- Joined
- Jul 29, 2007
- Messages
- 166
For those of you who have one or two very small slings, or wants to get some free crickets, I have a very clean way to breed crickets to get a small amount (100+) of pinheads.
Okay. Most of us use large crickets for one thing or another, right? But pinheads are so very hard to find!
Well, what I do to get pinhead crickets is take several large female crickets from the pet store. The females will in all likelihood already be carrying sperm, since they have been kept with hundreds of other males. Anyway, I put them in a small Tupperware container with an inch or two of moist peat moss. Then, you leave them in there for 2 or 3 days. The females will have laid their eggs in the enclosure after this time. If you want tons of babies, you can repeat this process several times before the first eggs hatch to get cricket egg laiden soil. The pinheads will hatch in a week or two depending on temperature.
When they hatch, make sure there is something for them to eat, and moisture precipitating on the walls. I usually put a piece of carrot in there, and they do fine off of that since it doesn't rot quickly. If you put anything in there that molds, the pinheads will die. This is a great way to get hundreds of pinhead crickets for FREE.
You can also raise them for as long as you aren't tempted to feed them to slings. Crickets eat anything, and as long as there isn't any mold, they will live to adulthood. I usually parcel out 30 or so pinheads to their own seperate enclosures in order to keep them spread out. If there are too many in a confined space, they will tend to cannibilize, and you will end up with less but larger crickets. Haha.
Here are what the female crickets look like.
You may be thinking, that looks like any other cricket. No... Look at the posterior aspect of the abdomen. That black needle looking thing is called an ovipositor. It is what it uses to deposit eggs. You can tell it is an adult, because it has wings. Also, females do not chirp. The males do. Also, males are smaller, and do not have the ovipositor. If the abdomen is nice and fat, you can be sure it is a gravid female. Choose those for your little pinhead colonies, and you will have lots of them!
I hope you found this helpful.
God bless,
Aaron
Okay. Most of us use large crickets for one thing or another, right? But pinheads are so very hard to find!
Well, what I do to get pinhead crickets is take several large female crickets from the pet store. The females will in all likelihood already be carrying sperm, since they have been kept with hundreds of other males. Anyway, I put them in a small Tupperware container with an inch or two of moist peat moss. Then, you leave them in there for 2 or 3 days. The females will have laid their eggs in the enclosure after this time. If you want tons of babies, you can repeat this process several times before the first eggs hatch to get cricket egg laiden soil. The pinheads will hatch in a week or two depending on temperature.
When they hatch, make sure there is something for them to eat, and moisture precipitating on the walls. I usually put a piece of carrot in there, and they do fine off of that since it doesn't rot quickly. If you put anything in there that molds, the pinheads will die. This is a great way to get hundreds of pinhead crickets for FREE.
You can also raise them for as long as you aren't tempted to feed them to slings. Crickets eat anything, and as long as there isn't any mold, they will live to adulthood. I usually parcel out 30 or so pinheads to their own seperate enclosures in order to keep them spread out. If there are too many in a confined space, they will tend to cannibilize, and you will end up with less but larger crickets. Haha.
Here are what the female crickets look like.

You may be thinking, that looks like any other cricket. No... Look at the posterior aspect of the abdomen. That black needle looking thing is called an ovipositor. It is what it uses to deposit eggs. You can tell it is an adult, because it has wings. Also, females do not chirp. The males do. Also, males are smaller, and do not have the ovipositor. If the abdomen is nice and fat, you can be sure it is a gravid female. Choose those for your little pinhead colonies, and you will have lots of them!
I hope you found this helpful.
God bless,
Aaron
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