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Thread: Canned crickets
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05-05-2021, 02:22 AM #1
Canned crickets
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Since settling in, he has had a good appetite. We keep him at about 8 mealworms a day and it’s clear that he can eat more if we provided more worms. She’ll feed him 6 worms in early evening and leave a few canned worms in his dish when she goes to bed. We use Flukers. He’ll usually eat those worms within an hour or so.
We’ve been reading that it’s good to vary his diet by adding crickets. But the crickets are too fast for him to catch and it’s even hard for us to cut off the legs as suggested in the guide. I was wondering if canned crickets would provide the similar nutrients as the live ones. These will be easier to handle and I’m guessing if he likes canned worms he’ll likely eat the canned crickets as well... is it a good idea to add canned crickets to his diet?
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05-05-2021, 03:35 AM #2
I don't recommend canned insects or worms. We are what we eat. Canned prey has NO opportunity for eating prior to feeding them to Toothless.
Insects and worms require a good dry diet 24/7. I don't recommend Flukers' for insect or worm diets.
Here are 2 different clear glass feeding dishes: Walmart's glass tealight holder -- smaller + 8 ounce Anchor's glass dishes also at Walmart. I use a stone ramp up to the 8 ounce dish for my adult leo. The smaller dish may help Toothless catch crickets. Measuring spoons may help you catch small crickets!
clear-glass-tealight-candle-holder-3-diameter-6.jpg 100616047478978p.jpg 71Ea8nVmhjL._SL1500_.jpg
(click to enlarge)
Have you decided upon a powdered supplement for Toothless? Mealworms COULD be fed at all Toothless's feedings. I use Zoo Med's supplements for all my geckos. Zoo Med's Reptivite multivitamins contains some vitamin A acetate (retinol). That's important for eye and skin health. Flukers' multivitamins only contain vitamin A beta carotene.
Flukers' Calcium with D3 contains excessive D3.
For link 23 click: For link 24 click: Calcium powders with D3 ONLY -- March 2021 (update)
Weekly Schedule 124 for Leopard Geckos 0-12 months old
(withOUT UVB)Metabolic bone disease (MBD) symptoms include uneven (lopsided) gait, walking on one or both "elbows", bowed limbs, belly dragging, and an underbite. Difficulty chewing should be closely monitored.The Reptile Supply Company (916-226-4089) based in Lodi, California stocks Zoo Med's ReptiVite multivitamins withOUT D3.
Feed lightly dusted prey 3x per week.
- Monday > > crickets or dubia lightly dusted with Zoo Med's Repti Calcium with D3
- Tuesday > > mealworms, superworms, or black soldier fly larvae (Phoenix worms) > > no dusting
- Wednesday > > crickets or dubia lightly dusted with pure precipitated calcium carbonate withOUT D3 (Zoo Med's Repti Calcium or NOW's human-grade pure calcium carbonate)
- Thursday > > mealworms, superworms, or black soldier fly larvae (Phoenix worms) > > no dusting
- Friday > > crickets or dubia lightly dusted with Zoo Med's ReptiVite multivitamins withOUT D3
- Saturday > > mealworms, superworms, or black soldier fly larvae (Phoenix worms) > > no dusting
- Sunday > > no food or free choice > > no dusting
For link 124 click: Weekly Feeding & Supplement Schedule 124 for leopard geckos 0-12 months old
Here's a healthy dry diet/bedding for mealworms/superworms and for bugs too! After you get mealworms or superworms, replace the bedding they come in with already ground Professional Reptiles' Pro Gutload (1-775-359-1085). Keep those worms in 6 quart plastic Sterilite tubs with bedding & ventilation at room temperature, NOT in the refrigerator.
Wheat germ, wheat bran, and oats contain hugely excessive phosphorus amounts! Use something else for a mealworm or a superworm bedding!
\/ \/ \/
In addition to a balanced dry diet to cover the basics, offer your geckos' feeders some veggies and fruits from these lists.
Gutload Ingredients for Bugs & Worms . . . . . . thanks to Olimpia -- August 2013
"A commercial gut loading food like Bug Burger or Superload (both by Repashy), Cricket Crack, Dinofuel, etc. is going to make your life easier AND provide a nutritious diet to your crickets at the same time. Avoid Fluker's gutloads, as they are super feeble in their formulas.
"If you opt for making your own gutload at home, here's a list of great ingredients to use:
BEST: mustard greens, turnip greens, dandelion flowers & leaves, collard greens, escarole lettuce, papaya, watercress, and alfalfa.
GOOD: sweet potato, carrots, (oranges), mango, butternut squash, kale, apples, beet greens, blackberries, bok choy, and green beans.
DRY FOOD: bee pollen, organic non-salted sunflower seeds, spirulina, dried seaweed, flax seed, and organic non-salted almonds.
