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You can feed them in any form. My chickadees got freeze dried mealworms all winter and loved them. Right now I have thousands of worms and if I don't freeze a portion, they will all pupate. Not that it's a bad thing but in order to have enough for winter feeding, I have to freeze them when I got em!
Kinda like freezing/canning the excess from your garden.
Are you planning on allowing your colony to go dormant in the winter? Growing them in the house seems like they would grow at a steady rate year round? Or are you anticipating needing to feed more in the winter do to lack of insects they can get on thier own?
Dormant? Don't know how to make a mealworm colony stand still except for lowering the temps and I'm not doing the refrigerator thing anymore. I do expect my colonies to continue as they have since they are indoors. My chickadees free range part of the day now and are able to find their own bugs so it's mainly a supply for winter since there are no insects available for several months out of the year.
The worms in the 3-drawer colony are the ones pupating already and I have a few hundred pupae put aside to morph into the new generation of beetles for in the top drawer.
My single bin colony will be allowed to develop as it will, without much interference except for the harvesting of the excess worms for this winter's supply.
I don't anticipate keeping the 3-drawer colony for more than another generation, just cause I'm still learning. After that, everything will be combined in the single colony and maybe 20 years from now I will also have the same container thriving and supplying the worms like Gallo del Cielo! It's not my intention to make it harder than it needs to be but knew that the 3-drawer setup would allow me the observation opportunity I wanted.