MrColors
New Member
Hello,
My Jackson's is very very picky about his food. He will only eat very fluttery things (butterflies, moths) or very active bugs (prefers grasshoppers to crickets). With winter around the corner, I will be unable to catch him his favorite foods, and his diet will be limited to crickets and superworms (he will not eat waxworms or hornworms).
I would love to get him some silkworms. However, as I am sure you all know, shipping is extremely expensive. It will also be more difficult in the winter months. The other day, I bought him some silkworm cocoons (they came in a little can). I also bought a long tweezers, as he is shy of my hand. I tried not feeding him for a day, as the woman suggested, to build up his appetite so he would more readily take it. I dangled it in front of him, danced it all around the cage, even made the little scrapey sounds on the mesh that attract him to grasshoppers. NOTHING.
I need him to start eating this way. Not for every time, but it'll help a lot. I'll be able to diversify his diet more, etc. How do I get him to do this?
I have heard that you can tie a string around it (or just make one stitch through the middle so there is less string) and use that to make it appear alive, and then cut it very close when he has taken it. However, I am fearful of this method--what if the string gets tangled in his intestine?
I have also heard--and this is odd--that you can do the same thing but with a hair, and that it will be less harmful because the hair is organic material.
Any suggestions would be lovely!
Thanks so much
My Jackson's is very very picky about his food. He will only eat very fluttery things (butterflies, moths) or very active bugs (prefers grasshoppers to crickets). With winter around the corner, I will be unable to catch him his favorite foods, and his diet will be limited to crickets and superworms (he will not eat waxworms or hornworms).
I would love to get him some silkworms. However, as I am sure you all know, shipping is extremely expensive. It will also be more difficult in the winter months. The other day, I bought him some silkworm cocoons (they came in a little can). I also bought a long tweezers, as he is shy of my hand. I tried not feeding him for a day, as the woman suggested, to build up his appetite so he would more readily take it. I dangled it in front of him, danced it all around the cage, even made the little scrapey sounds on the mesh that attract him to grasshoppers. NOTHING.
I need him to start eating this way. Not for every time, but it'll help a lot. I'll be able to diversify his diet more, etc. How do I get him to do this?
I have heard that you can tie a string around it (or just make one stitch through the middle so there is less string) and use that to make it appear alive, and then cut it very close when he has taken it. However, I am fearful of this method--what if the string gets tangled in his intestine?
I have also heard--and this is odd--that you can do the same thing but with a hair, and that it will be less harmful because the hair is organic material.
Any suggestions would be lovely!
Thanks so much