Colorcham427
Well-known member
I have sold a ton of L2 and L3 Violin mantis nymphs and even pre-sub and sub-adult pairs in the past few months.
In case some of you bought some else where, I would like to share my care-sheet that I provided for my previous buyers who I wasn't positive if they were new or not to the hobby or Violin species.
Here it is:
If you need any help let me know. This species is extremely easy to get every nymph to adult!!!
Only mist them once a day, light mist.
I started doing something different with my mantids that has helped them a lot.
My mantids' 75 watt lights go on at 6 A.M. If you can't do this early enough, invest in a timer, they are worth it!!!
I feed them early in the after noon, around 1 p.m. In EVERY mantis cage I keep two shallow cups with something for them to climb onto. The water dish is just a small, shallow container filled with water and I place some wood chips in it so they have a surface incase they fall into the water! LOL they will drown if the wood chips aren't there! The second small shallow container has a few pinches of sugar/powdered butter milk. 50/50 mix ratio. I only sprinkle a few pinches because this powdery mix hardens within 12 hours, so I only offer the flies enough for them to eat.
If you want, you can ALSO fill ONE shallow container with a tea spoon of honey and 1/4th of a cup of water. Mix it well! Then add a few pinches of sugar and stir it again. Then pour into the container and place in the cage(s).
I feed them their flies before it is TOO HOT for the flies to thrive in. Flies do BEST IN 75-80 degrees. Once it gets higher than 85 degrees, all the flies do is hang around the water source and they don't fly around and stimulate my mantids, because they are over heated and MUST rehydrate themselves constantly.
Once it is around 2 P.M. and the flies are eaten, I then raise the temperature by having my 250 watt bulbs turn on. The 75-80 degrees is raised within an hour to 100 degrees for my Violins and other 100 degree species' section.
I mist their cage around 6 P.M. with only one light spray, make sure it is a very fine mist, no dense drops! Their lights automatically shut off at 8 P.M.
For Violins, you can use butter fly net cages from livemonarch.com (lowest price) or thin holed screen or plastic mesh cage. MAKE SURE to set-up the cage with dried twigs from outside. I pick out twigs and thin branches all the time outside in my yard and near by wooded area/bike path. Make sure to pick out the kind of tree branches/twigs that are very bumpy with lots of crevices. NO smooth surfaced bark!
I pre-heat my oven at 300 degrees and then put the branches and twigs on a tray and place them in the oven for an hour. It smells good and the bark gets very dry and some of the pieces of bark on them tends to curve out a little which is good for the mantid's claws' grip!
It's important to kill whatever is living inside the bark. Parasites are tiny!!!
Violins need good ventilation.
If you are keeping the Violins in a room with high humidity due to other species, you should invest in a small fan and have it flower around their area in the room.
Do you have any other species? Any questions or concerns, just ask! I am an email away, thanks!
Not sure if this is the best thread for this section but thought I'd share my care sheet? Thanks all for helping me out with my over stock of Violins!!!
In case some of you bought some else where, I would like to share my care-sheet that I provided for my previous buyers who I wasn't positive if they were new or not to the hobby or Violin species.
Here it is:
If you need any help let me know. This species is extremely easy to get every nymph to adult!!!
Only mist them once a day, light mist.
I started doing something different with my mantids that has helped them a lot.
My mantids' 75 watt lights go on at 6 A.M. If you can't do this early enough, invest in a timer, they are worth it!!!
I feed them early in the after noon, around 1 p.m. In EVERY mantis cage I keep two shallow cups with something for them to climb onto. The water dish is just a small, shallow container filled with water and I place some wood chips in it so they have a surface incase they fall into the water! LOL they will drown if the wood chips aren't there! The second small shallow container has a few pinches of sugar/powdered butter milk. 50/50 mix ratio. I only sprinkle a few pinches because this powdery mix hardens within 12 hours, so I only offer the flies enough for them to eat.
If you want, you can ALSO fill ONE shallow container with a tea spoon of honey and 1/4th of a cup of water. Mix it well! Then add a few pinches of sugar and stir it again. Then pour into the container and place in the cage(s).
I feed them their flies before it is TOO HOT for the flies to thrive in. Flies do BEST IN 75-80 degrees. Once it gets higher than 85 degrees, all the flies do is hang around the water source and they don't fly around and stimulate my mantids, because they are over heated and MUST rehydrate themselves constantly.
Once it is around 2 P.M. and the flies are eaten, I then raise the temperature by having my 250 watt bulbs turn on. The 75-80 degrees is raised within an hour to 100 degrees for my Violins and other 100 degree species' section.
I mist their cage around 6 P.M. with only one light spray, make sure it is a very fine mist, no dense drops! Their lights automatically shut off at 8 P.M.
For Violins, you can use butter fly net cages from livemonarch.com (lowest price) or thin holed screen or plastic mesh cage. MAKE SURE to set-up the cage with dried twigs from outside. I pick out twigs and thin branches all the time outside in my yard and near by wooded area/bike path. Make sure to pick out the kind of tree branches/twigs that are very bumpy with lots of crevices. NO smooth surfaced bark!
I pre-heat my oven at 300 degrees and then put the branches and twigs on a tray and place them in the oven for an hour. It smells good and the bark gets very dry and some of the pieces of bark on them tends to curve out a little which is good for the mantid's claws' grip!
It's important to kill whatever is living inside the bark. Parasites are tiny!!!
Violins need good ventilation.
If you are keeping the Violins in a room with high humidity due to other species, you should invest in a small fan and have it flower around their area in the room.
Do you have any other species? Any questions or concerns, just ask! I am an email away, thanks!
Not sure if this is the best thread for this section but thought I'd share my care sheet? Thanks all for helping me out with my over stock of Violins!!!