Mealies are an easy thing! true, they do like warm but there's ways around that too. They will grow in cool temps but its very slow. I am on that super long mealworm thread its
https://www.backyardchickens.com/t/492636/mealworm-farming
i got gazillions now, started my farm in early august.. It is just that easy, 10 gallon tank works, or anything plastic too. Deep isn't as important, you just need a few inches of bedding, and like 4 inches above that bedding height. They cannot fly or climb out. You can use wheat bran, rolled oats, dry chick feed as bedding. Bake or freeze the bedding to kill unwanted stuff like grain mites, they are gross and can get out into your dry food if you get them. (I never have...) Go get you some mealies. I started with about 1000 (a cupful), put them in the bedding. Don't buy the big superworms, they aren't the same and almost impossible to raise. feed them scrap potato, apple, celery, lettuce, once a week is good. put the food on a plastic lid, paper plate etc. The important thing is keep em dry. no water. check your veges every few days and remove any moldy stuff.
once you get pupa and then beetles, you will start seeing the worms in 4 - 6 weeks. The easiest way around the heat.... Get a reptile mat, or seedling mat, it can be attached to the bottom of the farm. usually temp will be around 90, it won't melt the plastics. super cheap, $10-15.
that's really all there is to it. My daughter feeds them to her sugar gliders, and i give them to my Oscars also. Awesome winter protein source
https://www.backyardchickens.com/t/492636/mealworm-farming
i got gazillions now, started my farm in early august.. It is just that easy, 10 gallon tank works, or anything plastic too. Deep isn't as important, you just need a few inches of bedding, and like 4 inches above that bedding height. They cannot fly or climb out. You can use wheat bran, rolled oats, dry chick feed as bedding. Bake or freeze the bedding to kill unwanted stuff like grain mites, they are gross and can get out into your dry food if you get them. (I never have...) Go get you some mealies. I started with about 1000 (a cupful), put them in the bedding. Don't buy the big superworms, they aren't the same and almost impossible to raise. feed them scrap potato, apple, celery, lettuce, once a week is good. put the food on a plastic lid, paper plate etc. The important thing is keep em dry. no water. check your veges every few days and remove any moldy stuff.
once you get pupa and then beetles, you will start seeing the worms in 4 - 6 weeks. The easiest way around the heat.... Get a reptile mat, or seedling mat, it can be attached to the bottom of the farm. usually temp will be around 90, it won't melt the plastics. super cheap, $10-15.
that's really all there is to it. My daughter feeds them to her sugar gliders, and i give them to my Oscars also. Awesome winter protein source
