Grasshopper Piggies

I keep my nymphs on top of the reptibreeze in a critter keeper. This seems to help with heat and molting. These are fed to the Chameleons. In the pic, you can see the critter keeper on top.
20240218_130039.jpg
 
Since I started feeding this blend of mustard greens, arugala, and boy choy along with my own powderized multi grain blend their molting has exploded. All of my 100 hoppers seem to be coming up to maturity at once. I don’t care about the cost of getting this started. If I have 50 breeding males and 50 breeding females I should have a huge supply of babies by fall at the latent

https://www.aerofarms.com/product/micro-spicy-mix/

If anyone wants to try my mix just give me your address on a private message and send me a few bucks for shipping.
 
Last edited:
Initially, I thought the up turned tail meant, I'm ready to mate. After a few days of observation, the males completely ignored her up turned tail. Maybe the up turned tail means leave me alone, I've got eggs. Time to tap in our resident experts.
@SauceGandhi @Motherlode Chameleon what could this behavior indicate?

I think that grasshopper behavior can mean multiple behaviors ranging from releasing pheromones to breed, shedding to a new instar or just pooping.

Best Regards
Jeremy A. Rich
 
I tried to mimic what Dean does, since he’s clearly having success with his setups. Also got some ideas from a Zoo’s post that breeds their own locusts. The chicken wire towers are super easy and cheap to make and get them closer to basking, while raising up their food.
I think I have some of this in my garage! Thanks for the idea
 
Also I wonder if soft bodied hoppers sometimes drop prematurely from a shed and hit the hard ground while they’re still delicate. A fall like that from 3’ up head first could do some damage. At this stage they’re so soft their legs aren’t even functional
 

Attachments

  • IMG_7603.jpeg
    IMG_7603.jpeg
    165.1 KB · Views: 39
And I have plenty of mature hoppers so no sweat.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_7620.jpeg
    IMG_7620.jpeg
    180.9 KB · Views: 36
  • IMG_7622.jpeg
    IMG_7622.jpeg
    252.9 KB · Views: 39
Mature hopper disabled after last molt. This is about 8 hours after molting and the legs and wings are not functional. I feed anything like this off to my chams so it’s not a waste.
Aww...poor thing. Have you tried making a tiny little wheelchair for him? You could get one of those little fingerboards and secure his rear end onto it so he can still get around. 😂
 
I want to know what’s an acceptable death rate from hatchlings to final mature breeding adults. All of the parameters have to be perfect through all the 6 instars and multiple molts. If a hundred nymphs are hatched, maybe 20% make it through all the molts to breeding adults? I wonder how many Dean has die. But then again he rarely sells breeding adults. It takes long enough to get to third instar
 
Also I wonder if soft bodied hoppers sometimes drop prematurely from a shed and hit the hard ground while they’re still delicate. A fall like that from 3’ up head first could do some damage. At this stage they’re so soft their legs aren’t even functional
I have had success by hang the freshly molted, appears to be dying, hopper on the cage allowing everything to dry/form.
20231025_131800.jpg
 
😭😭😭😭😭 HELP! One of my Gray Bird hoppers laid eggs and a egg sack on top of the soil. Also, I have 2 Spotted Bird holes with no eggs. I burried the eggs. Should I change my soil? I use 1/2 coco fiber and 1/2 play sand.

20240220_102209.jpg
 
Back
Top Bottom