I don't think so, if they're very young. The chirping I noticed with mine was very different from their nightly croaking now.
I don't think so, if they're very young. The chirping I noticed with mine was very different from their nightly croaking now.
Hello Crystal!
I first got my little guys (who incidentally turned out to be a little guy and a little girl) last October. Kibbits was just a tiny guy at that point, no bigger than an inch probably. By late December, Kibbits (the male) started chirping. I didn't realize that was what he was doing until a few weeks later when he actually started croaking. In fact, when it first started, I assumed it was Igby, the older of the two frogs because he was still so small!!! But it turned out to be Kibbits; I think the little guy was testing out his voice, and it was funny to see it evolve that way! Started out as a squeaky chirp, then gradually turned into a squeaky croak, and eventually into his booming low croak at night. And boy was he proud of himself once he got to that low grumbling croak. : ) He had "croaking" contests with just about anything - the vacuum cleaner, thunder, the television, a truck outside ; ) Haha!
Sarah
A few weeks after I got my second Whites, which was incredibly small and still had a bit of a tail, I noticed a chirp coming from his cage, but I didn't think anything of it. Now, he is still quite young, but a lot bigger, and he chirps all of the time now. ALL OF THE TIME. Usually, it's whenever he sees or hears crickets. My avatar is a picture of his nightly ritual when I get him out to feed him: see the cricket cage, chirp with joy, and try as hard as he can to push his way into the cage.
Great pic! You guys make me feel guilty for not posting some of my own : ) (In a good way!)
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