I can’t believe I haven’t posted since September, but to be honest, there hasn’t been anything exciting to report.
Today, I’ll start with Charlotte, my Mexican red rump. She moulted last week and is looking lovely with her red rear and velvety black legs. She’s one of my faster spiders and I can handle her, but she’s quick to get away if I’m not careful.

Orinoco, the Venezuelan suntiger, has webbed out several tunnels at the top of the branches in the enclosure. This is my only arboreal spider, all the others are ground dwellers.

Incy Wincy, the Brazilian giant white knee, is growing fast. This is one of the greediest tarantula species and Incy is looking particularly fat at the moment. I don’t handle this one very often, as it thinks everything that moves is edible – including your fingers! It’s usually okay if you feed him/her first.

The others are all doing well – Cadbury, my oldest spider, the Honduran curly hair, moulted not too long ago. Little Pumpkin, the tinest, is growing and developing colours, and my giant salmon pink, Magenta has started eating properly. After eighteen months trying crickets, locusts, cockroaches, and other insects, which she would eat occasionally, I discovered she has a liking for (frozen) baby rats and will take one about once a month. Juanita, the Mexican red knee, is looking as if she’s approaching a moult, and Blackberry, the little Brazilian black, is eating well so I’m hoping he/she will moult soon, then I might be able to tell if it is a he or a she!
I’m going to write a separate post about the colony, so watch out for that shortly.

































