CitizenNumber9
Arachnobaron
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2013
- Messages
- 324
Hello everyone! I believe I may have found something that can keep crickets from smelling too much.
First I'd like to explain my set-up: I have two shoebox containers; one for adult crickets and one for small crickets. I recently picked up 50 large crickets hoping to start a breeding project, though I have to wait for most of them to mature first. The shoeboxes are set up with zero substrate and a few pieces of egg carton to make the critters happy. I feed them crushed up cat food, goldfish flakes, oats, and whatever green vegetable we have in the house at the time (lettuce, cabbage, potatoes, etc.) The reason I use lettuce and leafy plants is because I've noticed that rather than molding, they tend to just dry up after a day or two. No mold smell! I generally just sprinkle the food in the bottom of the containers - dry food on one side, vegetables on the other.
Okay everyone, hang onto your britches for this next part because I HAVE MADE A NOTABLE DISCOVERY!!
The most recent vegetable to be found in our house was celery. In case some of you don't know, celery is a green vegetable with little leafy bits at the top that, while we humans don't normally tend to like them, crickets seem to love. All right now, I hope you're ready for this: CELERY HAS A VERY STRONG SMELL. Shocking, right? Upon opening my crickets' containers, I was hit with a smell wave so powerful, so incoherently wonderful, I almost did a "Blue's Clues" and hopped right into the container (Let's not think about how terrifying it would be to shrink to the size of a cricket and then be surrounded by about 40 of them). Basically what I'm saying is, instead of smelling old, dead crickets when I pulled off the lid, I was hit with the wonderful smell of celery.
I hope you all enjoyed my over-zealous exaggerating, as I had fun typing this up :giggle: Let me know how you guys deal with smell and how your cricket breeding projects are going if you have any.
I know there will be comments about this so I'll go ahead and nip it in the butt.
: I do not like roaches. They are creepy and crawly and icky. I could get used to them, but my mother never will and I have plans to move to FL so I couldn't keep them anyway. :sarcasm:
PS: I also am trying to breed mealies. Does anyone know how feeding fish flakes and cat food to them works, or if it is nutritionally beneficial? I can't seem to find anything about it online
Also, has anyone tried feeding chicken food to crickets and mealies or if it would be nutritionally beneficial as well? I have a huge zip lock bag full of the stuff heheh.
If anyone is curious on my breeding plans I'll post that too for criticism purposes. :bruised: Just let me know!
Thanks everyone!
Autumn
First I'd like to explain my set-up: I have two shoebox containers; one for adult crickets and one for small crickets. I recently picked up 50 large crickets hoping to start a breeding project, though I have to wait for most of them to mature first. The shoeboxes are set up with zero substrate and a few pieces of egg carton to make the critters happy. I feed them crushed up cat food, goldfish flakes, oats, and whatever green vegetable we have in the house at the time (lettuce, cabbage, potatoes, etc.) The reason I use lettuce and leafy plants is because I've noticed that rather than molding, they tend to just dry up after a day or two. No mold smell! I generally just sprinkle the food in the bottom of the containers - dry food on one side, vegetables on the other.
Okay everyone, hang onto your britches for this next part because I HAVE MADE A NOTABLE DISCOVERY!!
The most recent vegetable to be found in our house was celery. In case some of you don't know, celery is a green vegetable with little leafy bits at the top that, while we humans don't normally tend to like them, crickets seem to love. All right now, I hope you're ready for this: CELERY HAS A VERY STRONG SMELL. Shocking, right? Upon opening my crickets' containers, I was hit with a smell wave so powerful, so incoherently wonderful, I almost did a "Blue's Clues" and hopped right into the container (Let's not think about how terrifying it would be to shrink to the size of a cricket and then be surrounded by about 40 of them). Basically what I'm saying is, instead of smelling old, dead crickets when I pulled off the lid, I was hit with the wonderful smell of celery.
I hope you all enjoyed my over-zealous exaggerating, as I had fun typing this up :giggle: Let me know how you guys deal with smell and how your cricket breeding projects are going if you have any.
I know there will be comments about this so I'll go ahead and nip it in the butt.
PS: I also am trying to breed mealies. Does anyone know how feeding fish flakes and cat food to them works, or if it is nutritionally beneficial? I can't seem to find anything about it online
If anyone is curious on my breeding plans I'll post that too for criticism purposes. :bruised: Just let me know!
Thanks everyone!
Autumn