AVOID AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE: potatoes, cabbage, iceberg lettuce, romaine lettuce, spinach, broccoli, tomatoes, corn, grains, beans, oats, bread, cereal, meat, eggs, dog food, cat food, fish food, canned or dead insects, vertebrates."Last edited by Elizabeth Freer; 05-07-2021 at 07:55 PM.
Click: Leopard Gecko Care Sheet's Table of Contents
Oedura castelnaui ~ Lepidodactylus lugubris ~ Gekko kuhli ~ Cyrtodactylus zebraicus ~ Phyllurus platurus ~ Eublepharis macularius ~ Correlophus ciliatus ~ (Phelsuma barbouri) ~ (Lygodactylus kimhowelli) ~ (P tigrinus) ~ (P klemmeri) ~ (H garnotii)Post Thanks / Like - 1 Thanks, 0 LikesJerryL thanked for this post
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05-05-2021, 08:54 PM #3
Hi Elizabeth,
Thank you for the detailed advice for Toothless. We currently put small pieces of squash in the mealworm bedding for the mealworms to munch on, then Liz chooses a few lucky worms each evening who are attached to the squash to put in Toothless' feeding dish. We've been dusting the worms in Zoo Med's Reptivite reptile vitamins with D3 before putting them in the feeding dish. We've also purchased Zoo Med's Repticalclium without D3 but not quite sure how to introduce it to him. Can we dust his food with both powders at the same time?
You mentioned that mealworms can be fed at all of his feedings; does that mean that we don't need to worry about crickets? Even within a dish - I'll try some of those teacandle holders - he just stands there and watches the cricket hop around, next to, and under him without doing anything. The only cricket he has ever caught was one that we had put in the fridge for a few minutes who seemed dazed as we placed him next to Toothless...
Another question Liz has is that Toothless seems to have a voracious appetite. We've gotten up as high as 10 meal worms in a single feeding and he eats the last one as quickly as the first one. Now he has learned that worms appear in his dish and he'll just stand there for hours waiting for the worms to come.
IMG_6583.jpg
Liz is also beginning to entice him to walk into her palm to grab a worm. It feels like he's constantly hungry no matter how much we feed him... At his age, how many worms can we feed him per feeding?
Thanks,
Jerry
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05-06-2021, 12:05 AM #4
Impaction
This is a question from my daughter Liz about her baby leopard gecko:
Hello! Lately I’ve been hand-feeding Toothless, and I have a question in impaction. He’s around 2-4 months old, I think.
When I chose out a mealworm for Toothless to eat from the mealworm cup I keep mealworms in, something must have got on my thumb, either a mealworm’s shed, or a single grain of corn meal. It was very light so I didn’t feel it/see it either in the dim light. When I put my hand down to hand-feed him, Toothless ate the light corn meal/mealworm shed instead of the actual meal worm.
I am quite concerned and I’m wondering if he is going to get impaction? If he does, what can I do about it?
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05-06-2021, 08:03 AM #5
Hi Liz,
As long as Toothless has 88-92*F temps underneath his warm dry hide, I don't think he'll have trouble digesting either a mealworm's shed or a grain of corn meal.
IF he does, it's quite safe to place 1-2 drops of vegetable oil on his nose to help him poop. IF you get to that point, warmish soaks (86*F -- a leo's preferred body temperature) along with throat-to-vent massaging will help Toothless pass such an impaction.
Are you keeping the mealworms at room temperature? That's best.
I'll reply to your other thread sometime later today.Last edited by Elizabeth Freer; 05-06-2021 at 08:07 AM.
Click: Leopard Gecko Care Sheet's Table of Contents
Oedura castelnaui ~ Lepidodactylus lugubris ~ Gekko kuhli ~ Cyrtodactylus zebraicus ~ Phyllurus platurus ~ Eublepharis macularius ~ Correlophus ciliatus ~ (Phelsuma barbouri) ~ (Lygodactylus kimhowelli) ~ (P tigrinus) ~ (P klemmeri) ~ (H garnotii)Post Thanks / Like - 1 Thanks, 0 LikesJerryL thanked for this post
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05-06-2021, 08:37 AM #6
JerryL, I've merged your two threads. The questions you have could be related, so it's easier to keep track of everything in one thread.
Post Thanks / Like - 1 Thanks, 0 LikesJerryL thanked for this post
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05-06-2021, 08:44 PM #7Thank you for the detailed advice for Toothless. We currently put small pieces of squash in the mealworm bedding for the mealworms to munch on, then Liz chooses a few lucky worms each evening who are attached to the squash to put in Toothless' feeding dish. We've been dusting the worms in Zoo Med's Reptivite reptile vitamins with D3 before putting them in the feeding dish. We've also purchased Zoo Med's Repticalclium without D3 but not quite sure how to introduce it to him. Can we dust his food with both powders at the same time?
Let's keep each supplement separate.
I suggest feeding Toothless all he'll eat in about 20 minutes. Let's see if that fills him up. Waiting at his food bowl for hours may be a sign that he's still hungry.
A dry diet like Professional Reptiles' Pro Gutload contains more nutrients than cornmeal alone. Pro Gutload is inexpensive. Keep it in an airtight container and away from light.
