Thx for All the responses. It is peculiar as their abdomen will even sag to the side if they hang on the side of the enclosure. As his thorax filled, he eventually straightened his abdomen so the food could pass.
I too have experienced "bad crickets" and years ago lost an anole colony and bearded dragon colony from a bad bacteria ladened cricket batch. I have had in-depth conversations with cricket breeders at the annual reptile shows and they say crickets will get that way when allowed to feed on dead crickets left in the cricket enclosure and also if kept too cold. Basically they get sick and bad bacteria establishes in their gut.
I struggle with the whole "fly management" (short shelf life; transfer into enclosure, etc.) So unless the sp. Is known not to tolerate crickets (Idolos, B. Mendica, other flower Mantis and many grass Mantis), crickets are just "easier".
I also feed some medium sized species my special fruit fly cultures (fat and nutritious) throughout their entire life cycle... just many more... no issues. ff's are easier to manage with the squeeze bottles!
For store bought, or breeder bought crickets, I agree with immediate administration of good diet ( I use Crick Crack™), and haven't had any problems.
My wife is extremely tolerant when it comes to my Mantis obsession, but draws the line at roaches!
Chinese, Stagmos, Dead Leaf's, Giant Africans, etc are ok with crickets, not to mention have incredible appetites! Occasional super worms too!??
Wish the bb flies were longer lived.
This is my first go at the Chinese... cool personalities!
Want to look into bushes that attract bees so I can naturally harvest them as a staple diet!
Sorry really got off topic here?