Oh okay. I'm not very knowledgeable on geckos. I just know they're too freaking cute.
Yeah, learning random facts about spiders is what I come to this thread for. Figure I can toss some random facts about stuff when I know it.
Tokay's get a reputation as being bitey and loud, and also get larger than Leopards do.
I remember the teeny little wall geckos that used to patrol the garden when I was a little kid in Bahrain. They were so damb fast!
The Bahrainis disliked them for no reason I ever understood, considering the island is so very well supplied with big black flies, large and aggressive mosquitos and other such insects. My parents were happy to encourage them.
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Brovid Hasselsmof[Growling historic on the fury road]Registered Userregular
I was a fan of the geckos in South Africa except for all the poop they used to leave all over my bed
Found this cutie hiding in a carton of milk boxes. She was rather upset that I was moving her home. I relocated her to my front entryway where it's not too cold but she can find lots of nooks to make a new home.
"Simple, real stupidity beats artificial intelligence every time." -Mustrum Ridcully in Terry Pratchett's Hogfather p. 142 (HarperPrism 1996)
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Kevin CristI make the devil hit his kneesand say the 'our father'Registered Userregular
Brovid Hasselsmof[Growling historic on the fury road]Registered Userregular
Eventful week for my spids, three molts in the last few days. Including the N. tripepii which I haven't seen in forever because it buried itself. Still haven't seen it, but it chucked its old exuvium out of its burrow some time last night so I at least know it's still alive.
Also recently fed my P. cambridgei for the first time since it molted last week, and it came out of its hide to chase the cricket which is the first time I've properly seen it in a while. And I think it might be time to rehouse it.
Lotta really entitled people up in arms about the gub'ment trying to tell them what species they can import and move around the states all willy nilly, holy shit.
Invasive species are a thing, y'all! We should definitely make determinations about species before they get here! Otherwise you just get burms in Florida again.
Funny how I've only heard about this SUPER SECRET ATTEMPT TO BAN PET KEEPING from
USark
And
One youtuber, linking to the USark page.
The entirety of the ammendment sounds reasonable af, if you're trying to prevent importation of species before you've been able to determine ecological impact. And also has carevouts to exempt already commonly imported and transported species, AND has a delay of a year before taking effect, specifically to address these common species.
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JedocIn the scupperswith the staggers and jagsRegistered Userregular
I would assume the Anti-Invasive Giant Spiders Act would get broad bipartisan support regardless of whether or not it was a sensible law. The campaign ads really write themselves.
I would assume the Anti-Invasive Giant Spiders Act would get broad bipartisan support regardless of whether or not it was a sensible law. The campaign ads really write themselves.
All you need are a couple pictures of those trees covered in webbing and a Jeff Daniels commercial or two, and the spodes wouldn't stand a chance.
I got another Brachypelma because, well, I couldn't figure out what it was exactly, so I had to take it home
It could be another emilia, but the coloration looks wrong for that. And googling to compare specimens is a fool's errand for brachys, thanks to near constant misidentification. I'll just need to see after the next molt.
Used to see bark spiders, like the first ones in this video but bigger, when I lived in RSA. They would run lines of silk across the roads at night, which were strong enough that if you drove into them they would stretch like an elastic band for quite a bit before breaking. Also at roughly the height of the people on the second row of the game viewer which made for much hilarity every time as I would slowly clothesline the volunteers in my car.
This one was hanging out in either my pajamas or blankets, and that shit don't fly.
She's got a pretty coppery racing stripe!
Before dumping her outside, I told her to eat many bugs, and stay out of my stuff.
I'm a bit worried about what skittery thing is going to make an appearance tomorrow; yesterday, a water bug appeared on my shoulder. I guess I did see a house centipede (on reflection, probably a silverfish, agh) the day before when cleaning, but I am way more aware of the current bug entente in my house -- the spider, they are behind on rent -- rent being paid in the form of pest control.
And obviously it was paying its taxes. I mean, you don't find any other insects in your bed, right?
"The western world sips from a poisonous cocktail: Polarisation, populism, protectionism and post-truth"
-Antje Jackelén, Archbishop of the Church of Sweden
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Andy JoeWe claim the land for the highlord!The AdirondacksRegistered Userregular
JedocIn the scupperswith the staggers and jagsRegistered Userregular
Upgrade! I put away a push lawn mower last fall, and by spring I see I have an ant farm tractor!
Sorry, ladies. If it were up to me I'd let you keep the whole thing, but the city starts writing tickets after a few weeks if I don't keep the front yard mowed.
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Brovid Hasselsmof[Growling historic on the fury road]Registered Userregular
JedocIn the scupperswith the staggers and jagsRegistered Userregular
Yeah, they booked it out of there pretty quick when I dragged it out of the shed and left it laying sideways on the lawn for a bit. It took me a minute to find a suitable stick so I could hold the lid open and get a picture without getting angry ants all over my hand, and in that time that top tray went from being completely covered with eggs to the few you see remaining. I think they have tunnels underneath the shed and they were just using the battery compartment as a nice dry nursery. I'll be interested to see to what extent they come back between now and next weekend.
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Brovid Hasselsmof[Growling historic on the fury road]Registered Userregular
I really don't like using crickets as a food source for my Ts, because they're really annoying to catch on account of they can jump, and they smell. So this time I got baby dubia roaches. But I've made a terrible mistake, because they just arrived and oh god they're so cute.
I really don't like using crickets as a food source for my Ts, because they're really annoying to catch on account of they can jump, and they smell. So this time I got baby dubia roaches. But I've made a terrible mistake, because they just arrived and oh god they're so cute.