Both plain calcium carbonate and Calcium + D3 are more forgiving than multivitamins with or withOUT D3. I recommend using ZM's Reptivite with D3 multivitamins at only 1 feeding per week. Then use ZM's plain (no D3) calcium at 2 additional feedings per week. Vitamin D3 is fat soluble. That means a single D3 dose sticks around in a leo's body ALL WEEK LONG & metabolizes all the calcium carbonate that comes along.
Weekly Schedule 124 for Leopard Geckos 0-12 months old
(withOUT UVB)
Especially adapted for leopard gecko ToothlessMetabolic bone disease (MBD) symptoms include uneven (lopsided) gait, walking on one or both "elbows", bowed limbs, belly dragging, and an underbite. Difficulty chewing should be closely monitored.The Reptile Supply Company (916-226-4089) based in Lodi, California stocks Zoo Med's ReptiVite multivitamins withOUT D3.
Lightly dust the prey 3x per week even when your leopard gecko eats daily. When your leo graduates to eating ~3x per week, still lightly dust the prey ONLY 3x per week.
During this time (0-12 months old) your leopard gecko will be transitioning from daily feeding to feeding ~3x per week. This all depends upon how fast your leo grows!
- Monday > > crickets or dubia lightly dusted with Zoo Med's ReptiVite multivitamins with D3
- Tuesday > > mealworms, superworms, or black soldier fly larvae (Phoenix worms) > > no dusting
- Wednesday > > crickets or dubia lightly dusted with pure precipitated calcium carbonate withOUT D3 (Zoo Med's Repti Calcium or NOW's human-grade pure calcium carbonate)
- Thursday > > mealworms, superworms, or black soldier fly larvae (Phoenix worms) > > no dusting
- Friday > > crickets or dubia lightly dusted with pure precipitated calcium carbonate withOUT D3 (Zoo Med's Repti Calcium or NOW's human-grade pure calcium carbonate)
- Saturday > > mealworms, superworms, or black soldier fly larvae (Phoenix worms) > > no dusting
- Sunday > > no food or free choice > > no dusting
For link 124 click: Weekly Feeding & Supplement Schedule 124 for leopard geckos 0-12 months oldLast edited by Elizabeth Freer; 05-07-2021 at 01:11 AM.
Click: Leopard Gecko Care Sheet's Table of Contents
Oedura castelnaui ~ Lepidodactylus lugubris ~ Gekko kuhli ~ Cyrtodactylus zebraicus ~ Phyllurus platurus ~ Eublepharis macularius ~ Correlophus ciliatus ~ (Phelsuma barbouri) ~ (Lygodactylus kimhowelli) ~ (P tigrinus) ~ (P klemmeri) ~ (H garnotii)Post Thanks / Like - 1 Thanks, 0 LikesJerryL thanked for this post
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05-07-2021, 09:22 PM #8
Last edited by Elizabeth Freer; 05-07-2021 at 09:31 PM.
Click: Leopard Gecko Care Sheet's Table of Contents
Oedura castelnaui ~ Lepidodactylus lugubris ~ Gekko kuhli ~ Cyrtodactylus zebraicus ~ Phyllurus platurus ~ Eublepharis macularius ~ Correlophus ciliatus ~ (Phelsuma barbouri) ~ (Lygodactylus kimhowelli) ~ (P tigrinus) ~ (P klemmeri) ~ (H garnotii)Post Thanks / Like - 1 Thanks, 0 LikesJerryL thanked for this post
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05-14-2021, 02:10 AM #9
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05-14-2021, 02:29 AM #10
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Thank you for designing a menu for Toothless. Currently we have a jar of Zoo Med Reptivite Multivitamin with D3 and a jar of Zoo Med Repti Calcium without D3. She alternates dusting with the two. The mealworms are being gut-loaded with vegetables from your list and also dandelion flowers. We buy the mealworms from Petco, though she also has a container with about 30 beetles hatched from the mealworms. We were hoping they'd breed to make new mealworms but so far it has been about 2 months and no luck.
We have a "mountain" on the cool side of his habitat and he likes to climb up there to look around when he's alone. We have a webcam in the room to watch him as he still doesn't like to be out much when people are around. When we are in the room, but not close to the habitat, sometimes he'll go up to some place high and just watch us. I didn't know much about geckos and lizards before Liz decided to get them as pets, but I've been pleasantly surprised at how intelligent the little guy appears to be.
The other day when Liz was feeding him mealworms dusted with calcium, we spilled some on his mountain, and he immediately ran over to lick up all the spilled white powder. I wonder if this means he needs more calcium than what we are giving him...
Thanks again for taking the time to share all this valuable advice, Elizabeth. It's much appreciated.Post Thanks / Like - 0 Thanks, 1 LikesElizabeth Freer liked this post
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06-28-2022, 12:21 AM in Leopard Geckos | Husbandry, Housing & Heating