ENTRY 1
The mantids aren't scheduled to arrive until tomorrow afternoon, so I used today to get everything all prepped for them when they DO show up.
The Supplies
Standard mantis habitat supplies for most of you I'll bet, but I thought I'd include it anyway. Several yards of thick ribbon, 2oz cups, 5.5oz cups, 32oz cups, some car wash sponges, hot glue, and some strange plastic crochet patterns that I thought would work perfectly as grip material. All this, plus a little surprise you'll see shortly...
Can't build habitats on an empty stomach!
RESULTS
I decided to make each cup a little bit different for the sake of experimentation. Some of the lids were a real pain to snap on and off, even without a mantis inside, or a hand occupied by forceps, so I used a method I had seen elsewhere on the forum the difficult lids.
(I'd like to apologize here for the inconsistent orientation of the photographs. Future entries will have only proper, landscape photos)
As you can see, on the larger cups I used the crochet patterns as my lid ventilation/grip. My reasoning being that once they grow into these cups, it should provide more comfort and air flow than the ribbon. I'm not sure if I'd ever use this material again, as it was surprisingly difficult to keep it in place with hot glue. Each cup has a strip of ribbon up the side for easy climbing, and a feeder hole/sponge combo at the bottom. Paper towel substrate in all cups.
Here we have the surprise enclosure mentioned earlier! But what could be inside?
With a little bit of hot glue, and a lot of time, I present the Crystal Cavern! There is a famous rockhounding site a few hours from where I live. I took a trip there once and came back with a bucket full of quartz crystals that have been collecting dust ever since.
Unfortunately, the pictures don't do it justice, but the *ahem* expertly placed crystals should provide hours of entertainment for any intrepid mantis. Now, the real timekiller here was cutting out the section of lid to replace it with ribbon, as the plastic used for these snap-lock type containers is quite thick and durable. My last exacto-knife blade snapped in half during my efforts, so I switched to my work box-cutter, which still managed to struggle. The best strategy I can recommend for anybody that wants to use this type of container is to score a line and follow it over and over until the blade pushes through.
And finally we end with the grand daddy of all mantis homes. The 10-gallon aquarium. I plan to divide this into two equal sections and decorate, for use with adult mantids. But four hours was enough for one day, so I think I'll leave it for another time.
I very much appreciate any thoughts, concerns, or observations you may have! After all, what else is a forum for?