SkittleBunny
Arachnosquire
- Joined
- Aug 25, 2016
- Messages
- 96
Most of the people who come in wanting to handle tarantulas are 100% beginners.. This makes non beginners nervous.. As beginners generally lack the experience and knowledge that comes with the hobby and some of them will end up killing their first T with heat lamps, tall enclosures, or handling accidents. Live and learn. (Thats why Arachnoboards is here! It is a great tool for beginners to learn with!)
Seasoned hobbyists, (2 years or more in the hobby) have normally held a tarantula by then. There are reasons however; and none of them are "because I want to show it off" or "because I want to hold it" unless they are too immature to see that risking injury to the spider is not worth showing it off or feeling like the spider loves you, when in fact you are just a surface to it. (Even I'm guilty of handling a pet shop rosie when I was a beginner..even though nothing went wrong 100 things could have)
Examples are; having to briefly have the t on your hand if it comes over the edge of the enclosure during maintainance, and this is only if you were unable to simply block it from crawling out, which happens to the best of us. (for those kinds of Ts that just always know when the lid is up..) Or having to handle spiderlings during shipping/receiving (for breeders with 100s of slings where it just happens occasionally)
Otherwise there really arent any reasons why you should handle them; even though sometimes we'll have to, providing the situation calls for it. There are many ways to avoid handling your T; cups are great for this as you can place a T in a cup without touching it with your skin at all.
There are safe ways of handling, but the risks outweigh the reward and the information is there to make an informed choice on wether or not to handle your T (which honestly isn't that great..its just a spider, handling will not earn you bragging rights here.)
Bottom line: if you love your spider, dont handle it. It could run away, be dropped, jump off of you, get smacked off of you by an unsuspecting stranger..or even run up your arm and down your back where you cant see it which increases the risk of injury to both you and your beloved spider.
Knowing the risks, it honestly just isn't worth it! Right?
Have a blessed day everyone! I hope this is informative to beginners or those thinking about handling their tarantulas.
Seasoned hobbyists, (2 years or more in the hobby) have normally held a tarantula by then. There are reasons however; and none of them are "because I want to show it off" or "because I want to hold it" unless they are too immature to see that risking injury to the spider is not worth showing it off or feeling like the spider loves you, when in fact you are just a surface to it. (Even I'm guilty of handling a pet shop rosie when I was a beginner..even though nothing went wrong 100 things could have)
Examples are; having to briefly have the t on your hand if it comes over the edge of the enclosure during maintainance, and this is only if you were unable to simply block it from crawling out, which happens to the best of us. (for those kinds of Ts that just always know when the lid is up..) Or having to handle spiderlings during shipping/receiving (for breeders with 100s of slings where it just happens occasionally)
Otherwise there really arent any reasons why you should handle them; even though sometimes we'll have to, providing the situation calls for it. There are many ways to avoid handling your T; cups are great for this as you can place a T in a cup without touching it with your skin at all.
There are safe ways of handling, but the risks outweigh the reward and the information is there to make an informed choice on wether or not to handle your T (which honestly isn't that great..its just a spider, handling will not earn you bragging rights here.)
Bottom line: if you love your spider, dont handle it. It could run away, be dropped, jump off of you, get smacked off of you by an unsuspecting stranger..or even run up your arm and down your back where you cant see it which increases the risk of injury to both you and your beloved spider.
Knowing the risks, it honestly just isn't worth it! Right?
Have a blessed day everyone! I hope this is informative to beginners or those thinking about handling their tarantulas.