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Brachypelma boehmei and Pandinus imperator

Just after twelve in the afternoon the tarantula and scorpion I had ordered with Matthijs Tempelman of Tarantulahub yesterday in the afternoon via Facebook Messenger arrived. I paid €25 for the tarantula, €60 for the scorpion and €10 for shipping. All in all €95.

Later in the afternoon I prepared two enclosures. I had expected the tarantula, a female Brachypelma boehmei, to be larger. Her enclosure is now a bit on the large side.

Brachypelma boehmei female
Brachypelma boehmei female.

First, I transferred the female Brachypelma boehmei to her enclosure; a plastic container with a piece of cork and some plastic plants. The substrate is a mix of sand and coconut coir, which I had made slightly moist.

Pandinus imperator
Pandinus imperator.

Next, I transferred the Pandinus imperator to its enclosure; a small plastic container with a piece of cork and some plastic plants. I don't know yet if this specimen is a male or a female. The substrate is moist coconut coir.

Finally, I cut up a super worm and put a small piece in each terrarium.

Later, in the afternoon, while checking up on the new ones, I noticed that the emperor scorpion was eating!

Pandinus imperator eating a piece of super worm
Pandinus imperator eating a piece of super worm.

I also replaced the lid of the enclosure of the Brachypelma boehmei with one with much smaller holes. The one I used originally had holes that are a few millimeter in diameter and maybe the spider could manage to escape through one.

Near the end of the afternoon I noticed that the Brachypelma boehmei also had taken away the piece of superworm. When I lifted the cork tube I spotted her on the inside of the tube holding the piece.

Feeding Four Tarantulas

Just after 6 o'clock I decided to feed my four tarantulas with the super worms that had arrived earlier today. I had ordered accidentally two boxes instead of one with De Kammieshop last Monday, so I have plenty of food.

Acanthoscurria geniculata eating a Morio larva
Acanthoscurria geniculata eating a Morio larva.

First, I dropped a living super worm with the female Acanthoscurria geniculata. Normally, I pre-kill super worms to prevent them from burrowing in the substrate. But the Acanthoscurria geniculata grabs everything that moves, including water, so I fell confident she would catch the worm immediately. And I was right.

Pterinochilus murinus with Morio larva
Pterinochilus murinus with Morio larva.

Next, I dropped a pre-killed Morio larva with the female Pterinochilus murinus. I carefully moved the quite skittish tarantula near the Morio larva, but she didn't seem interested in it. If she doesn't eat it I remove it the next day.

Next, I dropped a pre-killed Morio larva with the female Monocentropus balfouri. But she stayed hidden underneath a plastic leaf, so no photo.

Tliltocatl albopilosus with Morio larva
Tliltocatl albopilosus with Morio larva.

Finally, I dropped a pre-killed Morio larva with the female Tliltocatl albopilosus. She was also not interested, yet.

A Tarantula Eating

Later in the evening while checking my tarantulas I noticed that the juvenile female Monocentropus balfouri was eating a Morio larva.

Monocentropus balfouri eating a Morio larva
Monocentropus balfouri eating a Morio larva.

In the above photo some of the webbing this tarantula has made is visible in the left bottom corner. The leaves are plastic.

The Mandalorian and Grogu (2026)

Once a lone bounty hunter, Mandalorian Din Djarin and his apprentice Grogu embark on an exciting new Star Wars adventure.

In the evening Alice, Esme, and I watched The Mandalorian and Grogu in a movie theatre in the centre of Rotterdam. I liked the movie and rate it a 7 out of 10.

We did have some problems with our tickets, though. We thought we had bought tickets for 17:30. But when we arrived the ticket scanner reported that the tickets were invalid. A girl working for the movie theatre let us pass. But when we wanted to enter the screening room the movie had already started. Confused I asked for help and then it turned out the tickets were for next week! I was told to go down to the entry and ask if the ticket could be changed. So I went to the same girl that helped us earlier and she changed the tickets for ones for 19:30. So we had to wait nearly 2 hours. Because I was tired I wanted to stay inside and just wait.

Orange Bitey Thing Out and About

When testing a flashlight I had bought earlier today; indirect light into the enclosures of the tarantulas I keep, I noticed that the Pterinochilus murinus, also known as Orange Bitey Thing, was out and about. So I moved carefully the enclosure to the livingroom table, opened it, and took some photos.

Pterinochilus murinus RCF out and about
Pterinochilus murinus RCF out and about.

This is the first time I see this tarantula entirely out of its hiding spot since the rehousing I did nearly two weeks ago.

Revenge Prey

Leonard Summers—not his real name—is on the run. A former high-ranking Russian intelligence officer who defected to the U.S. after providing critical information about Russian spies in U.S. government service, Leonard, his wife Martha, and son Bernard have spent the past year holed up in a CIA facility near Washington. After the CIA makes a deal with the U.S. Marshal Service’s Witness Protection Program (WPP), Leonard’s family is transported to Minneapolis. The plan is to hide them in a wooded Minneapolis suburb that resembles their former home and dacha near Moscow.

The Summers are received at their destination by Lucas Davenport and fellow marshal Shelly White. Unbeknownst to them, the WPP group has been tracked by a Russian hit team. And while nobody in the WPP has ever been attacked…Leonard might be the first victim. As shots are fired and enemies dodged, Lucas must move quickly to uncover where the leak is coming from, before the hit team can strike again.

In the evening I started in Revenge Prey, a Prey novel book 36 by John Sandford.

Ironwood

Sworn to protect a scenic island meant to be far from the evils of the mainland, Detective Sergeant Stilwell can feel danger closing in.

Detective Sergeant Stilwell knows that his posting on Catalina Island is no paradise, but to most residents, it seems blissfully separated—by twenty-two miles of ocean—from the troubles of Los Angeles County. But now a threat is coming to his safe haven.

Acting on a tip from a confidential informant, Stilwell and his deputies watch a plane land in the middle of the night at the Airport in the Sky, a remote airstrip in the mountains. A duffel bag of drugs is dropped and the deputies move in, but things quickly go sideways. While Stilwell chases the fleeing pickup man into the mountainside brush, shots are fired on the runway and the plane flies off.

An internal inquiry follows, putting Stilwell on the bench until he is cleared of responsibility for the disastrous operation. But he is determined to find out who brought deadly violence to his island, and begins his own secret investigation into the drug deal gone wrong.

While under orders to remain in the sheriff’s substation, he finds in the lost and found a valuable backpack that was never claimed. He traces it to a woman who disappeared while hiking on the island four years ago. But then why was the pack only turned in two months back? Now thoroughly intrigued, he follows the mystery all the way to the LAPD’s Open-Unsolved Unit and Detective Renée Ballard.

Stilwell and Ballard work the case from both sides of the channel, and soon realize they are on the trail of a criminal who revels in taunting the authorities. Meanwhile, frustrated at being shut out of an investigation on his own island, Stilwell risks his already shaky standing in the department to pursue a case whose reach is wider than he ever imagined.

In the afternoon I started in Ironwood, a Catalina Novel by Michael Connelly.

Feeding a Monocentropus balfouri

In the evening, after having watched the second half of the Costa Rica tarantula documentary part 2 with Esme (we had seen the first half in the afternoon), I checked upon the four female tarantulas I keep.

Monocentropus balfouri with a morio worm (threat pose)
Monocentropus balfouri with a morio worm (threat pose).

First, I tried to feed the juvenile female Monocentropus balfouri. She immediately raised herself into a treat pose. This specimen is very skittish in my experience, so no surprise.

Monocentropus balfouri with a morio worm
Monocentropus balfouri with a morio worm.

After a short while, however, the spider relaxed and rested on top of the morio worm.

I feed my tarantulas mostly morio worms: larvae of the darkling beetle Zophobas atratus. I do crush the head to prevent the larva from burrowing into the substrate and appear later as an adult beetle.

After I had fed the Monocentropus balfouri I dropped a pre-killed morio worm with the Pterinochilus murinus, Acanthoscurria geniculata, and finally Tliltocatl albopilosus; one larva each.

Love Tarantulas The Complete Archive Volume 1

The 8th of May in the afternoon I ordered The Complete Archive Volume 1 from lovetarantulas.com, a 64GB USB stick with 13 ebooks and 15 documentaries. I paid £30 (€36,22) which in my opinion is a steal for this wealth of information. A few hours later I got a confirmation email by Andrew Smith: it would be in the post the next morning.

