Post
by DragonsFly » Sun Jun 20, 2021 7:32 pm
If your house stays at about 76 degrees all the time, that is a perfectly good temperature for Purple Pinchers. So you will mostly need to be concerned about the humidity.
You can find a $1 spray bottle at your nearest dollar store, but keeping the humidity where it needs to be will require having the right kind of substrate, deep enough and properly moist, and the right kind of tank and lid combination. Most people here use a combination of play sand (a 10 pound bag is usually less than $5 at a hardware store) and EcoEarth or similar, for their substrate, but you can use just play sand if you need to keep it as inexpensive as possible.
As for handling your crabs, most of the long-term crabbers here are pretty "hands-off"; hermit crabs are more of a "watch pet" than a "play with pet." This is because they need the high humidity in their tank in order to breathe properly, and also because they are actually wild animals, not "pets" at all. Some people do interact with their crabs more, but consider that to your crab, you are a huge predator, like a Tyrannosaurus Rex. Imagine what you might think if a giant T. Rex kept picking you up to "play" with you. Especially if the crabs are fairly new to captivity, the less you handle them the better, as handling them is stressful and they are already so stressed by being captured and transported into captivity that many of them get very sick and sometimes, sadly, die.
There really is a huge amount to learn at first, and it can seem overwhelming. Hermit crabs are sold with very misleading information about them. You did a great thing coming here, though, because there are lots of people here to help that have been keeping crabs and learning about them for a long time. Keep learning, and best wishes!
--{}: Dragons Fly Farm --{}:
Resident PP's:"Major Tom" & "Billie Jean"
“An adventure is only an inconvenience rightly considered. An inconvenience is only an adventure wrongly considered.”
― G.K. Chesterton