Hi all
I note from my "all Welcome thread" that some of you would like to come to our meets but it is too far.
Have you considered starting your own club!
Invicta started 13 years ago with Tim Pudney and two mates meeting at the local pub to talk about thier spiders and swap spiderlings, i found the club at the Black lion Gillingham show in 1997 i joined with my son as the 10th & 11th members.
We now have over 50 members make an annual profit of over £3000 which is all spent on the members for summer trips, christmas dinner at a posh restaurant and the club pays the members dinner and lecture fee at the BTS lectures. We have our own breeding group and spiderlings are often for sale at meetings for very cheap prices.
If you decide to take on the task of running a club a good way to start is too look through the members list in the community section, find members in your area and send a private message asking if they are interested.
i sent a letter to the journal in 2006 (Vol 21 No 3) for our 10th anniversary on how to set up and run a club. It will give you all the information you need.
If you require any help you know where to find me, and if you do start a club and get a hall i will come and do your first lecture wherever you are in the country.
Clubs are good, nothing gives me more pleasure than to see a new member who has never kept a Tarantula before asking the first tentative questions of other members at thier first meeting, then a year later they have thier 20th Tarantula and they are answering the questions of the new member.
This hobby is infinate and you learn all the time. I have been at this a long time and and i have a fair amount of knowledge on Arachnids in general and offer advice to my members on our Forum, but i have learnt new things on this forum from members who have been keeping tarantulas for a fraction of the time i have.
That is what makes this hobby so great that however much you think you know there is always something new to learn and these animals will continue to surprise us.
Regards Chris
I note from my "all Welcome thread" that some of you would like to come to our meets but it is too far.
Have you considered starting your own club!
Invicta started 13 years ago with Tim Pudney and two mates meeting at the local pub to talk about thier spiders and swap spiderlings, i found the club at the Black lion Gillingham show in 1997 i joined with my son as the 10th & 11th members.
We now have over 50 members make an annual profit of over £3000 which is all spent on the members for summer trips, christmas dinner at a posh restaurant and the club pays the members dinner and lecture fee at the BTS lectures. We have our own breeding group and spiderlings are often for sale at meetings for very cheap prices.
If you decide to take on the task of running a club a good way to start is too look through the members list in the community section, find members in your area and send a private message asking if they are interested.
i sent a letter to the journal in 2006 (Vol 21 No 3) for our 10th anniversary on how to set up and run a club. It will give you all the information you need.
If you require any help you know where to find me, and if you do start a club and get a hall i will come and do your first lecture wherever you are in the country.
Clubs are good, nothing gives me more pleasure than to see a new member who has never kept a Tarantula before asking the first tentative questions of other members at thier first meeting, then a year later they have thier 20th Tarantula and they are answering the questions of the new member.
This hobby is infinate and you learn all the time. I have been at this a long time and and i have a fair amount of knowledge on Arachnids in general and offer advice to my members on our Forum, but i have learnt new things on this forum from members who have been keeping tarantulas for a fraction of the time i have.
That is what makes this hobby so great that however much you think you know there is always something new to learn and these animals will continue to surprise us.
Regards Chris
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