|  |
Notices |
Welcome to the sSnakeSs community. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us.
|
02-10-05, 07:32 PM
|
#16
|
Member
Join Date: Jul-2002
Location: Ontario Cda
Posts: 3,234
Country:
|
My egg cases are still in cool storage. I usually leave them there until April. Any 'leftovers' that grow too big to use as feeders can then be released in my garden for bug control and attracting birds. The cases are really easy to collect around here, it's my one winter outing during a January thaw.
You could raise them on pinheads, fruit flies and any other tiny bugs until they're big enough to use as feeders. Newly hatched ones went over well with 1 month old chams. I've also used small mantis as food for crested and gargoyle geckos. Some of the bigger dart frogs ate them as they emerged from the egg cases, but not many Dendrobates touched them (probably too tough for their tender tongues to handle).
|
|
|
02-10-05, 07:34 PM
|
#17
|
Member
Join Date: Sep-2003
Location: Fort McMurray, AB
Age: 52
Posts: 1,285
|
thats sweet.
|
|
|
02-10-05, 07:38 PM
|
#18
|
Member
Join Date: Mar-2003
Location: Ontario Canada
Age: 65
Posts: 1,485
|
They can eat big prey. I've seen them eating monarchs like a cob of corn. I'd toss some pin head crickets in and see if they grab them with those front claws
__________________
Uncle Roy
-----------------------------------------
Herpetology - more than a hobby
It's a Lifestyle
celebrating 26 years of herp breeding
|
|
|
02-10-05, 07:42 PM
|
#19
|
Member
Join Date: Aug-2002
Location: Ontario
Age: 47
Posts: 5,000
|
Quote:
Originally posted by Jeff_Favelle
That's totally cool! Its awesome to find the things that fascinated us when we were young. Reminds us all why we do all this!!!
|
That's exactly why I grabbed up the female man. It was these types of things that got me into this hobby when I was a child.. I have the scar to prove it!
Hilde, I was thinking about trying some with the cresties, and now I think I definatly will..
Roy, i'll have to see if I can get my hands on some pinheads this weekend, as for now, they'll have to be happy with their fruit flies.
-Matt
|
|
|
02-10-05, 09:03 PM
|
#20
|
Member
Join Date: Dec-2002
Location: Ottawa, Ontario
Posts: 499
|
I remember in grade 5 we hatched an egg sack in class and my teacher gave them away to students who got permission from their parents that said that they were allowed to keep em. Well, i got permission and brought 3 <a href="http://www.ntsearch.com/search.php?q=home&v=56">home</a>. I kept them in separate jars with sticks and well, our <a href="http://www.ntsearch.com/search.php?q=house&v=56">house</a> was made out of stucco and we (my parents and i) lived near a river and in the summer wed have hundreds of mayflies that would stick on the sides of the house and id used to grab a few everyday or so and rip off their wings and drop them in front of the mantids and theyd take them readily. Matt, i am pretty sure that your mantids will do fine on 2 week old pinheads, all u need to do is to rip off the jumping legs and toss em in with the mantids  , mine would also take things a little bigger than they were!
good luck!
Thanks,
Ben
__________________
by the time you have
finished reading this you realize
that you have wasted
5 seconds of your life
Last edited by reptile boi; 02-10-05 at 09:05 PM..
|
|
|
02-10-05, 10:53 PM
|
#21
|
Member
Join Date: Jan-2003
Location: Ottawa, Canada
Posts: 2,537
|
Those are SOOOOOOOO awesome Matt  You've had 'em for a while, eh? I have hungry chams ... but I'll eat one for 5$...
Wicked pictures
__________________
Heather Rose
"Wanting people to listen, you can't just tap them on the shoulder anymore. You have to hit them with a sledgehammer, and then you'll notice you've got their strict attention." - John Doe, Seven
Heather Rose Reptiles
|
|
|
02-10-05, 11:16 PM
|
#22
|
Member
Join Date: Sep-2004
Location: Ottawa, ON
Posts: 132
|
Matt, fabulous, I can't believe it's that small from the pictures. I have a ravenous chameleon, he's a regular pig
Hilde, That's really cool, where'd you find the egg sacs? I never thought of mantis' as a food source. I thought they were somewhat rare in Canada, but I guess not...
