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08-25-2008, 09:11 AM
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Senior Member
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If your going to spend the money to breed, get some roaches. They smell a lot less when they breed and from what I've heard do it faster and are more nutritious. I would breed them but I'm still under my mother's thumb and if one escaped she'd flip.
For my crickets (I assume this would work for roaches, too), I have an old plastic drink cooler. They have very, very slick sides, so nothing can climb them. I tried using the opaque storage bins like above, but the crickets climbed it and escaped through the openings. I am thinking about starting to breed silkworms as a supplement/back up to my crickets I order every few weeks (you can get a thousand for 20 dollars shipped at crix-n-wiggles.com Which has some really healthy crix) but that isn't anytime soon. I think I will first get a mulberry plant established in my backyard or something so I don't have to be ordering the pre-made food.
TS
__________________
~Levi S.,14
1.1.0 Red Eared Slider Turtles (T. scripta elegans)
0.0.2 Eastern newts (N. virdescens virdescens)
0.2.0 African Clawed Frogs (X. laevis)
1.0.0 Bearded Dragon (P. vitticeps)
0.0.1 Pixie Frog (P. adsperus)
1.0.0 Earless Lizard (C. texanus)
1.0.5 Crested Gecko (R. ciliatus)
1 community fish tank with various species...
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08-25-2008, 09:39 AM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Oklahoma
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Turtlestork
If your going to spend the money to breed, get some roaches. They smell a lot less when they breed and from what I've heard do it faster and are more nutritious. I would breed them but I'm still under my mother's thumb and if one escaped she'd flip.
For my crickets (I assume this would work for roaches, too), I have an old plastic drink cooler. They have very, very slick sides, so nothing can climb them. I tried using the opaque storage bins like above, but the crickets climbed it and escaped through the openings. I am thinking about starting to breed silkworms as a supplement/back up to my crickets I order every few weeks (you can get a thousand for 20 dollars shipped at crix-n-wiggles.com Which has some really healthy crix) but that isn't anytime soon. I think I will first get a mulberry plant established in my backyard or something so I don't have to be ordering the pre-made food.
TS
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LOL, you are telling him he should get roaches and breed them but yet you never have had any or bred any. I have had roaches I thought they were a pain in the A*$! I would never use roaches again. I really dont see what the big deal is about them. Crickets are so much easier to deal with IMO and this is coming from someone who has kept both roaches and crickets.
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08-25-2008, 10:26 AM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: May 2008
Location: Texas
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OK OK OK OK Settle Down Guys!!
To be honest, i posted this a few months ago and have since started a dubia colony. Its going ok, not growing like was promised, but doing good. I do however think that there is no sub for the god old cricket. I was wondering if anyone of you guys bread meal worms? I would love some opinions regarding that.
__________________
Richard Dolman
Graduate Molecular Biology Angelo State University
0.0.1 Gekko Gecko 0.0.1 Rhacodactylus auriculatus
0.1.0 Paroedura pictus 2.3.0 Eublepharis macularius
1.0.0 Rhacodactylus ciliatus
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08-25-2008, 10:52 AM
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Geckos Unlimited Admin
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Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Virginia
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Lateralis beat crickets hands down any time. I used crickets for 15+ years and hated every minute of it. Lateralis are very similar to crickets in size, breed as fast if not faster, don't smell (assuming that you actually bother to clean your enclosures), don't make any noise, live WAY longer so you don't end up with tons of dead bugs in the bottom of the enclosure, and have a much high meat to shell ratio. Anyone not having these results is simply not doing it right or perhaps has poor quality stock.
Dubia are much slower to breed. But once they're established, they do quite well. They make for a nice larger sized feeder for bigger geckos and lizards (my U. Lineatus and tegus love them). I breed both dubia and lateralis and would never ever go back to crickets. Roaches are also a more natural diet for most herps. They live in almost every part of the world. They're mother natures feeders.
Mealworms are easy to breed also. And I do keep them around too just to add variety to my animal's diets. However, they're not very nutrious overall and their shells can cause impaction. I'd never use them as a single diet for any of my herps. But again, they are nice to have kicking around for variety.
