Regarding your question on your female jumping spider, she could very well be getting ready to lay an egg sac. Like you said she is very chunky and from the looks of it her webbing under that piece of wood you showed after completing her new enclosure is very thick which could be her nest in making. The only question is if you got her fully mature or if she has molted in your care. If she has molted in your care, then all egg sacs she will lay will be infertile. If she matured in the care of the pet store, then there could be a small chance she has been bred and will lay fertile egg sacs. If she doesn't lay an egg sac soon then you may want to feed her less. I tend to feed my mature male P.regius twice a month and my females mabey three times at max. But that being said, mature female jumping spiders have much larger abdomens than mature males and should be fairly chunky. I would do some extra research because I'm no crazy expert but I hope this helps. Love your videos and how the enclosures turned out.
hey there! thank you so much for your advice, this video was made awhile ago & she actually was pregnant haha! future video will be made ab it, but thank you again for the advice! i will keep this in mind if this ever happens again
A Bridge room with two connecting slide walls would be a great addition to the brand.
wait i am intrigued but dont understand, could you please explain? sounds really cool
Also known as a bridge corridor.
A third middle room that connects two houses together
Regarding your question on your female jumping spider, she could very well be getting ready to lay an egg sac. Like you said she is very chunky and from the looks of it her webbing under that piece of wood you showed after completing her new enclosure is very thick which could be her nest in making. The only question is if you got her fully mature or if she has molted in your care. If she has molted in your care, then all egg sacs she will lay will be infertile. If she matured in the care of the pet store, then there could be a small chance she has been bred and will lay fertile egg sacs. If she doesn't lay an egg sac soon then you may want to feed her less. I tend to feed my mature male P.regius twice a month and my females mabey three times at max. But that being said, mature female jumping spiders have much larger abdomens than mature males and should be fairly chunky. I would do some extra research because I'm no crazy expert but I hope this helps. Love your videos and how the enclosures turned out.
hey there! thank you so much for your advice, this video was made awhile ago & she actually was pregnant haha! future video will be made ab it, but thank you again for the advice! i will keep this in mind if this ever happens again
I’ve learned something new
So cool 😎 Kaylee 😊
Super cool! 😎
thank you so much!
Jumpy, jumpy jumpingspider