Thrush
|
|
|
02-10-05, 11:34 PM
|
#23
|
Member
Join Date: Aug-2002
Location: Ontario
Age: 47
Posts: 5,000
|
In the fall around my place there's litterally millions of them. Everywhere you look you see a couple of them..
I've always found egg sacs on wooden telephone polls.. It's worth a shot..
-Matt
|
|
|
02-11-05, 05:59 AM
|
#24
|
Member
Join Date: Jul-2002
Location: Ontario Cda
Posts: 3,234
Country:
|
I find them in grassy fields and edge of wheat fields of my favourite stomping grounds. The eggs are laid in fall, but I don't collect them until January or even February. By then the tall grass has been flattened for the most part and it's easier to spot the cases. During a warm spell I'll go out and explore. The ones I find are attached to the stems near ground level. They're hard to spot at first, but once you've seen a few you get to recognize them easily.
Every year I release some mantids in my garden, thinking it will save me a trip into the wild to collect cases next year, but it never works. I've yet to find one egg case here at home.
|
|
|
02-11-05, 11:25 PM
|
#25
|
Member
Join Date: Dec-2002
Location: Ottawa, Ontario
Posts: 499
|
"In the fall around my place there's litterally millions of them. Everywhere you look you see a couple of them..
I've always found egg sacs on wooden telephone polls.."
Matt your one lucky mouse, id love to live in a place where i can find mantids on my property, but instead i have to go to this grass feild behind my school and spend hours and hours under the sun looking for one. I have also never found egg cases on telephone poles, id always find them somewhere on the ground in a grassy feild, even then, all the ones i find are always dried up
Thanks,
Ben
__________________
by the time you have
finished reading this you realize
that you have wasted
5 seconds of your life
|
|
|
02-11-05, 11:45 PM
|
#26
|
Member
Join Date: Aug-2002
Location: Ontario
Age: 47
Posts: 5,000
|
LOL, I live in a grassy field.. My house backs on to a farmers property, I cant see the house behind me, just the field.. It's awesome. He doesn't mind me walking his property either, as long as the horses aren't out.
|
|
|
02-12-05, 08:26 AM
|
#27
|
Member
Join Date: Jul-2002
Location: Ontario Cda
Posts: 3,234
Country:
|
If you're collecting near a school, maybe the other students found most of them before you got there.
I have tried collecting them in the fall, but it's too much work considering how easy it is in winter. Right now the snow has flattend most of the grass and tall weedy plants, makes it easier to find a 'rounded blob' against the flattened weedy things even if they are the same general colour. There's fewer mosquitos, wasps and flies out at this time of year
|
|
|
02-20-05, 03:45 PM
|
#28
|
Member
Join Date: Oct-2004
Location: Richmond hill (greater toronto area) Ontario Canada
Age: 36
Posts: 80
|
wow awesome... do those things grow big? are u going to the expo in missisagua next weekend?? i want one lol
|
|
|
02-21-05, 11:06 PM
|
#29
|
Member
Join Date: Aug-2002
Location: The Island
Posts: 1,017
|
tres cool! when i was a kid i fed them the aphids i found on thistles. they would be black with them, so id jsut pick a flower and put it in tehre and that would feed em for a few days.
|
|
|
02-22-05, 10:58 AM
|
#30
|
Former Moderator no longer active
Join Date: Feb-2002
Location: Christchurch
Posts: 10,251
Country:
|
That's way too cool, Matt  I've seen those things around in the summer, but never knew what came out of them. Maybe next year I will pick some up and give it a try myself!
|
|
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 11:23 AM.
Powered by vBulletin® ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

Copyright © 2002-2023, Hobby Solutions.
|
 |