Snail's ??

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would someone here on forum please give me some info; on keeping and feeding snail's for a veiled cham. please. I have never used them and would really like to know the in's and out's of them??Thanks to all that respond. buttons.
 
I keep and breed snails. I've got so many baby's right now ' I might have to start eating them myself' as I doubt my Jacksons can consume them all!

I keep mine in a 20 gallon aquarium with about 2 inches of potted soil in the bottom(they need this to breed). You can provide them with hiding places like old flower pots,etc but I personally don't. Keep the soil damp, not soaked with water. Just don't let it get dry as they will withdraw into their shell to regain moisture. Keep them at room temp (in the 70's); if you want them to breed rapidly keep them warmer (80's).

Feed them dark green leafy veggies like Mustard, Collard, Turnip greens, carrots, mangos, cucumber and they need a calcium source for their shell, so place a piece of cuttlebone, egg shell, or sprinkle calcium powder on their food.

If you're starting from wild caught, breed them, then toss out the adults and raise and feed off the babies, as wild caught snails usually have parasites.
 
All good advice above- I would also add that if you are using wild caught snails, you should pick the eggs out of the soil to break the parasite cycle. If you keep your new eggs in contaminates soil, the snails will pick up parasitesfrom the poop of their parents.

It's a bit of a pain, but once you have a few dozen "clean" babies, you can return the adults to the wild. It may take 6 months to a year for your first generation eggs to lay eggs of their own. Then you will be inundated! :)
 
I had to dispose of 2/3's of my snail colony today. I just had way too many. They were breeding like crazy. I have a Jackson's who loves them, but i just had way too many for him to eat. Luckily i also have 3 turtles who enjoys eating them as well..but still. I kept about 4 second generation adults along with about 15 dime sized babies for next years breeding cycle, and carefully disposed the rest.

Not to mention, the colony i had got infested with gnats/ little flies that i couldn't get rid off. I don't know if they were attracted to the poop or the food that i fed the snails (Which was primarily leafy greens and carrots; no fruit) but they just become to much to bare. So i did a complete overhaul of the entire enclosure.

I've been thinking about getting some tree frogs (either Whites or Barking) so maybe next year, i'll have another set of mouths to feed off my snails to.
 
I had to dispose of 2/3's of my snail colony today. I just had way too many. They were breeding like crazy. I have a Jackson's who loves them, but i just had way too many for him to eat. Luckily i also have 3 turtles who enjoys eating them as well..but still. I kept about 4 second generation adults along with about 15 dime sized babies for next years breeding cycle, and carefully disposed the rest.

Not to mention, the colony i had got infested with gnats/ little flies that i couldn't get rid off. I don't know if they were attracted to the poop or the food that i fed the snails (Which was primarily leafy greens and carrots; no fruit) but they just become to much to bare. So i did a complete overhaul of the entire enclosure.

I've been thinking about getting some tree frogs (either Whites or Barking) so maybe next year, i'll have another set of mouths to feed off my snails to.
Feel free to dump some in my yard.
 
This thread caught my eye and the idea of snails as feeders is new to me, so I'm curious. Do you feed the whole snail to them? Shell and all? My brother has a fish tank and always gets snails, would those be ok? What's the deal with snails??
 
This thread caught my eye and the idea of snails as feeders is new to me, so I'm curious. Do you feed the whole snail to them? Shell and all? My brother has a fish tank and always gets snails, would those be ok? What's the deal with snails??
The kind I have are land snails/ Helix snails/garden snails! You feed the whole snail to your cham!
 
Aren't snail shells high in calcium too? That sounds kinda like a win-win feeder to me. (And this is definitely news to me! but then again, pretty much everything is since I am a new owner! haha.)
 
The kind I have are land snails/ Helix snails/garden snails! You feed the whole snail to your cham!
Ok cool. So all these snails my brother gets on his live plants for his cichlid tank could be suitable for my Cham? I'm still worried about parasites...I've read y'all throw out the babies and maybe the eggs too? These things are very hardy so I'm very curious how to utilize them as feeders! Lol
 
Ok cool. So all these snails my brother gets on his live plants for his cichlid tank could be suitable for my Cham? I'm still worried about parasites...I've read y'all throw out the babies and maybe the eggs too? These things are very hardy so I'm very curious how to utilize them as feeders! Lol
I wouldn't use the aquarium type snails! I had discus years ago, aka 1973/1974, and they had tapeworms, so I wouldn't chance it! But that's me!
 
I wouldn't use the aquarium type snails! I had discus years ago, aka 1973/1974, and they had tapeworms, so I wouldn't chance it! But that's me!
I can believe that. Snails that have been in water, whether dirty or not, can't be safe. Where do you order yours from? I'm very curious if my Cham would like them. She doesn't take to slow movers tho. Just today she stalked a hornworm until it started moving a little faster....lol!
 
I can believe that. Snails that have been in water, whether dirty or not, can't be safe. Where do you order yours from? I'm very curious if my Cham would like them. She doesn't take to slow movers tho. Just today she stalked a hornworm until it started moving a little faster....lol!
E-bay
 
Just type 'Helix snails' in ebay, and you should see some. I would hurry, since summer is almost up and they'll be hard to acquire in the cooler months.

I wouldn't feed water snails either.

You need to get adults, breed them, then toss the adults and raise the eggs/babies, so that any parasites the adults might have will be less likely to be passed to their offspring. Then feed the offspring, and all the generations from then on out to your cham.
 
^This

Not only toss the adults, but physically separate the eggs from any soil the adults were in contact with to break the parasite cycle.
 
Life escargots are helixsnails too and since they are sold for human consumption *puke* they will probably be .... *puke* ... clean *puuuuke*....
They aren't as cheap as the ones in your backyard tho...
 
Going slow but going well! How's things with your snails?

We did a huge purge this summer and are letting the colony build back up now. We had hundreds of snails at one point and it just became too much. I think I'm on generation 3 or 4. Whatever type of snails these are, it's about six months from hatching to laying eggs.

Bucky off and on decides that he either wants nothing to do with them or they are the most amazing thing that has ever happened to him. :rolleyes:
 
Going slow but going well! How's things with your snails?

We did a huge purge this summer and are letting the colony build back up now. We had hundreds of snails at one point and it just became too much. I think I'm on generation 3 or 4. Whatever type of snails these are, it's about six months from hatching to laying eggs.

Bucky off and on decides that he either wants nothing to do with them or they are the most amazing thing that has ever happened to him. :rolleyes:

Mine's going well. I have about 30 that hatched a few weeks ago and a few clumps of eggs that are still to hatch. I take it that will be it for this year, as i noticed (as they did last year) that when the humidity and temps in my basement drop with the outside weather they become quite dormant.

Do you have a problem with fruit or scuttle flies? I have these little black flies that infest the enclosure, and read that they're attracted to the rotting vegetation. I did a complete clean out a few weeks back, and that seemed to solve the problem for a few weeks but now they're back.

I ordered some fly paper to see if that does the trick….
 
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