Shoot! I did put some freeze dried krill in their bowl and they went crazy.
I gave them fresh bananas one night and then spirulina and carrots another. They didn't touch it.
![Sad :(](./images/smilies/icon_sad.gif)
Me, too. I'm planning on dumping mine on an ant hill.What should do with the old? I hate wasting money!
What I started doing was getting frozen krill from my local aquarium shop. I've seen it at Petco too. It's San Francisco Bay Brand Frozen Krill. The only ingredient is krill, and it's frozen so it won't go bad. My guys seem to love it! :)Julia Coenobita wrote:After looking at that food pyramid, I realized that I am not giving my hermit crabs nearly enough protein. I feed them nuts, but I realize they need meat and fish every day. That explains attacks on molters and micros that I sometimes have. I occasionally get raw shrimp which they love, which is available conveniently. What is the easiest way to feed my hermit crabs more protein? :?:
Yep. If the particular Petco in your area has marine fish or a relatively extensive tropical fish/reptiles section, there should be a mini-freezer in the back where they keep frozen food such as krill, silversides, plankton, or even baby pinkie mice.Julia Coenobita wrote:Where would I find that at Petco, at the fish section?
Thanks!
It all depends whether you're interested in feeding crabs chemically altered foods.Silver Buttons wrote:I was looking at the ingredients and it lists various proteinates. (Zinc proteinate, iron proteinate, etc.) A proteinate is a nutrient that's bound to a protein molecule to make it easier for the animal's body to access, or something like that. Are these safe for hermit crabs? Seems they would naturally derive minerals from the foods they eat, if they're being given natural foods.
It would depend on the ingredients.jaimeboo wrote:Wonder if it would be okay to give my hermies a kelp tablet to chew on? I take them b/c they supply a good source of Iodine.