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Cricket Pasta…Yum? Eating Live Crickets as Human Food?

Live Crickets For Sale…As Human Food?

I have eaten live crickets by accident on occasion.  It happens.   I have probably accidentally eaten mealworms, waxworms, wax moths, flies (double yuck), and all sorts of things.  Most of the time, you don’t know it until the insect hits the back of your throat, or you start crunching something when you didn’t put anything in your mouth.

Well, there is an entire cricket eating movement afoot.  Live crickets are now being used as food for Humans.  Why not?  They are good for us and they don’t taste too badly.  I would not reccomend eating them while they are alive because they get a little jumpy.

Here is an interesting article about cricket pasta and eating live crickets.

If you decided that you would like to try eating crickets, we can help.  Just order some here.  🙂

Here is the news article on Cricket Pasta.

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Confused Flour Beetles aren’t so Confusing to Breed and Care for any Longer

If you need a starter culture, please click here.

If you are looking for Flour Beetles to feed your dart frogs, fish or reptiles, then you probably have become as confused as the Confused Flour Beetle because there are a couple beetles that are often confused with each other.  There is the (Tribolium confusum) and the Red Flour Beetle(Tribolium castaneum), also known as the “Rice Flour Beetle.

Both the Confused Flour Beetle and The Rice Flour Beetle are from the Darkling Beetle family that includes Mealworms and Superworms.

The difference between rice flower and confused flower and are in how many clubs they have on their antennae.  Rice Flour Beetles have 3 clubs and Confused Flour Beetles have 4.  Other than that, they look the same.  They are the same reddish color and they are both about the same size which is 1/8″ to 1/4″ in length.

We raise Rice Flour Beetles in brown rice flour and we raise Confused Flour Beetles in Confused Flour.  Just kidding.  We raise and breed our Confused friends in whole wheat flour.

The Confused Flour Beetle and Red Rice Beetle are easy to culture and breed.  You simply place some adults in bedding and use a secure mesh lid, with a screen small enough to keep beetles and larvae in the container and that is it.  Both like it on the warm side to breed well, so keeping Confused Beetles and Red Rice Beetles warm, about 80 Degrees, will reward you will plenty of beetles to feed your frogs and small reptiles and amphibians.

We use 32 ounce culture cups with fabric lids for our breeding containers.  We start with about an inch of medium and then add an inch every month as the beetles colonize the bedding.  We split the cultures when they we fill the culture cup up about 3/4’s of the way.  One culture, filled 3/4’s of the way up can start 3 to 4 new cultures.

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Grow Chickens For Free Using Worm Poop and Black Soldier Fly Larvae

Black Solider Fly Larvae

How to Get Chicken Eggs For Free From Worm Poop

Times are tough and people are looking for ways to save money and survive. We have discovered a way to raise chickens, and get eggs for free.

What you will need for this project:

  1. Super Worm Poop.
  2. Black Soldier Fly  Larvae
  3. A bin to keep your starter larvae in

Soldier Grubs is the larvae of the Black Soldier Fly.  The Black Soldier Fly inhabits most of the United States and is very active in the warm and sunny months of the year.

Soldier Flies to not carry disease and they do not bite, although they do look like wasps.

Soldier Grubs love Super Worm Poop.  The Soldier Fly will lay eggs in the worm poop, or frass, and the eggs will hatch within a week in warm weather.  The larvae will quickly devour the frass.  You will have to continuously add more Super Worm Poop until the larvae reach about an inch in length.  Your chickens will devour them, and that will help your chickens get big and plump and lay eggs.

 

The first video will show you Black Soldier Fly Larvae growing in nothing but Super Worm Poop.

The second video is of two Black Soldier flies breeding.

The third video will show you a cluster of Black Soldier Fly Larvae laid in cardboard.