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- Jan 25, 2008
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The rarest T...
Would be the one we haven't found yet.
It's kind of like indie music. ;-P
Would be the one we haven't found yet.
It's kind of like indie music. ;-P
Not only in the US.Actually, I'd have to say male specimens of E. pachypus here in the states.
Not in Europe.Haplopelma vonwirthi?
chris why you gotta name everything you own!some of the more rare asian species would be
Ornithoctonus costalis
Ornithoctonus andersoni
Ornithoctonus sp."Koh samui"
Ornithoctonus sp."Surat Thani"
Ornithoctoninae sp."Malthai"
Haplopelma sp."Bach ma"
Cyriopagopus sp."Sulawesi"
Cyriopagopus sp."Borneo black"
Cyriopogopus sp."Sumatra"
Cyriopagopus sp."Sarawack"
Poecilotheria smithi
There are some of these in the US......Poecilotheria hanumavilasumica
From what I have read on the BTS site these are not in the U.S yet and also are found in only one place on a 60 acre tract thats a wildlife perserve in India.
John
The rarest T...IN THE HOBBY... would mean it has been found. If it hasn't been found yet, that would make it none existant in the hobby, not rare. Theres no telling who has what but it is interesting to ponder which, if any, in your own collection was a good find.The rarest T...
Would be the one we haven't found yet.
It's kind of like indie music. ;-P
Well, if 180$ for a sling is not expensive for you... it's all relative I guess.M. balfouri isn't that expensive in europe anymore. Slings go for 180 dollars or so.
Edit: Oh and many people have hanumavilasumica here...
It's definitely too expensive for me, but when you think what they cost about a year ago...Well, if 180$ for a sling is not expensive for you... it's all relative I guess.
I recently had a chance to buy a female of this species. 190 dollars was too much for me though...Maybe Xenesthis sp. "blue"
I'm not sure about this. But we're talking about known specieses so I assume someone has them. Maybe someone who lives near to their biotope.Are those two even present in the hobby?