Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Hairy, scary, sometimes contrary pets

Owners loyal to their tarantulas

- SUE MANNING

LOS ANGELES — Tarantulas are the heaviest, hairiest, scariest spiders on the planet. They have fangs, claws and barbs. They can regrow body parts and be as big as dinner plates, and the females eat the males after mating. But there are many people who call these creepy critters a pet or a passion, and insist their beauty is worth the risk of a bite.

“They are fascinatin­g to watch,” said Dee Reynolds, a 36-year-old nurse who has more than 50 tarantulas at her Los Angeles home. “They have (eight) beautiful slender legs; you look at how they are put together and how they dig and burrow.”

Reynolds doesn’t consider her tarantulas traditiona­l pets, but she says a lot of people do, and name them, talk to them and show them off.

Plus, in terms of being pets, they have lots of benefits, she said. “They don’t need daily walks, they don’t have to be fed special diets, they don’t claw furniture or bark, and you don’t have to find somebody to take care of them when you go on vacation.”

But, unlike Fido or Whiskers, you can’t cuddle with them, dress them for Halloween or play catch. They can cost hundreds of dollars, but they can also live for 30 years.

Ken Macneil, 38, has about 7,000 tarantulas at his exotic pet shop in Tucson, Ariz., which he claims is one of the largest in the country. He sells everything from scorpions and cockroache­s to ferrets, lizards and snakes, but nothing is as popular as the tarantula, and not just around Halloween.

His biggest tarantula is a mature male goliath birdeater that measures 25 centimetre­s long from front leg to back leg. The most expensive one Macneil has ever sold went for $900.

Macneil said his customers include museums, scientists and teachers and up to an estimated 20,000 pet owners and hobby enthusiast­s.

When you hold a tarantula, some feel like velvet, some like pipe cleaners and some have really bristly hairs, Reynolds said.

But there’s no handling her 20-centimetre bird-eater: “My girl happens to be wild. You can look, but don’t touch. She has a nasty attitude.”

Many tarantulas are docile, however. Macneil has a 23-centimetre spider named Tess who is “extremely docile and loves you to hold her. They don’t like to be petted. Their barbs or hair would come out and make you itch,” he said.

All tarantulas can bite, but most owners say it’s no worse than a bee sting, unless you are allergic. If you are, it can be fatal, Reynolds said.

So why do people keep and study tarantulas? For expert Stan Schultz, it’s about the exotic.

The 70-year-old from Calgary said he got interested in the critters when he was young because normal pets became boring.

Schultz has spent more than 45 years keeping, catching, importing, breeding, selling, writing and lecturing about tarantulas. His book, The Tarantula Keeper’s Guide, is in its third edition and headed to its fourth.

When asked to describe the most interestin­g thing about the spider, Schultz said recognizin­g the “basic aspects of learning and, dare I say it, intelligen­ce in tarantulas. But, before you get your hopes up, they’re still closer to a cabbage than the family dog in smarts.”

 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES/The Associated Press ?? This greenbottl­e blue male tarantula is one of 50 of the spiders belonging to Los Angeles resident Dee Reynolds.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES/The Associated Press This greenbottl­e blue male tarantula is one of 50 of the spiders belonging to Los Angeles resident Dee Reynolds.

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