- Joined
- Oct 13, 2011
- Messages
- 6,059
I tried celery and had a few deaths. It was rinsed.
funny misread!Well I feel like an idiot I read Spoods instead of Isopods. Guess I gotta slow down. I was like what is this person talking about!? Spiders don't eat vegetables!? Lol woooooow look at my dyslexia go! Hahah
Maybe chlorine in the tap water?funny misread!
It’s weird I found an old thread and the op fed his celery and they didn’t die like mine.
What should I feed my isopods? Any tips on breeding them?
I'm culturing a colony of isopods to use for cage maintenance, and I'm wondering what I should feed them? They don't seem to like celery much. I keep them in a kritter keeper with lots of ventilation, and I spray it down regularly.arachnoboards.com
Unlikely because I filter the tap water maybe the celery wasn’t rinsed off well enough?Maybe chlorine in the tap water?
Yeh most of it was fed to roaches and mealworms none died must just a bad peice loaded with pesticides as you guessed.It's possible whoever produced it used a pesticide that was worked into the plant itself during growth.
Can't wash that off.
This. Some sprays do indeed enter the fruit/vegetable below the skin. If you feed the base of something like celery, gravity works its magic and all the spray settles down to the base and concentrates in the cracks. One of the reasons we buy organic for certain crops. Brassica, celery, lettuces etc.It's possible whoever produced it used a pesticide that was worked into the plant itself during growth.
Can't wash that off.
Organic is really expensive only specialty stores have it I only had a regular, which could be why the isopods died.This. Some sprays do indeed enter the fruit/vegetable below the skinny. If you fee the base of something like celery, gravity works its magic and all the spray settles down to the base and concentrates in the cracks. One of the reasons we buy organic for certain crops. Brassica, celery, lettuces etc.
only have pill bugs left And the small ones might have died or borrowed.If you live near forests/wild areas that aren't sprayed you can probably easily find wild foods. They should have lots of leaves, wood etc anyway.
However I guess depending on how many you have you may still have to buy it. Expensive or not, it's the keepers responsibility. Probably 1 organic Carrot is only 1 or 2 dollars and you can cut into prices and freeze the Un used part. Probably cost pennies a week unless you have loads of isopods