As seen in general discussion, my Female Anuroctonus gave birth. I have way too many of the babies, so I must sell them.
Mature female- $19.00
5th instar female- $14.00
2nd instar babies- $8.00 --Purchase 5 or more for a %50 price reduction.
Easy to care for, all scorpions come with their own enclosure, complete with substrate mix I've made myself for superior burrow stability:
Give them access to water at all times, a large bottle cap is sufficient for adults, for babies, use small water bottle caps, pressed into substrate, so the rim is level with the substrate, and place several large pebbles inside it, so the babies dont get trapped, and drown. The babies will accept pinhead crickets.
A mix of sand and clay is fine for substrate. Do not attempt to house them together, they will kill each other.
Aphonopelma eutylenum "Blonde" morph
2" Body length unsexed: SOLD OUT
2" Female: SOLD OUT
2" Male: $25.00[/b]
1" unsexed juveniles: SOLD OUT
These tarantulas get bigger than the standard eutylenum. They love Blaptica dubia roaches, which are available at many pet and reptile stores.
Keep them on the dry side, with a water dish kept full at all times, and at least 4" of substrate to burrow into. Fairly active tarantulas, provide them with a hiding place.
California Trap-door spider
Mature females: $30.00 Keep in a tall open container. Coco fiber is fine, for substrate. Likes discoid roaches. Do not handle, they are very defensive, and when they bite, they dont let go. If a bite occurs, use a small paintbrush to gently pry the fangs out. When they are hungry, they'll prop their door open a little. Dont mess with their doors, or try to "beautify" them, this will cause them to build another door underneath.
Phidippus Audax "Bold Jumper"
Captive-bred Sub-adults unsexed: $6.00
Powerful killing machines, will tackle prey much larger than themselves. These don't need substrate, and they can get quite large, up to a 23mm body length. Their hunting strategy is much like a puma's; they stalk and creep low, then jump and deliver a killing bite to the back of the neck. For water, spray the side of the container once a day. Feed one large cricket or roach once a week. Overfeeding shortens their lifespan. lifespan: 2 years, 3 years-rarely. Beautiful metallic green/blue jaws, with strong contrasting colors. Intelligent. They display extreme curiosity towards new objects placed in their enclosure.
They appreciate a hiding spot, like a rolled-up dried rose leaf. Some are friendly, and like being held, others are skittish. They do not bite. Comes with enclosure.
One of my old males pictured below.. he was finger-trained. (you read that right.)
I cannot ship them, or travel outside of orange county. If you're in Orange county, I can deliver them to you personally. Email me if interested: smokehound42086@gmail.com