Trenor
Arachnoprince
- Joined
- Jan 28, 2016
- Messages
- 1,893
This hobby can allow you to flex all kinds of building muscles. I enclosure doesn't have to be monolithic in order to use building skills.I guess I wanted a really big project, to use my knowledge of building stuff
Keeping tarantulas is not hard but does require learning. Anything is simple once you know what to do. There is a wide range of tarantulas out there with different needs, colors, temperament, enclosure requirements etc. It is a challenge learning to care for them all correctly.This whole Tarantula & Scorpion thing really is aimed towards people that want something simple.
Again, I feel your going to an extreme without proper understanding. It's the pet not the enclosure that makes the challenge. Also man, deciding if your going to own a cobra takes a lot more consideration then enclosure size.I want a challange. Maybe I'll get a Cobra or something.. But I checked some videos on that too, and their enclosures are tiny too.
Finally, let me just say, you should study up on all the pets your interested in and decide on one that's in your skill level and you feel you can care for(keep in mind how long some of these animals live). Then use your building skills to set up a nice home for it. I have reptiles and tarantulas. They all have good enclosures. My Bearded Dragon has custom cut slate tile flooring in his home. I built my ball python's hide with shelving wood and he enclosure layout is very functional and looks great too. My Ts have nice enclosure layouts as well. There is plenty of opportunity to get your build on but please get a pet because you are interested in that pet and want to take care of it. Needing a building project is not a great reason to buy a pet.