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Meet Elmo the B. Albopilosum (Honduran Curly Hair)
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<blockquote data-quote="VanessaS" data-source="post: 77025" data-attributes="member: 4948"><p>Spiderlings have to be kept in very small enclosures so it is easy for them to find their food and easier for you to control the humidity. An enclosure of that size will kill them and you would never find them in it. Keep them in the vial that the breeder sends them in and don't rehouse them until they have very obviously grown too big for the vial. Their rehousing should be done in increments according to their size. They won't be in the enclosure you detail above for a very long time.</p><p>While juveniles can be housed in a bit larger than average enclosure - spiderlings never can.</p><p>I'm sure that many of the members here have examples of the different sizes, and I have a couple myself, that can be posted on this thread to give you an idea.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="VanessaS, post: 77025, member: 4948"] Spiderlings have to be kept in very small enclosures so it is easy for them to find their food and easier for you to control the humidity. An enclosure of that size will kill them and you would never find them in it. Keep them in the vial that the breeder sends them in and don't rehouse them until they have very obviously grown too big for the vial. Their rehousing should be done in increments according to their size. They won't be in the enclosure you detail above for a very long time. While juveniles can be housed in a bit larger than average enclosure - spiderlings never can. I'm sure that many of the members here have examples of the different sizes, and I have a couple myself, that can be posted on this thread to give you an idea. [/QUOTE]
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Meet Elmo the B. Albopilosum (Honduran Curly Hair)
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