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Re: Giant AF still not eating

Originally Posted by
MyKindOfLullaby
...I picked up some dechlorifing stuff from petsmart. I rinsed everything down with the dechlorified water and mixed new substrate with the water as well. I put my frog in a dish with the new water and changed it twice. She's now taking a honey bath. Hopefully this will fix the problem. Any advice or thoughts? (So crystal geyser has chlorine in it???). Right now she is a pale green color and I'm hoping she'll return to her dark green color tomorrow.
Dechlorinated tap water is fine for frogs. Some owners think they are going one step further and use other water sources thinking it's going to be better and accidentally make it worse.
Water bottling companies have to meet certain city codes of purity and how they go about it can alter the water so it's unsafe for frogs. The bottle might say "spring" but it's rarely pure spring and many times there is some processing involved.
In the case of Cristal Geyser think the problem is aggressive filtration to reach very low mineral contents. Then the water, although safe to use for human drinking, becomes unsafe for frogs. In that water frogs would loose minerals to the water creating chemical imbalances that affect the frog's physiological processes and create a health issues similar to when R/O or distilled water is in use.
So my recommendation is to use treated tap for your frog. If local water is hard and leaves water spots on glass when spraying can use distilled for spraying but avoid spraying frog directly with it.
If this was the cause or it contributed to frogs issues it should get better; but be aware it could take some time since frogs heal slowly. Good luck
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Last edited by Mentat; September 22nd, 2013 at 07:05 PM.
Remember to take care of the enclosure and it will take care of your frog
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September 22nd, 2013
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Re: Giant AF still not eating
I would definitely try superworms. They are my frogs favourite food but don't give too many because they aren't very nutritious.
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Re: Giant AF still not eating

Originally Posted by
SCF
Have you tried changing up it's diet a little? Try offering him/her a small pinkie, or hornworms always get a lot of interest from my pets. I would even try a few superworms.
I agree on the hornworms. Especially if they are the blue colored (fed artificial diets) because the color is striking and most animals won't refuse. I am about to feed my GABF some hornworms that I have raised and they are basically chunky blue candy treats.

Originally Posted by
Truffs1178
I would definitely try superworms. They are my frogs favourite food but don't give too many because they aren't very nutritious.
Agreed, dust these with calcium because they have a low Ca:P ratio. You could gut load these with wheat germ, carrots, or anything else nutritious to help out a little. My frog absolutely loves these and on days when she won't take a dubia roach or a canadian nightcrawler she will almost always jump at a wriggling superworm.
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Re: Giant AF still not eating

Originally Posted by
NialR35
Those random change of colors could be the frog toxing out from the untreated water. I would make sure everything is treated and that you give your frog a bath with just treated water so it can rinse off and detox.
First I put her in treated water and she squirted old water out. Then I put in her in more treated water and 10 minutes later I added honey to it. She's still a pale green right now.
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Re: Giant AF still not eating

Originally Posted by
Mentat
Dechlorinated tap water is fine for frogs. Some owners think they are going one step further and use other water sources thinking it's going to be better and accidentally make it worse.
Water bottling companies have to meet certain city codes of purity and how they go about it can alter the water so it's unsafe for frogs. The bottle might say "spring" but it's rarely pure spring and many times there is some processing involved.
In the case of Cristal Geyser think the problem is aggressive filtration to reach very low mineral contents. Then the water, although safe to use for human drinking, becomes unsafe for frogs. In that water frogs would loose minerals to the water creating chemical imbalances that affect the frog's physiological processes and create a health issues similar to when R/O or distilled water is in use.
So my recommendation is to use treated tap for your frog. If local water is hard and leaves water spots on glass when spraying can use distilled for spraying but avoid spraying frog directly with it.
If this was the cause or it contributed to frogs issues it should get better; but be aware it could take some time since frogs heal slowly. Good luck

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Thank you for your help! She's still a pale green color and she didn't eat tonight. How long do you think she could go without eating? I'm scared she's going to starve herself
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