What's on your wish list?

DeanK

Arachnosquire
Joined
Jun 16, 2016
Messages
81
Check out Thrixopelma genus :) ockerti and cyaneolum come to mind as pretty T's from that genus
I love my ockerti, stupid butt in the air when it's annoyed is hilarious.

My want list is
P. metallica
C. darlingi
T. cyaneolum
B. emelia
G. iherengi
H. sp Colombia
 

Jeff23

Arachnolord
Joined
Jul 27, 2016
Messages
620
Cyclosternum fasciatum now Davus fasciatus
You are right. The problem is that most of the Google and board links switch over to the old name so I copied and pasted from the wrong one. I have several Davus Penalores and am happy with them.
 

Jeff23

Arachnolord
Joined
Jul 27, 2016
Messages
620
I was only at two Ts when my boyfriend finally decided to stop trying to negotiate a tarantula limit. That was a few months ago and I'm now at four--I'm trying to go a little slow and not freak him out too much. I have:

0.1 G. porteri
0.0.1 G. pulchripes
0.0.1 LP
0.1 B. vagans

On my (short) list:
Euathlus sp. red
A. chalcodes (or hentzi--I'm from MO so it would be cool to have something native to my home state)
N. chromatus
GBB
E. parvulus
M. robostrum
B. albopilosum

You can tell I'm into NW terrestrials. ;) On that note, if there are any you think are underrated, I'd love to hear your suggestions! (Thanks @magicmed for the N. chromatus suggestion awhile back!)
Of your wish list I have Euathlus Sp. Red, GBB, and M Robostrum. All three are nice choices and different from each other on their activity. Tell your boyfriend that T's need to be owned in multiples of seven.
 

Estein

Arachnoknight
Joined
Feb 11, 2016
Messages
153
Of your wish list I have Euathlus Sp. Red, GBB, and M Robostrum. All three are nice choices and different from each other on their activity. Tell your boyfriend that T's need to be owned in multiples of seven.
Ha, I should. I don't know why he's so hesitant about the Ts--he's an entomologist, for crying out loud. He should be all over the idea of more arthropods. :rolleyes:
 

Estein

Arachnoknight
Joined
Feb 11, 2016
Messages
153
Check out Thrixopelma genus :) ockerti and cyaneolum come to mind as pretty T's from that genus
I read somewhere recently (sorry--I can't remember where, but not on Arachnoboards) that Thrixopelma is arboreal. Thoughts?
 

Bugmom

Arachnolord
Joined
May 28, 2012
Messages
646
What I have:

Acanthoscurria geniculata
Aphonopelma chalcodes (formerly known as sp. "Flagstaff Orange")
Aphonopelma... one of the newly classified species but frankly I don't know which one, but it's not a hentzi
Aphonopelma seemani
Augacephalus ezendami
Avicularia diversipes
Avicularia versicolor
Brachypelma albiceps
Brachypelma albopilosum
Brachypelma baumgarteni
Brachypelma boehmei (most likely a boehmei/baum hybrid)
Brachypelma vagans
Bumba cabocla
Ceratogyrus darlingi
Chromatopela Cyaneopubescens
Davus fasciatus
Encyocratella olivacea
Ephebopus cyanognathus
Ephebopus murinus
Euathlus parvula
Eupalaestrus campestratus
Grammastola rosea RCF
Haplocosmia himalayana
Hapalopus sp. Colombia large
Harpactira pulchripes
Heterothele gabonensis
Lasiadora parahybana
Megaphobema mesomelas
Omothymus sp. "Hati Hati"
Poecilotheria fasciata
Psalmopoeus cambridgei
Psalmopoeus irminia

What I want (this is not nearly a complete list):
Holothele incei (I have some of these coming at least)
Pterinopelma sazimai
Xenesthis (any/all)
Linothele megatheloides
Linothele fallax
Euathlus sp. "blue"
Idiothele mira
Cyclosternum sp. "machala"
Haplopelma vonwirthi
Kochiana brunnipes (I had one, it was male, and unfortunately mating was unsuccessful)
Lampropelma violaceopes
Pamphobeteus sp. "platyomma"
Psalmopoeus pulcher
Pseudhapalopus sp. "blue"
Tapinauchenius plumipes
Theraphosinae sp. "Panama"
Psalmopoeus ecclesiasticus
Harpactira cafreriana
Harpactira namaquensis
Harpactira tigrina
Sahydroaraneus raja
Thrigmopoeus psychedelicus
 

Kodi

Title Master
Old Timer
Joined
Jul 27, 2012
Messages
315
I'm glad to say I have the species that were top on my mental list. Buuuut one species will always be at the top.
Typhochlaena seladonia
 

Walker253

Arachnobaron
Joined
Jun 12, 2016
Messages
554
What I have:
0.1 A. genticulata
0.2 A. chalcodes
0.1 A. hentzi
0.1 A. seemanni
0.0.1 A. avicularia
0.2 B. smithi
0.0.2 C. darlingi
0.0.1 E. murinus
0.1.1 G. pulcripes
0.0.1 Hapolopus sp. (Columbia) large
0.1 H. gigas
0.1 L. parahybana
0.1 N. chromatus
0.1 P. muticus
0.1 P. cancerides
0.1 P. regalis
0.1 P. cambridgei
0.1 P. irminias
0.1 P. murinus
0.0.2 T. okerti

