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Tarantula Forum Topics
Tarantula Enclosures
Arboreal dangers for a tiny climber
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<blockquote data-quote="spider4747" data-source="post: 65240" data-attributes="member: 4241"><p>The holes are on the side so it is cross ventilated. The holes are less in number but bigger than the 6 holes on the plastic enclosure I was using. Idon't see the problem with the current set up since i'm sure one or two of these holes is big enough for a cricket to escape. I could just carve two more in.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Edit: I put 3 more in.</p><p></p><p>How do you poke holes into the plastic? Do you heat up a rod and just stick it? The plastic of the pot is easier to just spin the tip of the blade until it opens big enough</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="spider4747, post: 65240, member: 4241"] The holes are on the side so it is cross ventilated. The holes are less in number but bigger than the 6 holes on the plastic enclosure I was using. Idon't see the problem with the current set up since i'm sure one or two of these holes is big enough for a cricket to escape. I could just carve two more in. Edit: I put 3 more in. How do you poke holes into the plastic? Do you heat up a rod and just stick it? The plastic of the pot is easier to just spin the tip of the blade until it opens big enough [/QUOTE]
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Arboreal dangers for a tiny climber
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