk threads that catch the breeze to carry them hundreds of kilometres — creates an annual 'gossamer' event that turns fields and hedgerows silver with accumulated silk threads on calm autumn mornings after the migration night. The spider ballooning event's combination of its extraordinary biological mechanism (the spiders' use of electrostatic fields as well as wind to achieve lift — the Earth's atmospheric electrical gradient helping spiderlings 'surf' on silk without wind) and its sheer scale (the equivalent of 1.4 million spiders per square kilometre in peak migration nights) creates one of Britain's most extensively occurring but least observed natural phenomena. The Suffolk and Norfolk coastal grasslands produce the most visible gossamer deposition, the fields' short grass retaining the silk threads in photogenic horizontally banded formations.

When
Aug — Oct
Best viewing
On still autumn mornings after peak ballooning nights, coastal grasslands and hedgerows at Holkham and nearby Norfolk sites are draped in horizontal bands of gossamer silk — a silent, eerie, and photogenic spectacle. Arrive early for the best light and before breeze lifts the threads.
Category
Fauna
Status
Returns Aug 2026

About this spectacle

On calm autumn mornings across the North Norfolk Coast, fields and hedgerows transform into shimmering silver landscapes as millions of money spiders complete their annual ballooning migration. From late August through October, tiny Linyphiidae spiders climb to the tips of grass stems and fence posts, release fine silk threads, and ride the breeze — assisted not only by wind but by the Earth's atmospheric electrical gradient. The morning after peak migration nights, accumulated gossamer lies in horizontally banded formations across the short coastal grasslands at places like Holkham, turning the landscape luminous in low autumn light. The scale is staggering — equivalent to 1.4 million spiders per square kilometre on peak nights — yet the event passes largely unnoticed. Visitors who arrive early on a still, dewy morning will find fields draped in delicate silk, catching the light and stretching to the horizon. There is no noise, no obvious movement — just an uncanny silver stillness that gradually reveals itself as one of Britain's most extraordinary biological events.

When to go

Aug — Oct

Getting there

Nearest airport: NWI. Nearest city: Norwich.

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