I hope you are feeling better now.
I have another batch of eggs hatching and they have been dried for a month and still babies are coming out. So don’t despair, when it’s their time to hatch, they will. Might not be as much as we are expecting but they will (might).
if there are no hatchlings yet, you can still move it. The only reason you have to separate the lay bin when hatching the eggs is so that the adults will not harm/eat the baby hoppers. These are based on the papers Motherlode Chameleon wrote. I just follow most of guides in breeding grasshoppers.
I totally abandoned taking care of the laying bins because I thought none will ever hatch, but left the heat going on. I was surprised when I saw those cute hatchlings, as of earlier I have maybe 15.
They are cute even when they grow big and looks like a giant creature from outer space.
I haven’t been to the vet, for tue past three pr four days he’s not eating anything. Prior to that we would only eat one hopper or one silk worm every couple of days.
First batch of baby hopper hatched two days ago, started emerging from the egg bin. It took a good three months or so before the first baby emerged. I have neglected the bins and left it dry for a month but with heat. Got my surprise when I checked the bins two days ago.
I have an umbrella plant for about two or so months now. Base on what I have read, they don’t like too much water. I don’t mist the much since my fogger is the main hydration for my cham the plant substrate is not that wet and it is growing new leaves and branches. I don’t know when summer comes...
Welcome back Mr. G! Stop being a brat and eat the healthy food. You know your dad is busy and don’t add up on it. But well, since you’re a handsome beast, you can get away with it.
^^^ like Andrew1283 have said, or you can do a T5 HO 6500K grow light from Amazon. The downside with T5 is you have to change the bulb every now and then but with LED it will take years before you have to change the while light system.