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Mantid Discussions
Food and Feeding
Homemade Dry Cricket Feed
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<blockquote data-quote="sschind" data-source="post: 284912" data-attributes="member: 797"><p>I've got a friend who make fish food and he is constantly researching nutritional requirements of different fish and the nutritional values of different foods. For example, he uses duck eggs instead of chicken eggs because duck eggs have twice as much nutritional value so he doesn't have to use as much. He also use a special variety of sweet potato that has more nutrients than your standard orange ones and he drives a ways to get them. He dehydrates everything then mixes it all together, makes it wet and lets it dry out and crumbles it up.</p><p></p><p>I tried to put a bug in his rear (pun intended) about researching cricket food but so far it has not taken flight.</p><p></p><p>I've always used a combination of dog food, guinea pig food and wheat bran and I never had a problem with the crickets eating it. I grind it all up fine and mix it in a 1.1.2 ratio.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="sschind, post: 284912, member: 797"] I've got a friend who make fish food and he is constantly researching nutritional requirements of different fish and the nutritional values of different foods. For example, he uses duck eggs instead of chicken eggs because duck eggs have twice as much nutritional value so he doesn't have to use as much. He also use a special variety of sweet potato that has more nutrients than your standard orange ones and he drives a ways to get them. He dehydrates everything then mixes it all together, makes it wet and lets it dry out and crumbles it up. I tried to put a bug in his rear (pun intended) about researching cricket food but so far it has not taken flight. I've always used a combination of dog food, guinea pig food and wheat bran and I never had a problem with the crickets eating it. I grind it all up fine and mix it in a 1.1.2 ratio. [/QUOTE]
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Mantid Discussions
Food and Feeding
Homemade Dry Cricket Feed
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