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<blockquote data-quote="DewDrop" data-source="post: 61119" data-attributes="member: 4217"><p>Yeah with the set up, you can go cheap and reasonable with them. The advice is great on the forums. The collectors on here are serious with what they know and do a nice job helping people out. My a. avic or pink toe, eats a few crickets a month. Usually no more than five or six. I feed her a couple of crickets at a time and she either eats them quickly or refuses them. She won't eat any more than that. Humidity is important so just leave a water dish and get the substrate a little damp. It'll dry out. Height is important in an enclosure for the arboreal pink toe. I am no expert, I am also here to learn. Tarantulas shed their skin.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DewDrop, post: 61119, member: 4217"] Yeah with the set up, you can go cheap and reasonable with them. The advice is great on the forums. The collectors on here are serious with what they know and do a nice job helping people out. My a. avic or pink toe, eats a few crickets a month. Usually no more than five or six. I feed her a couple of crickets at a time and she either eats them quickly or refuses them. She won't eat any more than that. Humidity is important so just leave a water dish and get the substrate a little damp. It'll dry out. Height is important in an enclosure for the arboreal pink toe. I am no expert, I am also here to learn. Tarantulas shed their skin. [/QUOTE]
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