- Joined
- Apr 11, 2007
- Messages
- 5,438
*sigh...*
Citizen-smithi, a t with a legspan large enough to span the vertical gap left by the door of a 12x12 exoterra (8") is already too large for a 12x12 tank. for that matter, a 5" or 6" is already pushing it for a 12x12. Those things are great for arboreals but totally inappropriate for terrestrials.
This bothers me. Not because you're keeping a t this way but becausing you're advising somebody else to do so. You know it's an inappropriate setup because we all told you when you posted this question a few months ago. Why are you now advising a new keeper to do something you were told again and again was a bad idea?
1- A five or ten gallon (or even 20 for a big-un) tank is a far better enclosure for a large terrestrial tarantula than an exo-terra. There should not be more than 1.5x the legspan of the T in clearance between the substrate and the ceiling. This CANNOT be accomplished with the front opening doors on an exoterra. Once the t is big enough to span that space it has become too big for the floorspace available.
2- Humidity sensors are practicaly USELESS. Stop using them, stop worrying about them. Research your T and keep the soil appropriately moist for that species. If you stop paying attention to your hygrometer and start paying attention to the T it will tell you if it's comfortable. Use the hygrometer to monitor the ambient humidity in the room, that's all.
It is irresponsible to advise new people to just do things the hard way out of the gate. Sure, you can MAKE an exoterra sort-of-work but at best it still won't be as good as a plain old glass terrarium with a plexiglass lid. They also cost less than half of what the exoterras do. Why set somebody up to fail by telling them how to modify the wrong enclosure to make it barely adequate when you could just say "Get a ten gallon tank"?
Citizen-smithi, a t with a legspan large enough to span the vertical gap left by the door of a 12x12 exoterra (8") is already too large for a 12x12 tank. for that matter, a 5" or 6" is already pushing it for a 12x12. Those things are great for arboreals but totally inappropriate for terrestrials.
This bothers me. Not because you're keeping a t this way but becausing you're advising somebody else to do so. You know it's an inappropriate setup because we all told you when you posted this question a few months ago. Why are you now advising a new keeper to do something you were told again and again was a bad idea?
1- A five or ten gallon (or even 20 for a big-un) tank is a far better enclosure for a large terrestrial tarantula than an exo-terra. There should not be more than 1.5x the legspan of the T in clearance between the substrate and the ceiling. This CANNOT be accomplished with the front opening doors on an exoterra. Once the t is big enough to span that space it has become too big for the floorspace available.
2- Humidity sensors are practicaly USELESS. Stop using them, stop worrying about them. Research your T and keep the soil appropriately moist for that species. If you stop paying attention to your hygrometer and start paying attention to the T it will tell you if it's comfortable. Use the hygrometer to monitor the ambient humidity in the room, that's all.
It is irresponsible to advise new people to just do things the hard way out of the gate. Sure, you can MAKE an exoterra sort-of-work but at best it still won't be as good as a plain old glass terrarium with a plexiglass lid. They also cost less than half of what the exoterras do. Why set somebody up to fail by telling them how to modify the wrong enclosure to make it barely adequate when you could just say "Get a ten gallon tank"?
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