The outside of the Complete Archive Volume 1 cover
The outside of the Complete Archive Volume 1 cover.

And today, in the morning, the package finally arrived. No idea why it took so long. The USB stick was in a small plastic bag glued to the inside of a DVD like cover: very neat.

The inside of the Complete Archive Volume 1 cover
The inside of the Complete Archive Volume 1 cover.

In the evening I watched the first of two Costa Rica documentaries. Alone, because Esme had school (Dutch) followed by a dance workshop. I liked the documentary a lot: it was a mix of historical/taxonomical information and actual field work.

Monocentropus balfouri out and about

After I had watched the Costa Rica documentary I checked upon the tarantulas I keep and noticed that the juvenile female Monocentropus balfouri was out and about.

Monocentropus balfouri out and about
Monocentropus balfouri out and about.

Rehousing an Orange Bitey Thing

In the evening I decided to rehouse the Orange Bitey Thing; a female Pterinochilus murinus Red Color Form. I drilled holes in the lid of a 19 litre plastic container, to which I added coconut coir, and some plastic plants.

Next, I took the tarantula, still inside her small enclosure, up to the bathroom. This species can be quite skittish and moves fast, so I wanted a place where an escape wouldn't cause too much of a problem. After quite some time I managed to finally move the spider in a plastic cup using a paint brush. No threat posing by the spider, and no running around; it was actually resisting to move at all.

Pterinochilus murinus in a catch cup
Pterinochilus murinus in a catch cup.

I cleaned up some of the decoration in the original enclosure: some cork and some plastic plants, and moved it to the new enclosure as well. Then I tried to move the spider in her new home. But it refused to move from her position near the bottom. There was no hole in the bottom of the catch cup (recommended) hence I couldn't push her carefully out that way. So I decided to let the catch cup with spider inside the large enclosure so she could get out in her own time.

Pterinochilus murinus in a catch cup inside the new enclosure.
Pterinochilus murinus in a catch cup inside the new enclosure.

Notice in the above photo how the plastic plants provide plenty of anchor points for webbing. In my experience Pterinochilus murinus webs a lot. Because this species uses some height of its enclosure, when available, it's now and then called semi-arboreal.

The last time I rehoused this tarantula was way back in 2020, when it managed to escape the catch cup I used.

The Drama (2026)

A happily-engaged couple is put to the test when an unexpected turn sends their wedding week off the rails.

In the evening Esme and I watched The Drama. I liked the movie and rate it a 7 out of 10.

They Will Kill You (2026)

A woman takes a job as a housekeeper in a NYC high-rise, unaware of the building's history of disappearances. She soon realizes the community is shrouded in mystery.

In the evening Esme and I watched They Will Kill You. The movie was both weird and funny. It was nice to see Angus Sampson in a (short) role similar to his one in The Lincoln Lawyer: a private investigator. Anyway, I liked the movie, and rate it a 7 out of 10.

Carolina Reaper Chocolate

Yesterday I noticed a small green dot in one the 10 sections of a seed starting tray; a Carolina reaper chocolate chili pepper plant had breached the soil. And today, in the early afternoon, a tiny seedling could be seen.

Carolina reaper chocolate seedling

I planted the 10 seeds Sunday the 26th of April. I got the seeds earlier this year from my brother. According to him this pepper grows slowly. It is my first attempt at growing chili peppers.

The Smoke Ring

In the free-fall environment of the Smoke Ring (an immense gaseous envelope and neutron star circling a habitable cluster of plants, trees and animals), descendants of the starship Discipline’s crew no longer remember their Earth roots or the existence of Sharls Davis Kendy, the computer AI controlling the ship — until Kendy initiated contact once more, 500 years after the crew whom the half-mad AI calls “mutineers” were abandoned on this strange world (see The Integral Trees).

Fourteen years later only Jeffer, the Citizens Tree “Scientist”, knew that Kendy was watching and advising. When Citizens Tree rescues a family of loggers, they learn of the Admiralty, a military organization in a town unknown to Citizens Tree. Jeffer is among those who want to visit the town and the Admiralty, which may have maintained intact Discipline's original computer library. The events following the visit to the town and the subsequent flight from the Admiralty form part of this exciting tale of adventure, danger and courage.

In the evening I started in The Smoke Ring, The Smoke Ring series book 2 by Larry Niven.