Here are tips and facts about Tarantulas.
Why Keep a Pet Tarantula?
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Calm, fascinating behavior
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Silent, odorless, and very clean
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Extremely low space requirements
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Minimal daily maintenance
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Beautiful colors, patterns, and sizes
⚠️ Downsides:
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Not very interactive
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Some species are fast or defensive
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New World species can kick urticating hairs
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Handling is not recommended
2. Best Tarantula Species for Pets (Beginner-Friendly)
⭐ Chilean Rose Hair (Grammostola rosea / porteri)
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Very hardy and docile
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Slow-moving, forgiving care
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Great for beginners
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Long lifespan
🌿 Curly Hair Tarantula (Tliltocatl albopilosus)
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Fuzzy appearance
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Calm temperament
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Good eater
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Excellent starter species
🍂 Mexican Red Knee (Brachypelma hamorii)
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Iconic orange-red markings
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Slow, defensive rather than aggressive
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Long-lived and hardy
🌸 Brazilian Black (Grammostola pulchra)
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Jet black, velvety look
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Very calm and impressive
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Grows slowly but lives long
3. Enclosure Setup (Very Important)
🏠 Size Rule
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Terrestrial species: floor space matters more than height
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Enclosure length: ~3× leg span
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Height: no more than 1–1.5× leg span (to prevent fall injuries)
🪵 Interior
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Deep substrate (3–6 inches): coco fiber or soil
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Cork bark hide (mandatory)
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Water dish (always)
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Minimal decor—tarantulas like simplicity
🌡️ Temperature
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Most species: 70–80°F (21–27°C)
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Room temperature is usually sufficient
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Avoid heat mats unless absolutely necessary
💧 Humidity
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Species dependent (generally 60–75%)
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Overflow water dish or lightly mist substrate edges
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Never mist the tarantula directly
4. Feeding Your Tarantula 🍽️
What They Eat
Live insects only:
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Crickets
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Roaches (excellent staple)
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Mealworms / superworms
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Hornworms (occasional treats)
Feeding Schedule
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Spiderlings: every 2–3 days
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Juveniles: every 4–7 days
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Adults: every 7–14 days
💡 Prey should be no larger than the tarantula’s abdomen.
5. Molting (Critical Knowledge ⚠️)
Tarantulas molt throughout their lives.
Before molting:
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Refuse food (sometimes for weeks or months)
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Move less
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May lie on their back (this is normal!)
Rules:
❌ Do NOT disturb
❌ Do NOT feed
❌ Do NOT flip them over
Proper humidity is essential for a safe molt.
6. Handling & Behavior
🚫 Handling is discouraged
They may:
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Flick urticating hairs (itchy and irritating)
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Threat pose (rear legs up, fangs visible)
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Bolt suddenly
🟢 Bites are rare and usually mild, but falls can be fatal to the tarantula.
7. Lifespan & Growth
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Females: 15–30+ years (species dependent)
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Males: 3–7 years
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Grow slowly and molt regularly
Sexual dimorphism becomes noticeable in adulthood.
8. Common Mistakes (Avoid These)
❌ Too much enclosure height
❌ Excessive misting
❌ Handling frequently
❌ Leaving live prey during a molt
❌ Using heat lamps
❌ Housing multiple tarantulas together
9. Health & Signs of Trouble
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Curling legs tightly → dehydration or stress
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Stuck molt → humidity issues
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Refusing food → premolt or mature male behavior
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Constant pacing → enclosure stress
10. Are Tarantulas Good Pets?
✅ Great if you want:
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A long-lived, low-maintenance pet
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A calm display animal
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Minimal daily care
❌ Not ideal if you want:
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Frequent handling
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Fast movement or interaction
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Multiple tarantulas together (they are solitary and cannibalistic)
11. Fun Tarantula Facts
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Can regenerate lost legs
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Sense vibrations through their feet
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Have tiny retractable claws and adhesive foot pads
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Molt their entire exoskeleton—including fangs
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Some species change color after molting