sschind
Well-known member
I have no problems getting thousands, probably tens of thousands pinhead banded crickets every month from my purchase of 500 adults but my problem is getting them past the first couple of molts. I lose probably 75% or more within the first 2 or 3 molts. I know they need higher humidity and I have tweaked my setups and thought i may have it figured out but now I am fighting mold on my egg cartons. It's possible I have them too crowded but if I get more containers or larger ones I will run out of room.
My setup currently consists of Sterelite containers 14x11x12 with holes drilled in the top. This keeps the humidity up nicely and since they are on a top shelf in my reptile room they seem to stay nice and warm as well. I layer egg carton with plenty of room between layers (I alternate direction so they don't nest) and at top I take one section of egg carton and soak it in water. I noticed that as the water soaks down to lower layers the crickets tend to avoid the wetter ones near the top so even though they need higher humidity they don't seem to like being on wet cardboard. My next move will be to separate the soaked carton from the others with a layer of plastic to keep the lower layers drier but even though they are damp they still attract the crickets. Tonight when I went in to clean i noticed lots of dead bodies in each layer. I am thinking placing the cartons upright rather than flat may help. It will give the sheds room to fall and maybe increase air circulation.
Once I get them through the 3rd molt they seem to be pretty bulletproof so If anyone has any tips or secrets they are willing to share to get past this delicate stage I would appreciate it.
My setup currently consists of Sterelite containers 14x11x12 with holes drilled in the top. This keeps the humidity up nicely and since they are on a top shelf in my reptile room they seem to stay nice and warm as well. I layer egg carton with plenty of room between layers (I alternate direction so they don't nest) and at top I take one section of egg carton and soak it in water. I noticed that as the water soaks down to lower layers the crickets tend to avoid the wetter ones near the top so even though they need higher humidity they don't seem to like being on wet cardboard. My next move will be to separate the soaked carton from the others with a layer of plastic to keep the lower layers drier but even though they are damp they still attract the crickets. Tonight when I went in to clean i noticed lots of dead bodies in each layer. I am thinking placing the cartons upright rather than flat may help. It will give the sheds room to fall and maybe increase air circulation.
Once I get them through the 3rd molt they seem to be pretty bulletproof so If anyone has any tips or secrets they are willing to share to get past this delicate stage I would appreciate it.