Native spiders went busy spinning their webs to create their new homes on top of tall grasses, bushes and fences.

The flood is finally over for Wagga Wagga residents. However, damages of properties, loss of lives and injuries will remain in the memories of the people.

Days of rain got rivers swollen and risked dams to spill. The long running rainfall flooded several states and forced thousands of residents to evacuate and leave their houses behind.

Authorities have to deal with restoring roads and repairing properties including fencing, livestock and other infrastructure losses. According to Michael McCormack, local MP, around $500 million alone might be needed to manage all those mentioned damages.

While everyone is looking at re-establishing properties, countless hairy-legged critters are busying rebuilding their homes.

To keep themselves away from the floodwater that swept through towns and nearby paddocks, native spiders found a way to secure themselves by flying up while spinning webs making homes to a higher ground.

They created homes across bushes and sticks that made towns looking like being covered by a white blanket.

Last year's flood in Pakistan also created the same scenario with local spiders rebuilding their homes on a higher distance from where they normally used to create their resting webs.

Several residents woke up to an extraordinary panorama of a wide and thick, white blanket that seemed to cover most of the areas after the flood had stopped.

Surely, these spiders knew how to protect themselves. They've got the initiative that left people amazed.

Browse the slides to see the amazing scenes.

Creating new homes for these little local creatures is obviously not a problem. They've got endless webs that they could spin anytime they want to build a new resting place.