SkittleBunny
Arachnosquire
- Joined
- Aug 25, 2016
- Messages
- 96
My LP slings, only because they are so tiny I cant see them hardly, so feeding them is stressful. Just newbie problems .. Lol
From the Repticon in BR?My LP slings, only because they are so tiny I cant see them hardly, so feeding them is stressful. Just newbie problems .. Lol
I have two E. sp red slings. One of them is doing exactly this. It made a big burrow up against the side of the enclosure, sealed itself up and hasn't come out for months. I can see it in there, and most of the time its got its face buried up into where the burrow entrance was, but it never comes out. I'm almost worried it trapped itself down there. Still hasn't molted.The only T in my collection that consistently frustrates me is the Euathlus sp. red sling. It burrows for months and seals itself in, not allowing me to provide it with food or water. It doesn't seem to be growing, which is probably because it's not eating, which is probably because it's underground 24/7. I have tried leaving tiny pre-killed crickets in there overnight, just in case it came out while I was asleep, but it doesn't seem to ever touch them. As of right now, I regret buying it. Maybe if it survives and gets bigger, I will start enjoying it. Right now, I'm mostly worried that it's not getting enough water, so I spray the inside of the vial it's in, but that evaporates quickly.![]()
Yes and yes lol I forgot the booth nameFrom the Repticon in BR?
Did you get them from the vendor adjacent to The Caffeinated Spider?
The only T in my collection that consistently frustrates me is the Euathlus sp. red sling. It burrows for months and seals itself in, not allowing me to provide it with food or water. It doesn't seem to be growing, which is probably because it's not eating, which is probably because it's underground 24/7. I have tried leaving tiny pre-killed crickets in there overnight, just in case it came out while I was asleep, but it doesn't seem to ever touch them. As of right now, I regret buying it. Maybe if it survives and gets bigger, I will start enjoying it. Right now, I'm mostly worried that it's not getting enough water, so I spray the inside of the vial it's in, but that evaporates quickly.![]()
Mine must be broken, it did do a little excavating but sits out in the open almost all the time, it rarely retreats when disturbed and it eats like a beast (watching it wrestle mealworms is hilarious).I have two E. sp red slings. One of them is doing exactly this. It made a big burrow up against the side of the enclosure, sealed itself up and hasn't come out for months. I can see it in there, and most of the time its got its face buried up into where the burrow entrance was, but it never comes out. I'm almost worried it trapped itself down there. Still hasn't molted.
The other hasn't burrowed at all, just sits on the top. Molted once so far. Didn't seem to grow at all from the molt.
I got mine as a surprise freebie (like my C. huahini it wasn't a species I was particularly interested in) and I do actually enjoy keeping it, as "pet holes" go it's actually pretty visible (it can usually be found "doing a lurk" at the entrance of its burrow but does sometimes come out), mine has a great feeding response and usually only refuses food when in pre-moultNot sure if I would consider this one a PITA but my H. gigas named Larry never wants to eat for me. He also happens to be one of my favorite tarantulas, even though most of the time I only see one of his legs; hence why I call him a "pet leg" instead of a "pet hole."
Despite being reclusive and never really seeing Larry, he also possesses the most character out of all my spiders. I just love him so much that I decided to get more H. gigas slings-Leonard and Laureline. I refer to all my H. gigas spiders as the "Larries."
Complete PITA? Maybe so, but so much love. How could one not fall in love with a big, fat, red reclusive spider?
I heard that they grow a bit slower than other species from the genus, mine spazzes out and runs laps of the enclosure when disturbed as well.Its growing at less than half the rate of my other two pokies. And every time a light turns on or anything moves near it, it spazzes out and starts sprinting around.
Had to look up what 'firebrats' were, lol. Funny nameProbably my Chilobrachys electric blue slings. When I got them I gave them extra deep substrate and a little hole to start their burrow from in one corner so I could watch them but they both decided that wasn't a good idea so they made holes exactly adjacent to the pre-dug burrow but not directly at the side so I can't look inside. Now that wouldn't be a problem if it wasn't for their strange food preferences. Pinhead crickets? Red runners? Oh no, absolutely not. The only thing they eat reliably are firebrats (which I luckily have a colony of).
The problem with these is that they don't keep running around in there, after some panic the firebrats just sit completely still basically forever. I've seen them remain in the exact same spot for days. And the slings of course don't venture out of their holes so they don't find them. I can't go in there and poke the firebrats either because then the slings retreat back into their burrow and don't come out for at least an hour or so
I've tried offering pre-killed ones too but they don't seem to care.
At least they're nowhere near as bad as the Heteropodas (both slings and adults) but this is a T thread
Yeah, my channel on youtube has the same name. I decided to finally join here after lurking for years, mostly to look at the classifieds section for a friend to be honest. He's in the US and wants to get into Ts and he wants a C. versicolor, so I've been looking around for him. But I have to say I do enjoy posting here tooYour nickname sounds familiar, do you post videos on YouTube as well?