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Tarantula Forum Topics
General Tarantula Discussion
Molting?
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<blockquote data-quote="Tortoise Tom" data-source="post: 133288" data-attributes="member: 27883"><p>I don't know where in the world you are, but it is very dry here in my climate in the Southern CA desert. I like to increase humidity a bit when mine are molting. I mist the enclosure a bit, but no where near the spider, and I like the substrate to be a little more damp than usual. You can also add humidity to the room, if that is possible in your situation.</p><p></p><p>If your climate and the room where your tarantula lives is already moderately humid, none of this is really necessary, but it shouldn't hurt either. Just don't spray or wet the actual tarantula.</p><p></p><p>What species are we talking about? I can't tell from the pic.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Tortoise Tom, post: 133288, member: 27883"] I don't know where in the world you are, but it is very dry here in my climate in the Southern CA desert. I like to increase humidity a bit when mine are molting. I mist the enclosure a bit, but no where near the spider, and I like the substrate to be a little more damp than usual. You can also add humidity to the room, if that is possible in your situation. If your climate and the room where your tarantula lives is already moderately humid, none of this is really necessary, but it shouldn't hurt either. Just don't spray or wet the actual tarantula. What species are we talking about? I can't tell from the pic. [/QUOTE]
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Tarantula Forum Topics
General Tarantula Discussion
Molting?
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