GeckoFanboy
Member
Would like to hear from others here.
For many years, with my late gecko, I had a cricket critter cage, and I supplied the crickets with Flukers cricket supplements regularly...meaning they had access to food 24/7. Lately, with my new gecko, I am trying different things with my crickets.
In the cricket cage, at all times, I am making sure they have fresh carrots and an orange slice. They ravage the orange slice, and probably eat more of it than the carrots. Then, 24 hours before I feed the crickets to my gecko, I remove about 6 of them from the critter cage, and place them in another container with Flukers orange cubes, grain food, and quencher. These 6 crickets get fed to my gecko. I'm hoping they have plenty of gut load in them. Thoughts?
Also, I am wondering what exact fruits and veggies are the most nutritious to feed the crickets? And which ones you should NOT feed to your crickets? And is there anything else healthy to feed a cricket that is not a fruit or veggie?
For many years, with my late gecko, I had a cricket critter cage, and I supplied the crickets with Flukers cricket supplements regularly...meaning they had access to food 24/7. Lately, with my new gecko, I am trying different things with my crickets.
In the cricket cage, at all times, I am making sure they have fresh carrots and an orange slice. They ravage the orange slice, and probably eat more of it than the carrots. Then, 24 hours before I feed the crickets to my gecko, I remove about 6 of them from the critter cage, and place them in another container with Flukers orange cubes, grain food, and quencher. These 6 crickets get fed to my gecko. I'm hoping they have plenty of gut load in them. Thoughts?
Also, I am wondering what exact fruits and veggies are the most nutritious to feed the crickets? And which ones you should NOT feed to your crickets? And is there anything else healthy to feed a cricket that is not a fruit or veggie?
Last edited: