I started out with 2 L. parahybana slings May this year at an age of 25. Then I got B. smithi, P. murinus and P. ornata a couple of month later and then I got H. minax, H. albostriatum and a P. regalis and last time I got an A. seemanni which brings it to a total of 9 T's :)
I found my 4" B.smithi making a molting mat earlyer to day and this evening it flipped over an is molting right now. But what I don't understand is why it is molting since it molted about 2½ month ago :? And from what I can tell there has not been anything that could have provocked such an early...
I asked Søren Rafn from Denmark that same question regarding my burrowing P.ornata, and he said that sometimes some pokes just burrows for no reason.
I guess it's a little like Usambaras where some are burrowers and some are arboreal.
The package i've been waiting for in 6 days(althougt it almost felt like years) finally arrived :D
P.regalis at 1", H.minax at 4/5" and H.albostriatum also at 4/5".
I'm just so thrilled =D And me who thought that I would never raise so little slings :rolleyes: Just hope I can manage it :)...
Ofcourse :) Was just curios about the 3 pregnant females in Europe. Thats not alot of different bloodlines, so I thought that there were quite a chance that the offspring at one time or another would be part of an inbreeding if no record were kept.
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