@ Richard - if your Dubia colony isn't growing fast enough, re-check your temps and humidity as well as what you're feeding them. The cooler they are, the slower they reproduce. Get some flexwatt under them on a thermostat/rheostat and they'll take right off.
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08-25-2008, 12:24 PM
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Junior Member
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here in the UK I have never heard of anybody feeding roaches to anything never mind breeding them, I think I will stick stick with crix and worms @ locusts for my dragon and stick to crix and worms for my geckos when I get them, I know I can keep and breed them I have done in the past 
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any animal will bite if mistreated or provocted
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08-26-2008, 08:04 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Oklahoma
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My question with people that breed roaches. How do you seperate the different sizes? Without spending hours on end chassing roaches around trying to get the sizes seperated, or turning a 30 min feeding into a 3 hour feeding trying to chase the sizes down you need in one big tub as you feed.
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08-26-2008, 11:22 PM
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Geckos Unlimited Admin
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Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Virginia
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cliff_f
My question with people that breed roaches. How do you seperate the different sizes? Without spending hours on end chassing roaches around trying to get the sizes seperated, or turning a 30 min feeding into a 3 hour feeding trying to chase the sizes down you need in one big tub as you feed.
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Im not sure how anyone else does it. But I made a set of "strainers". Cups with different sized holes in the bottoms.
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10-16-2008, 01:01 AM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: London, ON, Canada
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Riverside Reptiles
Lateralis beat crickets hands down any time. I used crickets for 15+ years and hated every minute of it. Lateralis are very similar to crickets in size, breed as fast if not faster, don't smell (assuming that you actually bother to clean your enclosures), don't make any noise, live WAY longer so you don't end up with tons of dead bugs in the bottom of the enclosure, and have a much high meat to shell ratio. Anyone not having these results is simply not doing it right or perhaps has poor quality stock.
Dubia are much slower to breed. But once they're established, they do quite well. They make for a nice larger sized feeder for bigger geckos and lizards (my U. Lineatus and tegus love them). I breed both dubia and lateralis and would never ever go back to crickets. Roaches are also a more natural diet for most herps. They live in almost every part of the world. They're mother natures feeders.
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I've been researching Dubia roaches for some time now. I'd love to start a colony of them but I live in a 3 floor apt. building and I'm sure if the landlords or other neighbors found one they would FREAK OUT !!
I know that they don't infest like other roaches do but I likely wouldn't be able to convince others of that. From what I've read they don't stink, chirp or jump. I currently have a few stray crickets that talk to each other from different rooms and it drives me CRAZY!! Apparently roaches eat almost anything you feed them and are very clean which makes for less maintenance on their enclosure. Also ... once your colony breeds for several generations you don't have to buy feeders all the time.
So I am looking forward to trying them at some point but until then I will have to stick to crickets, silkworms and butterworms.
Dyesub Dave. 
__________________
1.2.7 Crested Geckos, 0.0.2 Micro Geckos, 1.1.2 White-Line Geckos, 2.2.0 Velvet Banded Geckos, 0.1.3 Gold Dust Day Geckos and one AWESOME boy that loves them all !!!
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10-16-2008, 03:06 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: a crazy ass city with lots of gangs
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i would probably do the roaches if it weren't for the fact that i can't even look at them. i have like 5-10 crickets going around that i cant for the life of me find and they just keep chirping endlessly.
does the strainer idea work for crickets?? no luck yet but i've tried breeding them
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10-16-2008, 07:45 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: London, ON, Canada
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I've been able to breed crickets before but it's difficult to get the tiny pinheads to a decent size. I'm sure that with enough space and proper enclosures, food and heating it would be easier but it's really a lot of work as they seem to need constant maintenance.
I've heard that roaches need far less maintenance than crickets when it comes to housing and breeding them!!
Dyesub Dave. 
__________________
1.2.7 Crested Geckos, 0.0.2 Micro Geckos, 1.1.2 White-Line Geckos, 2.2.0 Velvet Banded Geckos, 0.1.3 Gold Dust Day Geckos and one AWESOME boy that loves them all !!!
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