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Anyone keep crickets?

JessKeen

New member
Hey everyone! Does anyone here keep crickets for themselves or their critters? My husband is planning on starting a cricket colony for our own consumption. He has been researching like crazy, he's obsessed, haha!!! It's amazing the weird recipes he has found online. I wonder how loud they are going to be!

Anyway, his obsession with cricket farming is making my snake obsession look a little bit less...obsessive! So that's a plus. Anyone who has cricket experience, share!
 
I usually buy my crickets in bulk from the reptile show, or at the price of gold from Petco. But I've been seriously wanting to start a colony myself, to save on the cost and hassle.

I've been watching a few different Youtube videos to get some ideas, but I look forward to seeing if anyone has any great tips. I'd also like to know.

Crickets for human consumption, though?.. sounds crunchy. And are you feeding your husband in his tank? Or is he pretty tame?.. food aggression can be problematic. You should also probably suppliment his food with powdered sugar, to ensure that he's receiving a proper American-human diet. Other than that, good luck with him ;).
 
ROFL! His "tank" is pretty much his computer desk so I imagine I'll just go ahead and feed him there. But really it's going to be him feeding me. I'm going to food process crickets to add to date and nut bars for protein but I haven't promised to try one whole yet. I feel like it's butt spikes will get stuck in my teeth...


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We did last Spring. I shut down the colony over winter when the frogs were brumating, and should start it up again. I'm tempted to go with Dubia instead, but my husband has a real aversion to anything with "roach" in it's name.

There are plenty of guides online. Most say you need two bins. I find three work better-one to feed the frogs out of that's the right size for feeding, one where the eggs are incubating and hatching and the pinheads are growing to the right size to feed frogs, and one of adult crickets, chirping up a storm and laying eggs. The feeding bin and incubating/hatching bin rotate, as do the lay boxes. If you want to keep your bins going long-term, you will need a UTH or some heat source to incubate the eggs. Since my frogs don't eat much over the winter, I just let my bins shut themselves down as it cooled down, and will restart the lay bin with adult crickets (and am hoping that my last batch of eggs from last fall will hatch once it starts warming up) and bought the occasional batch of crickets to feed over the winter.

If you want the babies to grow, do not feed food designed for gut-loading with calcium-the shells get too hard and they can't molt. I only feed high-calcium food to the ones in the feeding bin, who are destined to be powdered and tossed into the frog tank anyway.

I use the gel water crystals-the ones sold for plants are cheaper than the ones sold for crickets, and are chemically the same stuff. Just make sure you get ones that don't have rooting hormone, fertilizer, or any other additives.

If he wants an insect protein source, he might be better off with mealworms (I've eaten chocolate covered toasted mealworms before-not half bad). Grain beetles reproduce easily and aren't noisy at all. In fact, I ended up with an accidental colony of them in my frog tank (and now bring some forward when I clean the tank, because they eat leftover cricket food, and my daughter tends to overfeed the frogs, which then leads me to feeding the feeders).
 
Not to sound judgmental but BLECH lol. I know they are supposed to be all sorts of healthy but I don't think I could knowingly eat bugs.

I looked into raising crickets for my lizards but went with dubia roaches instead. Cricket bins are a bit smelly (to me) and the chirping drives me nuts. Plus if they get loose they can eat your clothes and carpet & will continue to reproduce. Are crickets the only kind of bug you would/could eat? Dubia roaches actually have more protein, but I don't know if they are safe for humans....
 
Geez, remember that guy that died at, was it Ben Seigel's, in the roach eating contest???

I've kept crickets (not for breeding, adults) in a 66 quart container (they can't climb or fly) with no lid, with egg cartons for hides. They love kitchen scraps, especially greens.

With no lid, the smell is greatly reduced.
 
If I own insectivores, I will keep dubias or will buy crickets for the rest of my life. I can not take the smell. Roaches have much, much less odor. There are days I wish I didn't sell crickets at my store!
 
I find mealworms very gross while alive. The way they move makes me want to climb a tree to get away from them and never come down. The dead jarred ones at the pet store don't bother me so maybe as long as he killed them before I had to do anything with them. Do you think we could make protein bars as easily with roasted mealworms as with roasted crickets? Also are mealworms harder to care for?


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I would love to get a Beardie, but I know I couldn't put up with the chirping of crickets in my house. Is there any other "less insect" way to feed Beardies? The roaches would skeeve my husband out, and I am not sure even I could handle them unless using tongs.
 
Superworms are good dragon food. You just buy a quart-sized bag of food, and 500 superworms, and they last a long time! I kept mine in one of those plastic drawer things from Target.

I gave mine apple slices for moisture.
 
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I keep my roach colony in a plastic tote (w/ a screen added on the top for ventilation) and my feeders in a small tank. They make hardly any noise, if you walk near the bin you can hear a rustling sound. The only time I touch them is on accident lol. Otherwise I use tongs or small pieces of egg crate. unless I'm cleaning then I use a scooper and wear gloves.

I think it would be easier to roast mealworms than it would be to roast crickets. Mealworms are pretty easy to care for as well. Plus they don't chirp, have very little smell and if one gets away it's because you dropped it and didn't notice.
 
I would think so-they're one of the ingredients used at the Audubon insectarium (which is where I had them)-and they also had "chocolate chirp cookies" as an option.

Mealworms are just plain easier to manage than crickets. Just get a bunch, give them some dirt, and sprinkle some oatmeal or wheat germ in, with some cricket water gel stuff. You'll get grain beetles, and then mealworms, and then more beetles, and more mealworms, etc. You can sift them from the bedding quite easily with a strainer.
 
Superworms are good dragon food. You just buy a quart-sized bag of food, and 500 superworms, and they last a long time! I kept mine in one of those plastic drawer things from Target.

I gave mine apple slices for moisture.

THAT I can handle. Thanks!
 
Just looking into this subject myself. I like the idea of knowing the food being eaten by the food for my pets. I agree it sounds a little gross to raise roaches, but so many positives; lack of smell/flight/jumping/biting/vertical climbing/cannibalism, longer lifespan, and nutritional value (highest protein, ~half the fat of worms).

My local reptile shop even sells a starter kit for breeding roaches.
 
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