i just read your post on dusting worms in another thread, too. i like the idea of keeping him/her in soil more than the eco earth and had planned to try some pothos clippings; this won't be a problem as long as i find one without fertilizer?
i just read your post on dusting worms in another thread, too. i like the idea of keeping him/her in soil more than the eco earth and had planned to try some pothos clippings; this won't be a problem as long as i find one without fertilizer?
Pothos, as its called, will grow in sphagnum moss as it turns out so using eco earth is fine. I would have once suggested using an organic topsoil product as its cheap, but as it turns out, it can harbor nematodes.
I hope you realize you are going to have to change the soil every two weeks or so to prevent bacteria build up, but eco earth makes it easy to uproot the plant and clean the roots off.
Horned Frogs eat probably 90% vertebrate prey in the wild, so they need alot of calcium in their diet. Now that doesnt mean to over do it with the dusting, but I would suggest whole fish (not goldfish or other feeder fish that come from a fish hatchery) and the occasional mouse (for a full grown frog). There is also a great dry powder product called samurai pacman food which is fish meal based, and it also has lots of vitamins and is "nutritionally complete" though i would offer other stuff too.
Feeding just crickets, or just nightcrawlers, even with a supplement will still probably lead to a deficiency so a variety is always better. The nice thing about pacman frogs is they respond well to tong feeding, so foods like can-o-cricket and pacman food are convenient and nutritious choices.
the benefit of the can-o-crickets over live crickets is that the can o crickets are in a can, whereas live crickets are alive, which isnt very convenient and crickets are gross, stinky insects. Another plus is that the canned ones (provided you got a high quality one like zoo med or something similar) are gutloaded with highly nutritious stuff right before they are canned, which is also very convenient. Live crickets are just inconvenient, but if you already raise them or keep large quantities and gut load them right, by all means use them, just dont forget to feed some fish fish and mice every now and then.
I swear by fish/pacman food and nightcrawlers when it comes to getting a baby frog up to size. I got three pacs and a fantasy frog from just under quarter sized to over two inches in a month, and a Budgetts Frog from the size of a silver dollar to over three and a half inches in a month on that diet.
I am raising a large female that went from quarter sized to 4" in 2.5 months. No mice or fish. Varied diet of invertebrates gut loaded crickets(live), Red Wigglers, Waxworms, Night Crawlers, and occasional Pacman Food. Hornworms as a treat. She is huge and powerful. Green/Brown C. Cranwelli named Pariah.
impressive. since he's my first, i just want him healthy and growing appropriately. i will definitely order the pacman food. he's switched over to the eco earth, btw, and the tank's been cut down to half the size it was.
@grif: can that low temp exo terra mat be mounted under the tank? side mounting has never and is not working for me.
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