G. pulchra question

puck4u

Arachnopeon
Joined
Sep 15, 2010
Messages
5
Hey all,

I have searched and cant find the exact answer to my problem. About 4 days ago my little G. pulchra went into his hide, did a little bulldozing, and has sealed himself inside the hide. I thought it to be normal since I have found burrowing is a normal characteristic, but I have not seen him in 4 days now...including all hours of the night. I have put a cricket in to see if it "vanishes" but is still there today. The substrate is about 5" deep and the tank is about 60% humididty. temps around 75 degrees. Do I just wait and wonder? is it a premolt thing? do I dig him out to check on him? UGH !!!!:?:wall:
 

AbraCadaver

Arachnoknight
Old Timer
Joined
Feb 6, 2009
Messages
296
Its probably premolt if he's not taking prey.

Just leave him be, when he's ready he will come out and show off his new suit! :D

Even if it's not premolt, he might just think the weird giant poking their nose into his house is a bit creepy =p
 

jt39565

Arachnoknight
Joined
Aug 28, 2010
Messages
179
I agree, mine does that from time to time, without molting, I call it a practice molt.
 

curiousme

Arachnoprince
Old Timer
Joined
Dec 11, 2008
Messages
1,661
It might be in premolt, or it might be settling in for the winter. It isn't uncommon for terrestrials to burrow down and then seal it up in the fall and have some me time until spring, when they emerge freshly molted. Don't dig it out, it is just being a tarantula. If it wants to come out, or needs water, it will come out and get some. Probably at night when you're asleep! You don't worry until you smell a smelly smell that smells smelly.
 

Terry D

Arachnodemon
Old Timer
Joined
Nov 21, 2009
Messages
733
Puck, Yeah, probably best to just leave it alone. There were a few times when my first two little ones would go into this mode rather early- sometimes a week-and-a-half or so after molting, after eating a few good meals back to back. I then waited a few days and scraped a little sub to the side and poked a cricket in. Often it was taken. When they'd go into this mode a few weeks after molting it was always premolt and theyd refuse. The small ones I have now are not fed quite as often. Interestingly, I don't run into the above situation anymore. They don't even burrow. Those I have now usually wanna climb out onto my hand when I open the cage. {D

Terry
 

puck4u

Arachnopeon
Joined
Sep 15, 2010
Messages
5
I love this place!! thank you all for the advice... I will just keep fresh water in there and wait it out:clap:....or smell for the smelly smell {D
 

darkart82

Arachnosquire
Old Timer
Joined
Aug 22, 2009
Messages
83
id raise the temps to 80 to 84 and drop it to 75 to 78 at night and raise the humidtiy to 65 to 70 percent , brazil has beautiful rainforests
 

puck4u

Arachnopeon
Joined
Sep 15, 2010
Messages
5
Sooooooo,

Im going into week 2 and still no sign of life....still blocked in and and the hasnt taken any food.....:?
 

Scoolman

Arachnolord
Old Timer
Joined
Feb 9, 2010
Messages
612
id raise the temps to 80 to 84 and drop it to 75 to 78 at night and raise the humidtiy to 65 to 70 percent , brazil has beautiful rainforests
Good job dark. Someone actually did their homework beyond the care sheets. Your suggestion for the temps are good. But the humidity puck is keeping is good. G pulchra come from the pampas grasslands of Uruguay and Brazil.
Puck, it is very likely your G pulchra is in pre-molt. Do not worry, tarantulas know how to take care of themselves. I have had mine seal their burrows for 4 weeks, molt, wait another 4weeks, then surface. Just keep the water full, and watch & wait. It will resurface when ready and hungry.
 

puck4u

Arachnopeon
Joined
Sep 15, 2010
Messages
5
Thank you schoolman for the info...I have read some of your blog btw..good stuff and lots of info. It's my favorite T in my collection right now and I'm just a little worried, thats all...I miss seeing him {D

I felt the humidity was about right, but I have now kept the entire room at a constant 81 degrees. Will keep watching and hoping :clap:
 

sja69

Arachnopeon
Joined
May 16, 2010
Messages
28
I posed the same question in this thread a while back, and after experiencing this behaviour from my Pulchra (it went away to molt),
I am no longer concerned by this. You can be 99.99% sure that it will be fine and that it knows what it's doing.
I also reiterate what has already been said many times, these animals have been around for millions of years.
 

killy

Arachnoknight
Old Timer
Joined
May 20, 2009
Messages
250
When I got my pulchra sling from Paul Becker, I brought the enclosure with me - Paul showed me how to set it up with a "starter-burrow" against the side surface of the enclosure, with a piece of cork as a sort cover - the pulchra took to it immediately, and pretty much stayed there - I named him Caveman - the "burrow-with-a-view" was a win-win, because Caveman made himself right at home in it, enlarging it here and there and securing the cork-lid with webbing, and I could spy on him whenever I wanted to. True to his name, he rarely came out of his cave, and when I introduced crickets, he'd wait for them to approach his narrow burrow opening, then pounce and drag them back into the cave/dining room.

I suggest you try this the next time the opportunity presents itself.

P.s - that was several molts ago - I've since rehoused him in a bigger enclosure with plenty of 'digging-substrate,' but he has chosen to stay "out" and has not even attempted to create another burrow.
 
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