mtolosa
Member
Hello!
I'm the new member who got into mantids because they hatched in our Christmas tree ^_^ I'm looking for ways to be active in the forums, so I thought I'd share the enclosures I came up with for housing my little guys until spring rolled around and it was warm enough for release.
I do some canning for fun and also use mason jars as cups and vases, so I had a whole lot of pint sized jars in my cupboards... why not use my various sizes of jars for mantis enclosures, right?? They come in all sorts of sizes, and you can get them at local hardware stores or even thrift stores for about $.99 each. As he got older, I ended up keeping my big male in a 2 gallon pickle jar from Goodwill (I don't think I have a photo of that one though).
They were really low-fi. Just a jar with a fabric square on top (I screwed the lid ring over it to secure it), paper towels (and eventually pebbles) on the bottom, and twigs for hanging and climbing.
As my male aged he got pretty gimpy from various wars with ants and crickets, and he began to have trouble climbing the glass but for the growing nymphs they had no problem.
I'm the new member who got into mantids because they hatched in our Christmas tree ^_^ I'm looking for ways to be active in the forums, so I thought I'd share the enclosures I came up with for housing my little guys until spring rolled around and it was warm enough for release.
I do some canning for fun and also use mason jars as cups and vases, so I had a whole lot of pint sized jars in my cupboards... why not use my various sizes of jars for mantis enclosures, right?? They come in all sorts of sizes, and you can get them at local hardware stores or even thrift stores for about $.99 each. As he got older, I ended up keeping my big male in a 2 gallon pickle jar from Goodwill (I don't think I have a photo of that one though).
They were really low-fi. Just a jar with a fabric square on top (I screwed the lid ring over it to secure it), paper towels (and eventually pebbles) on the bottom, and twigs for hanging and climbing.
As my male aged he got pretty gimpy from various wars with ants and crickets, and he began to have trouble climbing the glass but for the growing nymphs they had no problem.