What I want:
#10 to #3 in no particular order
A.bicoloratum
B. baumgarteni
B. emilia
C cyanopubescens
E campestratus
Homoeomma sp fire
I. mira
P. pulcher
#2
P metallica
#1
G pulchra
 

KezyGLA

Arachnoking
Joined
Apr 8, 2016
Messages
3,013
Sorry to hear you are struggling. I can relate on the time involved. I probably got too many slings myself, but I do know it will get a lot easier once they reach juvenile state. I have got all of my T's set up with deep water dishes now to help me out on watering. But it doesn't fix the problem where some of them use it as a bolus toilet:vomit: or bulldozer landfill.

Hope it gets better for you.
Heheh you got that right! Deeper dishes work ok but I have a fan on constantly to prevent mould and mites with my more tropical species so they dry out quickly. It is a pain but I still love them all, though its time for most to get sold:(
 

johnny quango

Arachnoknight
Old Timer
Joined
May 17, 2013
Messages
260
This is my current collection
Acanthoscurria ferina
Aphonopelma serratum
Aphonopelma gabeli ?
Avicularia braunshauseni
Avicularia sp colombia
Avicularia metallica
Brachypelma albiceps
Brachypelma albopilosum hobby
Brachypelma annitha
Brachypelma auratum
Brachypelma emilia
Brachypelma klaasi
Brachypelma schroederi
Brachypelma smithi
Brachypelma verdezi
Chromatopelma cyaneopubescens
Crypsidromus puriscal
Cyclosternum pentalore
Dolichothele bolivianum
Dolichothele diamantinensis
Euathlus sp red
Euathlus parvula
Euathlus sp north
Eucratoscelus constrictus
Eupalaestrus weijenberghi
Grammostola actaeon
Grammostola anthracina
Grammostola iheringi
Grammostola pulchra
Grammostola pulchripes
Heterothele villosella
Hapalopus triseriatus lowland
Megaphobema mesomelas
Megaphobema robustum
Pachistopelma bromelicola
Pamphobeteus sp machalla
Pamphobeteus sp mascara
Pamphobeteus nigricolor x2
Phormictopus cochleasvorax
Psalmopoeus cambridgei
Theraphosinae sp cuzco
Thrixopelma cyaneolum
Thrixopelma sp cajamarca x2
Thrixopelma lagunas
Thrixopelma pruriens
Vitalius sorocabae
I think that's everybody and my current wishlist is completely empty
 

Red Eunice

Arachnodemon
Joined
Mar 2, 2014
Messages
666
Short "wishlist": S. hoffmanni.
That is all I'm missing of the horned species currently available in the hobby.
 

DeanK

Arachnosquire
Joined
Jun 16, 2016
Messages
81
I read somewhere recently (sorry--I can't remember where, but not on Arachnoboards) that Thrixopelma is arboreal. Thoughts?
I think the ockerti is the only member of the genus with arboreal leanings, I've read that this is because the region where they live is prone to flooding in the rainy season and they go up to avoid the water. Mine spends most of it's time on the floor
 

WeightedAbyss75

Arachnoangel
Joined
Feb 22, 2014
Messages
921
Right now, I would love to get a P. rufilata. What is not to love about a green and red beast of an arboreal that can teleport ;)
 

basin79

ArachnoGod
Active Member
Joined
Sep 14, 2013
Messages
5,893
Eva Green carrying a tub containing a juvenile female Chilobrachy sp electric blue.
 

sdsnybny

Arachnogeek
Joined
Apr 29, 2015
Messages
1,330
More female molts than the males ;(
@Marijan2
Also there has never been Davus fasciatus in the hobby all are now Davus pentaloris. Davus fasciatus has black carapace and looks smaller than pentaloris
Check recent paper by Ray Gabriel
 

Redneck

Arachnoprince
Old Timer
Joined
Aug 1, 2009
Messages
1,393
Seeing everyone's current list and wish list...it makes me really miss my old collection.

The only reason I am limiting my current collection is I am limited on space and time. More limit on the space than time! So I am just wanting to get the species that really catch my attention.

One day, when my wife and I can get the land and house we want, I will dedicate a room to Ts again and get back into breeding and larger collection.
 

Estein

Arachnoknight
Joined
Feb 11, 2016
Messages
153
I think the ockerti is the only member of the genus with arboreal leanings, I've read that this is because the region where they live is prone to flooding in the rainy season and they go up to avoid the water. Mine spends most of it's time on the floor
Awesome, thanks for the info!
 

AlbatrossWarrior

Arachnosquire
Joined
Feb 6, 2016
Messages
147
I want so many T's it's ridiculous :banghead:

Right now I REALLY want a few P. murinus DCF and a TCF, if I could ever find any

But by next summer I really want to have an M. balfouri, S. calceatum, H. maculata, and H. pulchripes

And if I ever had money to spend, I would get my dream T, Typhochlaena seladonia
 
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