If you are interested in breeding feeders at home, but aren't able to "baby sit" them because you are busy, there are other feeders out there that require little care/effort.
Vermicomposting worms, such as Red Wrigglers (small worm) and European Nightcrawlers (medium worm) are great choices. I feed these to my frogs and my cichlids and they love them. I keep them indoors at room temperature in Rubbermaid tubs. They are fed paper/cardboard and table scraps (like bread, veggies, fruits, used coffee grounds/tea bags, etc...). I feed them maybe once every two weeks, and I change out their bins maybe every 6 months or when it is getting full.
The other up side to them is that they make the BEST all natural fertilizer and you are doing something good for the environment. You can also make some money off of the castings. The red wrigglers breed pretty fast too, they will double their population every 90 days. I'm not sure how fast the European Nightcrawlers breed, I've only had them for a couple of months.
My pill bugs are doing well too, I only feed them fish flake food and rotting lettuce, and I make sure that their substrate stays wet. My colony is starting to take off, I noticed a new batch of babies last night. I probably only check on these guys once every 2-3 weeks. I'm keeping them in a sterelite shoe box at the moment, but I think I might get them a bigger tub eventually.
Mealworms are also really easy to breed, not my favorite feeder but they're good to have as a back up. I think I neglected my colony for almost a year, and there was still lots of mealies alive. I am taking better care of them now, but they are tough little guys.
Roaches are also great feeders. They like heat and you have to make sure that they don't run out of food or water as some species will cannibalize each other or their young. A cat/small dog gravity fed feeder filled with water gel crystals and one filled with food like cat/dog food, dry cereal, chick egg laying mash, etc..., would be a good way of making sure that they don't run out of food.
Dubia is a good starter roach and comes highly recommended by many keepers. They are very nutritious, they don't bite, they don't smell, they don't climb glass/smooth plastic, they don't make noise, they also don't run fast like pest roaches do. Females give birth to 20-30 nymphs every month. Tubs should be cleaned out once every 6 months or so.
Cardboard egg carton is a must have when breeding feeders. You can buy the large flats on line, but you can also get these from restaurants. Anywhere that serves breakfast or bakeries will have tones of these, and will probably appreciate people taking them off of their hands, that way they do not take up space in their dumpster.




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any advice on THAT!? hahaha
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I found her dead this morning. Her eyes are all glazed over and she's in rigor.

