I can see it now! Sterling Dairy Cows!!
Lol yup! A dairy com with a big jet black stripe down its back with ultra clean sides.
@lumpy i actually have a dairy cow that matches that exact description lol. I found it a couple weeks ago in my cresties bioactive.
Lol
That is why I think I might get them!
I have a stripey too!
I swear the amount of variety is insane!
There’s others with a lot of variety and I need to ge and separate them all haha.
Panda kings Chuck out albinos so I can’t wait to see when that happens
I can’t wait to see, make sure to post when the little one finally shows their true colors.
It is usually suggested to add new blood to your culture every while. P. ornatus Witches Brew was created due to inbreeding, and this strain does have occasional problems with segments crossing over each other and other harmful mutations. It can be done over time, just takes a very hot second.
I’ve heard arguments for both sides.
I think it can be beneficial to add some new blood but it’s not something you have to do often. I also think it can also be helpful for when you have that itch to buy a new culture but don’t have room or time for a whole new species lol
Yep, I agree. There is lots of things in this hobby that goes both ways. It is just the way that it is, and both sides of the opinion are beneficial. I love threads like this, because people can learn new things from both ends
Yep, I wonder what makes you have that urge to have every single design of every single color out there… But it just makes it more fun !
Yes I understand, but you don’t need to add new ones too often, just even every year or 6 months, if you want.
Very true!
I’m thinking that this collection will lead me into an invertebrate room, along with the tarantulas and scorpions. Then throw in all the beetles I want, too!
We had tarantulas. Evil gits hahaha.
We had a female obt and a female dwarf Brazilian blue diamond.
Feeding them was fun! Just shoot, grab the food from the tongs
I love tarantulas. I’ve got a female A. chalcodes, a female T.albopilosus and a sling L. parahybana.