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- Jan 25, 2011
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I am about 99 percent sure the amazonica is female. This particular cambridgei is by far my most defensive psalmo. Worse even than any irminia I've ever owned.Great photos Bob! I love your P. cambridgei with his/her threat posture! Shows some spunk, and I love tarantulas with spunk!
Bob, do you know the gender of your Avicularia sp. amazonica?
Thank you!Beautiful tarantulas!
Thanks! I'm actually using my phone camera for most of these and I'm amazed at that quality of the pictures it takes and the amount of detail it picks up on. I'm fortunate that most of these guys are pretty cooperative with photos. The only ones I can never get a picture of are my S.calceatum and OBT.Those are some epic specimins you have, and how cooperative of them to pose so lovely for you. You have gorgeous critters, good sir!
My phone takes pretty good pictures too. I'm glad for that, as I'm a fairly lousy shot. You do well with a cell phone, I must say.Thanks! I'm actually using my phone camera for most of these and I'm amazed at that quality of the pictures it takes and the amount of detail it picks up on. I'm fortunate that most of these guys are pretty cooperative with photos. The only ones I can never get a picture of are my S.calceatum and OBT.
I'll definitely try. The flash scares them though. I would turn it off but the room is rather poorly lit plus it helps bring out their colors better I find.My phone takes pretty good pictures too. I'm glad for that, as I'm a fairly lousy shot. You do well with a cell phone, I must say.
The few of yours are very nice to look at. Throw shots of your elusive ones in here, if you ever manage to get any of them of course.
Ephebopus species are like the platypus of tarantulas to me. They have the flattened legs of an arboreal, and some even climb a lot while younger, but as adults they are burrowers. The fact that they have urticating hairs located on the pedipalps fascinates me.With Ephebopus sp. you can't go wrong. No way. They are amazing, defintely more better than some overestimated strong venom high strung bla bla bla OW'S T's. Great pics Bob.
Damn right. Also, they are really fast (sometime i think their speed is really underestimated in a general way by a lot of enthusiasts), amazing colours, they're good eaters.. yeah, IMO size only but oh well (my total madness.. love to dream about them giant as a Theraphosa sp.) I owned those (murinus, cyanognathus, uatuman) for years before starting into OW'S. Also, i think that Ephebopus cyanognathus is not only the most fast of that "company", but one of the best teleport speed T's ever (had one years ago that was like a Tapinauchenius sanctivincenti almost) able to make athletic feats of bravery in the line of duty.. i love female murinus, they remind me of Glenn Danzig skeleton dress in Misfits days... they are top notch T's!Ephebopus species are like the platypus of tarantulas to me. They have the flattened legs of an arboreal, and some even climb a lot while younger, but as adults they are burrowers. The fact that they have urticating hairs located on the pedipalps fascinates me.
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Seems reasonable. I'll get on it!:wink: You're not off the hook yet, Bob. How about a nice little video in high quality like these pics demonstrating why OBTs have that nickname?? ::
[SUB](Use a good microphone to get the full range and timbre of the screams)[/SUB]