Thanks for the reply. I've just re-read the back of the supplements - And it says it's ok for both reps and amphibians. Silly me.![]()
Thanks for the reply. I've just re-read the back of the supplements - And it says it's ok for both reps and amphibians. Silly me.![]()
Mine says it in big letters on the front. Lucky me.![]()
What other reptiles do you have? Is this your first frog?
Hello Loz welcome to the forum. Wow another from the UK. We would love pictures of your frog. What else do you keep?
Yea this is my very first frog. Between me and my boyfriend we've got a bearded dragon, a veiled chameleon, two flying geckos, 6 spiders, stick insects, leaf insects, two giant Asian matises, a yellow anaconda... and now my froggy.
I will try to upload some pics of my new addition soon, but I'm having problems with getting pics from my camera to the PC at the mo, something up with my PC I think.
i have been using nutrobal vitamin powder for my frogs and toads as this was what the pet store told me to use, now im wondering if it will be to strong?
For a pacman frog your main concern is going to be calcium supplementation. I would dust his food about once or twice a week while he's still young - less frequently when he is older. Vitamin/mineral supplements are usually less of a concern for large frogs like this because they have more possibilities for a varied diet. Much of the advice followed by frog enthusiasts originally comes from dart frog enthusiasts - when all you feed your frogs is fruit flies (talking about dart frog keepers here) then you really do need to worry about supplements. However, when your frog can eat many other things that are readily available, it's better to make use of varied foods than rely on powdering the same food item day-in, day-out.
Founder of Frogforum.net (2008) and Caudata.org (2001)
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)