To be honest, I don't know if you have a baby or a juvenile. You make reference to both. Before I got my PacMan, I did a lot of research and Printed out many "Care Sheets" from various websites and Vendors. I've spoken on the phone to Vendors. Most did not recommend "dusting" crickets with vitamins, or "gut-loading" crickets with vitamins. PetSmart appears to be negligent in the sense that no one really has a sound history of the care this frog has received while in their care. I think this frog needs some time to adjust to his new home. He was in a Critter Keeper, and had MANY live Crickets walking around this Critter Keeper. So, is this frog a baby or a juvenile? If the Crickets were walking around the Critter Keeper, than this frog is not hungry. You put him in a 10-gallon enclosure and were "constantly" misting but you had no Hygrometer. And you had a Temperature of 82-degrees, which I personally think is a little to warm. Why did you "pack down" the substrate? There is no need to do that. Just put the substrate into the enclosure and mist it. You don't need to "soak it". How can this frog be dehydrated when you are constantly misting the enclosure? Frogs absorb moisture through their skin.