Question
The Land Rover's two way radio aerial also made a great scaffold for a one inch bark spider that imperiously took up residence. Despite her diminutive size, she was an absolute dynamo. Every evening she strung out her web using the aerial as a support, and every morning she gobbled it all up, saving each precious milligram of protein snared in the gossamer threads, only to rebuild it again at dusk. We named her Wilma and her three yard wide web was an engineering marvel, an absolutely formidable, super sticky trap that seized any flying insect in a grip of silky steel, including four inch longhorn beetles, which she would methodically suck the life out of. Sometimes we needed to drive to the far end of the boma and as we started the vehicle she would hang on to her just completed web in a flat panic at the engine's vibrations. In the end, we always took pit on her and walked instead
1) The Land Rover's aerial made a scaffold for a bark spider that was an absolute dynamo every evening she strung out her web, and every morning she ______________ again. We named Wilma, and her web would seize any flying insect in a grip of steel. Sometimes we needed to drive to the far end of the boma, but because she would hang on to her web in a panic when we started the vehicle we __________________.
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GPT-4o mini
The Land Rover's aerial made a scaffold for a bark spider that was an absolute dynamo; every evening she strung out her web, and every morning she gobbled it all up again. We named her Wilma, and her web would seize any flying insect in a grip of steel. Sometimes we needed to drive to the far end of the boma, but because she would hang on to her web in a panic when we started the vehicle, we always took pity on her and walked instead.