So I've been doing a ton of research and can't come up with a definitive answer. I'm trying to find the best rotation for keeping bb and house flies as feeders.
I have an orchid, 2 budwings, 2 spiny flower, and a local stagmomantis limbata female. I ordered house fly and bb fly pupae. All are hatching and buzzing around. I usually feed everyday or every other day. So I need a few live ones available at all times. Although I get the feeling I am wasting flies by hatching them all at once. I feed them yen's special blend and mist them lightly. It's been less than a week and I can see deaths in the jars. So my feeding schedule is sloppy.
How do you keep fresh flies on rotation while also being efficient? Saving some for later. I don't want to buy 100 pupae if the mantids can only eat 30 of them. Before the batch dies. I'll buy whatever contraptions I need upfront. I just want it to be cost effective in the long run. Get a nice schedule going and maximizing the feeders.
The only adult I have is the limbata. All the rest are L3/L4. So they are not eating mass amounts of flies.
I have an orchid, 2 budwings, 2 spiny flower, and a local stagmomantis limbata female. I ordered house fly and bb fly pupae. All are hatching and buzzing around. I usually feed everyday or every other day. So I need a few live ones available at all times. Although I get the feeling I am wasting flies by hatching them all at once. I feed them yen's special blend and mist them lightly. It's been less than a week and I can see deaths in the jars. So my feeding schedule is sloppy.
How do you keep fresh flies on rotation while also being efficient? Saving some for later. I don't want to buy 100 pupae if the mantids can only eat 30 of them. Before the batch dies. I'll buy whatever contraptions I need upfront. I just want it to be cost effective in the long run. Get a nice schedule going and maximizing the feeders.
The only adult I have is the limbata. All the rest are L3/L4. So they are not eating mass amounts of flies.