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General Tarantula Discussion
Do adult male T's stop eating near end-of-life?
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<blockquote data-quote="Martin Oosthuysen" data-source="post: 38637" data-attributes="member: 1070"><p>Hello</p><p>Usually mature males will eat less and less,then you get the ones that are exceptions to the rules. I like feeding roaches, I moved away from any crickets. This is just a personal choice, roaches do not bite and longevity is way way past crickets life expectancy. </p><p></p><p>I can easily leave the feeder in,and still retrieve it a few days later with no stress of finding a dead feeder like with crickets and usually they seem to commit suicide in the water bowls. I know not really suicide,but I like saying that haha.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Martin Oosthuysen, post: 38637, member: 1070"] Hello Usually mature males will eat less and less,then you get the ones that are exceptions to the rules. I like feeding roaches, I moved away from any crickets. This is just a personal choice, roaches do not bite and longevity is way way past crickets life expectancy. I can easily leave the feeder in,and still retrieve it a few days later with no stress of finding a dead feeder like with crickets and usually they seem to commit suicide in the water bowls. I know not really suicide,but I like saying that haha. [/QUOTE]
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Tarantula Forum Topics
General Tarantula Discussion
Do adult male T's stop eating near end-of-life?
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