Hey! I'll be selling these little guys in the upcoming months. Likely with several freebies/bulk prices. I really just want to keep my females line going so I'll be throwing babies left and right at people if I can.
Maybe. Yen’s male got munched so he’ll be first priority.I would take one them? I have the room. PM me if it's of interest.
be sure to wrap the ooths in moist cotton for shipping!!Maybe. Yen’s male got munched so he’ll be first priority.
Is moist cotton needed to keep the ooths from drying out during shipment?be sure to wrap the ooths in moist cotton for shipping!!
yesIs moist cotton needed to keep the ooths from drying out during shipment?
What about mold though? I'll need to ship these ooths with a heat pack, so how will I retain humidity without causing the ooth to mold?yes
these ooths really appreciate frequent misting, especially when particularly fresh!!
1: mold probably will not form in the few daysWhat about mold though? I'll need to ship these ooths with a heat pack, so how will I retain humidity without causing the ooth to mold?
All fine. Let me know.Maybe. Yen’s male got munched so he’ll be first priority.
howdy im in findlay ohio-Hey! I'll be selling these little guys in the upcoming months. Likely with several freebies/bulk prices. I really just want to keep my females line going so I'll be throwing babies left and right at people if I can.
You’ll have to go to Yen to actually about the nymphs since I’ve decided to give the ooths to him. Sencha has yet to lay her first egg case, but it should be plenty fertile. These guys take about 2-3 months to hatch out too so it will be a bit. Free mantises usually only happen between friends/those with a friendly business relationship. H. majuscula are fairly common so I doubt they'd be expensive. However, consider that providing a mantis with a safe variety of feeder insects (that are not mealworms or anything with too much fat) will cost money. I pay $20 for bottleflies and crickets about once a month.howdy im in findlay ohio-
interested in a couple if not cost prohibitive for me
im on lowest tier ssdi income
but could use some new buddies to keep me occupied-have experience with wild collected and hatched ooths of chinese mantis and bred released
same goes for p audax jumpers-wild caught--bred hatched-released
p.s.
i know and undertand thse arent releasable
AmazingNature can save money on feeders if he were to breed his own crickets: https://www.joshsfrogs.com/timberline-crickets.htmlYou’ll have to go to Yen to actually about the nymphs since I’ve decided to give the ooths to him. Sencha has yet to lay her first egg case, but it should be plenty fertile. These guys take about 2-3 months to hatch out too so it will be a bit. Free mantises usually only happen between friends/those with a friendly business relationship. H. majuscula are fairly common so I doubt they'd be expensive. However, consider that providing a mantis with a safe variety of feeder insects (that are not mealworms or anything with too much fat) will cost money. I pay $20 for bottleflies and crickets about once a month.
Ghann's cricket farm has the best deal on banded crickets imeAmazingNature can save money on feeders if he were to breed his own crickets: https://www.joshsfrogs.com/timberline-crickets.html
I have bred crickets (Acheta domesticus) in the past by keeping them in a slippery glass aquarium with peat moss for them to lay their eggs in. It wasn't hard. The Banded crickets (Gryllodes sigillatus) that I bought from Josh's frogs recently were harder to keep alive, so I wouldn't get those.
roaches breed more rapidly than crickets if kept warm enough. I'm allergic to Turkestan roaches but I have like 8 feeder species. Redhead and lobster roaches are the best imeEven better would be a Turkestan roach colony, because they are very low maintenance. All you do is feed them, and they breed in their plastic bin or aquarium. But they breed more slowly than crickets, so it might take a few years to get a good colony going. They are cheapest at Aaron Pauling's website:
https://www.aaronpauling.com/collections/non-climbing-roaches
repashy superfly is my go-to. it's about 43 cents per cultureThe Hierodula will eat crickets and roaches fine, but there are species of mantises that are more picky. Ghost mantises seem to need flies because the flies move more. Ghost mantises are not very interested in slower moving insects.
The smaller nymphs of Hierodula will need fruit flies. It can cost a bit of money for the media:
https://www.joshsfrogs.com/fruit-fly-media-24-lbs-20-8-liters.html
And exelsior for the fruit fly cultures: https://www.joshsfrogs.com/excelsior-bulk-30-lbs.html
The exelsior sucks up the moisture of the media as the fruit fly larvae eat the media, so it is important to have.
That's a great deal for Repashy superfly! 43 cents per culture.Ghann's cricket farm has the best deal on banded crickets ime
I would stay away from house crickets because of disease issues banded crickets do not have
roaches breed more rapidly than crickets if kept warm enough. I'm allergic to Turkestan roaches but I have like 8 feeder species. Redhead and lobster roaches are the best ime
repashy superfly is my go-to. it's about 43 cents per culture
Hey! I'll be selling these little guys in the upcoming months. Likely with several freebies/bulk prices. I really just want to keep my females line going so I'll be throwing babies left and right at people if I can.
An ooth has been laid and set to Yen! However, they must first incubate for 2-3 months. It will be a bit before there's any babies.Hi looking for a pair of Majuscula! I've tried to contact @yen_saw but he hasn't replied anything yet, so would like to know if you know any information on what's going on with those Majuscula ooths.
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