Dubias have some money in them, if you decide to get a colony going. And aren't horribly difficult.
Or loud.
Or smelly.
Like a nice size breeder female you can flip for $2 a piece, here.
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Brovid Hasselsmof[Growling historic on the fury road]Registered Userregular
Yeah they're definitely pricey compared to crickets. I got ~30 baby roaches for like £7 which is crazy when I consider I can get ~150 baby crickets for £3. Crickets just suck so much though, and most of them end up just dying because my Ts can't eat them fast enough.
These are bigger than I was expecting. That combined with being a new type of food has provoked some funny responses from my slings. Lots of cowardly running away, or half curious half scared slapping while they figure out if they can eat it.
Yeah they're definitely pricey compared to crickets. I got ~30 baby roaches for like £7 which is crazy when I consider I can get ~150 baby crickets for £3. Crickets just suck so much though, and most of them end up just dying because my Ts can't eat them fast enough.
These are bigger than I was expecting. That combined with being a new type of food has provoked some funny responses from my slings. Lots of cowardly running away, or half curious half scared slapping while they figure out if they can eat it.
I have genuinely never had a T I own or care for at the shop really go for roaches.
I always end up having to fish out five or six cause the T ignores them, they burrow, and then a month later they're like all sitting in the water dish. Like fine fuckers, crickets and meal worms from now on!
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Brovid Hasselsmof[Growling historic on the fury road]Registered Userregular
Yeah the burrowing is annoying. I squished a few heads to stop that happening. I would have got red runners instead because they don't burrow, but nobody seems to sell them small enough.
Posts
Leopard geckos are great lizards, but that is not a leopard gecko.
Leopards don't have the toe pads to allow them to climb glass like that.
I'd guess it's some morph of a Tokay gecko, but that's just a guess based on a 30 second clip with no scale.
Yeah, learning random facts about spiders is what I come to this thread for. Figure I can toss some random facts about stuff when I know it.
Tokay's get a reputation as being bitey and loud, and also get larger than Leopards do.
But they're still cute, even if they can do a number on your fingers.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KvnHz2RWTVw
Look at this tiny dinosaur motherfucker!
It has anime eyes, so it's fitting that the tweet is from Japan.
To me it seemed like it was watching something it wanted to eat.
The Bahrainis disliked them for no reason I ever understood, considering the island is so very well supplied with big black flies, large and aggressive mosquitos and other such insects. My parents were happy to encourage them.
Neoholothele incei "Gold"
That lil spode is a fuckin beaut
the Japanese literally translates to "want to eat" so yep I'd say that's a safe bet
Thank God you were here, I was teaching a seminar.
You are correct, based on the hashtags, which are "#tokei" and "#tokeiyamori", yamori being Japanese for "gecko".
We can't all speak Japanese, but "Cute animal wants a treat" is pretty much universal.
Answer is Yes.
(Onychophora, aka a Velvet Worm)
Steam: YOU FACE JARAXXUS| Twitch.tv: CainLoveless
Also recently fed my P. cambridgei for the first time since it molted last week, and it came out of its hide to chase the cricket which is the first time I've properly seen it in a while. And I think it might be time to rehouse it.
Invasive species are a thing, y'all! We should definitely make determinations about species before they get here! Otherwise you just get burms in Florida again.
There's very good reason live animal and plant shipping is highly controlled
USark
And
One youtuber, linking to the USark page.
The entirety of the ammendment sounds reasonable af, if you're trying to prevent importation of species before you've been able to determine ecological impact. And also has carevouts to exempt already commonly imported and transported species, AND has a delay of a year before taking effect, specifically to address these common species.
All you need are a couple pictures of those trees covered in webbing and a Jeff Daniels commercial or two, and the spodes wouldn't stand a chance.
Really hit the nail on the head.
It could be another emilia, but the coloration looks wrong for that. And googling to compare specimens is a fool's errand for brachys, thanks to near constant misidentification. I'll just need to see after the next molt.
https://youtu.be/ktWWfyZU9g0
Used to see bark spiders, like the first ones in this video but bigger, when I lived in RSA. They would run lines of silk across the roads at night, which were strong enough that if you drove into them they would stretch like an elastic band for quite a bit before breaking. Also at roughly the height of the people on the second row of the game viewer which made for much hilarity every time as I would slowly clothesline the volunteers in my car.
She's got a pretty coppery racing stripe!
Before dumping her outside, I told her to eat many bugs, and stay out of my stuff.
I'm a bit worried about what skittery thing is going to make an appearance tomorrow; yesterday, a water bug appeared on my shoulder. I guess I did see a house centipede (on reflection, probably a silverfish, agh) the day before when cleaning, but I am way more aware of the current bug entente in my house -- the spider, they are behind on rent -- rent being paid in the form of pest control.
And obviously it was paying its taxes. I mean, you don't find any other insects in your bed, right?
-Antje Jackelén, Archbishop of the Church of Sweden
Sorry, ladies. If it were up to me I'd let you keep the whole thing, but the city starts writing tickets after a few weeks if I don't keep the front yard mowed.
Dubias have some money in them, if you decide to get a colony going. And aren't horribly difficult.
Or loud.
Or smelly.
Like a nice size breeder female you can flip for $2 a piece, here.
These are bigger than I was expecting. That combined with being a new type of food has provoked some funny responses from my slings. Lots of cowardly running away, or half curious half scared slapping while they figure out if they can eat it.
I have genuinely never had a T I own or care for at the shop really go for roaches.
I always end up having to fish out five or six cause the T ignores them, they burrow, and then a month later they're like all sitting in the water dish. Like fine fuckers, crickets and meal worms from now on!