So im considering this just because I dont have the time. Here are the ones I might be willing to sell..
Aphonopelma Moderatum- 4inch female. Freshly Molted.
Megaphobema Robustum- 6inch female
Haplopelma Schmidti- 8inch Female. Freshly Molted.
What are the current asking prices for...
I had a MM h.maculata a while back and never had any agression problems. It was fast tho but he would definatly rather run than fight. once while I was feeding he ran out of his enclosure, up one of my legs, around my back, down the other leg, and eventually hid in the pocket of my camera bag...
Ive seen ruptured Ts before and they werent curled up, instead they remained pretty limp and floppy and spread out.
At least you have a good story to tell
No one I could find really knew much about the Ts. Honestly the setups werent great. They keep them in 2 foot tall hex cages with like 3 inches of substrate. But they seem settled and VERY well fed. The had some vinegaroons (One big one), a centipede, a bunch of AGB milis, some tailless...
So i went to butterfly world a couple days ago (south floridaians know Im sure but if you dont its a bug museum) and I checked out their spider collection. Not much, just a rosie, a curly, and a L. parahybana. Heres the crazy part...The Curly has ENORMOUS! It was BIGGER than the parahybana...
The orange leg has to be M. robustum at that price (and thats still a little high) I paid $150 for an adult female. All the other prices are high but the benefit is, the spiders are right there, you dont have to wait. And you dont have to pay shipping.
Looks like a trap to me (IMO). Try asking in the True Spiders & other arachnids section. Give it alot more room to burrow and keep it very moist. I keep mine in a tall jar filled alomost to the top with peat and mist once a week. Be careful with it too cause they are a little more potent...
So a week ago my AGB was fine, eating, digging, being normal and stuff and today I found it dead. Its been in the same spot for a few days but didnt think anything of it cause sometimes it does that. Its stiff as heck and the first few segments behind the head are cloudy and greyish looking...
Im 99% sure male versis have hooks but in my experience with other avics (no mature versis tho), the hooks arent too pronounced. A year does seem a bit soon to mature tho, pics would be helpful.
because the deserts they generally live in dont have fine, loose sand like that stuff u get for leopard geckos. They live in drier areas where the soil is nice and compact and they can build good burrows, not those discovery channel sand dunes.
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