I thought your little avic bit you and pooed on you at the same time?Nope.. no bites here.
Yet!
No. My lack of handling my Ts really helps this.
If you're going to argue semantics you also need to look at the nomenclature that the term is being used in. Somebody who works HAZMAT and somebody who is just an arachnophile will have totally different definitions for the same term. And the prevading definition here is not an all encompassing term describing any time that you come into contact w/ the container.If you want to get semantical, anytime you take that enclosure off it's shelf, open the lid, or interact with the spider's environment, you are by definition "handling" that creature. (IE: I work in a warehouse offloading freight, therefore my title at work is "Material Handler.")
If you're going to argue semantics you also need to look at the nomenclature that the term is being used in. Somebody who works HAZMAT and somebody who is just an arachnophile will have totally different definitions for the same term. And the prevading definition here is not an all encompassing term describing any time that you come into contact w/ the container.
And I already admitted that bites happen more than just when you're handling (for you: when you're purposefully holding a tarantula or letting it walk on you) a tarantula. However, every bit helps when it comes to avoiding being tagged. (And I don't mean vandalized with spray paint so you don't get the definition confused.)
You should sell your P. striata if you want to keep it that way.I haven't been bit yet and hopefully never.