Hello to everyone!
My wife and I are relatively new beardie owners. Had one 7-month-old from Petco via our 15-year-old daughter. Everyone fell in love and after a month, we went to a local breeder. My wife, and I and other daughter each got 1 that was 2 months old. Have done fine with all of them for another 2 months. Then went to a local reptile show. Wound up with 2 more at 4 months of age.
My problem has been that my 4-month-old male German Giant citrus hypo with lavender bars (can't tell for sure because he's growing so fast and shedding so often, but that seems to be his underlying coloration
:idea: ) refuses to eat anything hard-bodied. I have tried crickets from pinhead to 1/2", and different sizes of dubia nymphs, even from different suppliers. He barely eats collards and butternut squash. He will however eat waxworms. I know waxworms are high fat and have let him go 3 days without any waxies and even then he still won't touch a cricket. :evil: I know I can't allow him a waxworm diet
Now, I have noticed that he won't touch a still waxworm and rarely notices a slow one. He's also really lazy about getting off his log and going to his food. He really has to be hungry to leave his log. I thought perhaps crickets were too much like fast food for his taste. So, I have tried chilling the crickets to slow them down :idea: - No good. I tried really chilling the crickets so I could handfeed Mo (short for Slow Mo - It was a cool day at the reptile show when we got him). Nope.
I know this has nothing to do with him being watched, as we've done cricket body counts next day - they are all there DOB (dead on their backs).
He's well fleshed out and solid boned. Currently in a 2'x2'x2' home-built, plexiglass front/solid walls with a Reptisun 10.0. Temp gradient is 110 directly under basking lamp to 84 F, the same as all of his other siblings who thrive. He has 2 rocks in the enclosure, 1 directly under the lamp and the log - The love of his life. His cage is not as brighly lit as the others, which will be rectified in 2 days.
So, I did some research :study: I know these black soldier fly larvae sound like the perfect ticket fo him, but I can't breed them myself and he's a big boy according to all with whom I've spoken. We've already started cricket and dubia colonies. I can't imagine mail-ordering enough of these fly larvae to fill him up. He can eat 50 waxworms at a time!
Any ideas/help/suggestions/ smart@#$comments will be appreciated.
Frank Romano
My wife and I are relatively new beardie owners. Had one 7-month-old from Petco via our 15-year-old daughter. Everyone fell in love and after a month, we went to a local breeder. My wife, and I and other daughter each got 1 that was 2 months old. Have done fine with all of them for another 2 months. Then went to a local reptile show. Wound up with 2 more at 4 months of age.


My problem has been that my 4-month-old male German Giant citrus hypo with lavender bars (can't tell for sure because he's growing so fast and shedding so often, but that seems to be his underlying coloration

Now, I have noticed that he won't touch a still waxworm and rarely notices a slow one. He's also really lazy about getting off his log and going to his food. He really has to be hungry to leave his log. I thought perhaps crickets were too much like fast food for his taste. So, I have tried chilling the crickets to slow them down :idea: - No good. I tried really chilling the crickets so I could handfeed Mo (short for Slow Mo - It was a cool day at the reptile show when we got him). Nope.

I know this has nothing to do with him being watched, as we've done cricket body counts next day - they are all there DOB (dead on their backs).
He's well fleshed out and solid boned. Currently in a 2'x2'x2' home-built, plexiglass front/solid walls with a Reptisun 10.0. Temp gradient is 110 directly under basking lamp to 84 F, the same as all of his other siblings who thrive. He has 2 rocks in the enclosure, 1 directly under the lamp and the log - The love of his life. His cage is not as brighly lit as the others, which will be rectified in 2 days.
So, I did some research :study: I know these black soldier fly larvae sound like the perfect ticket fo him, but I can't breed them myself and he's a big boy according to all with whom I've spoken. We've already started cricket and dubia colonies. I can't imagine mail-ordering enough of these fly larvae to fill him up. He can eat 50 waxworms at a time!
Any ideas/help/suggestions/ smart@#$comments will be appreciated.
Frank Romano