Quote Originally Posted by bshmerlie View Post
When you get a chance post a picture of your frogs and their enclosure.
I most definitely will! Saturday is tank cleaning day so that seems like a good time to get a few pictures. Does anyone have any solid advice on how to take a good picture of Red-Eye's in their tank? I've tried a couple shots but because of their small size, color matching their plants, and all the stuff in their tank throwing off my focus, I've had little luck.

Quote Originally Posted by bshmerlie View Post
You said small crickets so im assuming these are not pinhead crickets. Basically...look at the distance between their two eyes and that should be the appropriate size
Oops! Yes, my mistake. I meant small crickets. I was under the impression that pinheads and smalls were the same but I've now seen the difference. The smalls seem to be the perfect size using the "distance between the eyes" method.

Quote Originally Posted by bshmerlie View Post
Its great that you have them eating from a feeding dish. It helps you to monitor them eating at the same time prevents crickets from getting lost and dying in the enclosure.
Hahaha! Yea... I actually started out feeding them "free-range" which was a mistake. I found two problems... First it seems the crickets I purchase moonlight as an excavation team and if I don't put them in a dish they tend to dig underneath the plants to hide. The second problem I found almost had me rolling on the ground laughing. I use Eco Earth Coconut Husk substrate, and whenever the frogs hunted the crickets free range, they would pounce on them like a tiger... Then abruptly receive a mouthful of substrate along with their cricket. When this happens their little hands FLY to their mouths and they quickly fling out the substrate along with the (now dead and unappetizing) cricket. After that happens they tend to take a break from hunting for a half hour to an hour. The feeding dish has solved both these problems. and it's cute watching them sit on the edge of the bowl taking turns.

Quote Originally Posted by bshmerlie View Post
Also make sure you have a shallow soaking dish for them with just treated tap water. Change out the water every morning so it will be fresh for them the next night. Check out the red eye care article on the left.
I use the standard stone corner water dish that you find at EVERY pet store in the world, it seems to be the perfect size. I've been changing their water at night right before I kill their lights and feed them but I think I will use your advice and give them water in the morning so the water will consistently be the same temperature when they use it at night. Also... I have been using tap water treated with 1 drop of Reptidrops per 4oz of water, but I was curious on people's thoughts on using water from a Brita filter treated with the Reptidrops? It leaves some of the minerals in the water but insures things like lead are gone. That care article is WONDERFULLY written! I stopped their first and have read it a couple times and gotten great info! The only thing it didn't mention was the amount to feed. Which you guys' have thankfully answered for me.




Quote Originally Posted by Leefrogs View Post
I've never seen picures of oodinium.
I unfortunately didn't take any pictures while they were sick as I did my best to just let them be while they were recovering (I should have shot some during their baths!).




Quote Originally Posted by Tony View Post
I'm curious as to how he arrived at that diagnosis. As far as I am aware Oodinium only infects fish and presents similar symptoms to ich. I'm wondering if maybe he was confusing their normal white spotting for a disease.
Too be honest I'm not sure how he arrived at the diagnosis. The info I have from him is that both of them had become sluggish and weren't feeding as regularly as the first two weeks he got them in.

When he showed me what he assumed was Oodinium it looked very similar to the Ich that seems to be rampant at our local Wal~Marts fish tanks. Now that they are healthy (I hope) the smaller of the two frogs (male?) has 0 spots and the bigger frog (female) has 3 white spots on her back that look exactly like the markings on your frog. The spots they had when I first got them looked different however. They were unregularly shaped when compared to the three dots on the bigger frog. Also they almost had a fuzzy look to them, like they weren't as smooth as the three dots on the bigger frog, hard to explain. And lastly they were several sections of spotting on both frogs which appears to be completely gone.

Could it have been something else? Some kind of fungus? Either way it seems to be gone and they seem to be doing well. I hope this is the case!

Thanks everyone for all the help! You guys' are (froggy) lifesaver's!!

P.S.
Thanks for the warm welcome to the forum!