singapore blue vs cricket 2

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Uploaded by on Jul 13, 2007

lil blue is up aginst a fatty of a cricket...But agin i guess it wouldnt be cool to post if he didnt eat it.lol

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Uploader Comments (ShaunAndPatsy)

  • Is this a good spider and is it safe around children

  • All spiders have a certian amount of venom but not poisonus, i would not recomend a spider to a child, due to they are too hard to care for. they require spacific heat and humidity, as well as patients. This spider is only a sling in this video but will grow to about 7-9". again not for kids. A good starter spider would be a Rose Hair. they are only like $20 dollars at the pet store and are easy to take care of but again depending on the age of your child.

  • Nice spider are they dangerous, and can children handle.

  • I wouldnt handle this one too, small and easily frightened. A child would not understand the fagatability of the bug. and might scare it. forcing it to bite.

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  • @casino015

    no one should handle these

  • Im a kid i have an epmeror scorpion,chilean rose,and crickets

  • ahhahaha that cricket thought he was all tough until he found a big suprise! he tried so hard to get away lol

  • Ya, to see the blue, you need to expose it into the right light. I have a terrestrial version of the sing blue, the cobalt blue. She's a fully grown adult female, and Its also difficult to distinguish the blue. It is hard to sex arboreals at that size. Pokes are pretty easy to sex because females get brighter in color for each molt, while males brown out. Generally Ts with very large abdomens are likely to be female

  • My blue is about 3" now hard to tell the color blue yet until i take pictures. So hard to tell male/female yet.

  • I've noticed. I keep 4 poecilotheria (ornata, formosa, rufilata and regalis), avicularia, heteroscodra, tapinauchenius gigas and psalmopoeus arboreal Ts. I found that my poecilotheria regalis (sub-adult) and my psalmopoeus irminia sling really burrow and the rest don't. How big is your blue?

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