I have a large Dubia colony in a 30 gallon Rubbermaid. It was in the garage and would get some condensation on the inside when it started getting cold out. Around November (in NC) it was moved inside. I noticed continual condensation. It was mainly on the side with the egg crates. I found that it was up against a poorly sealed old drier vent. It was sealed better today. I also removed the wet parts of the egg crates.
I have a typical set up, a human heat pad under the egg crate side. About 6-7 egg flats and a few paper towel cores on one side; food and water crystals on the other side. Feed them dog food and random veggies or fruit. I have several hundred.
Is condensation inside normal? Or was it from the cold on the outside of the container? What bad effect will the moisture cause, what do I need to look out for? A few spots of the egg crate were very wet and mushy.
PS: Just watched G-Force. Made me wonder if Guinea Pigs would eat Dubias. :twisted:
I have a typical set up, a human heat pad under the egg crate side. About 6-7 egg flats and a few paper towel cores on one side; food and water crystals on the other side. Feed them dog food and random veggies or fruit. I have several hundred.
Is condensation inside normal? Or was it from the cold on the outside of the container? What bad effect will the moisture cause, what do I need to look out for? A few spots of the egg crate were very wet and mushy.
PS: Just watched G-Force. Made me wonder if Guinea Pigs would eat Dubias. :twisted: