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Jul 15, 2010

 Milk Dud

Posted by: Goldwinger
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I've had Milk Dud for over a year now. She was relinquished to me by her owner who no longer wanted her. I only spoke to the woman on the phone and never met her. She wasn't even there when I drove all the way to Maryland to get Milk Dud.

What I do know is that Milk Dud was 4 years old and had never, ever seen another glider. She had never had tent time, play time or ever bonded with any person. There was no effort ever put into teaching her to trust any human being.

She was fed cat food and had only some chew toys and a nesting box and a very small silent spinner in her cage. She was missing part of her ear but had never seen a Vet.

This glider was and still is one of my challenges here. After I got her, took her to the Vet, changed her diet and went through the 30 day quarantine I introduced her to Luna whom I had literally SAVED from a pet store. (her story is in my journal)

Luna is still no luck with bonding as of yet but I've worked with both her and Milk Dud daily to gain their trust.

As I said before sometimes it just takes baby steps and they have been glider size baby steps. I need to get Milk Dud to trust my hand which literally took months. I could not put my hand in her pouch at all. I would get attacked and she stood her ground.

Over these past 18 months I have used a soft tone in talking to her everyday in her cage, tent and bathroom time in small time limits, and treats to gain her trust. Taking her and Luna and Jack in the pouch out of the cage and rubbing the outside of it and then putting my hand in the pouch to get a soft pet and touch and using treats fed in the pouch.

My ultimate goal was that I wanted her to come to me and have worked daily on trying to accomplish this task. This to me is the true voice of trust.

She would never come to the front of the cage to take a treat and sometimes I just had to leave it somewhere for her. Then she would take it from my fingers in the cage once I showed her I no longer was just going to leave it for her. Finally I could get her to come to the front of the cage door looking for a treat. When she would be awake at night she finally got to the point where she would come to the front of the cage just if I walked by looking for her treat but she would never venture out the cage door.

Over the last few months I've not allowed her to have a treat unless she would, on her own using the treat as bait climb on my hand to get it. She began doing this just at the cage door. Then I would use the treat to get her to climb up my arm almost to my shoulder in front of the cage door before I gave her the treat. She would take it and immediately turn around and head back for the cage but I was so proud of the fact that she would even venture out.

Finally tonight for the very first time she climbed out the door, onto my arm and sat on my arm in the kitchen, no where near her cage and ate her treat being ever so cautious and curious about her surroundings. She did not run but she was quite nervous. After she was done I calmly walked her back to her cage and let her calmly get back in. Then I did it again and after she was done with her treat this time she climbed on my shoulder and just sat there looking around.

I am so very proud of my little Milk Dud and can hardly believe how far we've come. I know 18 months seems like an awful long time to gain so little trust when some have gliders that will sleep in there hands but to me and Milk Dud this is a miracle of baby steps and patience and I am so very proud of my sweet little girl.

Forced trust at play time is wonderful in a tent or bathroom but to actually have my sweet girl come to me is something I can hardly describe after so many months of working with her to show her I mean her no harm.

Jul 6, 2010

 Life with Maiko and Mateo, month 2

Posted by: joeymum
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Month 2 feel like they have flown by. I'm still not bonded with the boys, but it is better than when I first bought them. Maiko is still aggressive and pouch protective, but not as much as before. I did purchase the bonding potion from Suncoast that I use if I'm going to take him out of the pouch for some reason. Mateo is coming along well. He never crabs unless I take the pouch out f the cage and carry it around, but his crabbing seems forced and a characteristic that he doesn't seem to like to do. They have their vet wellness today, so I'm kind of nervous about this. They are so wriggly when you hold them, I don't want them to jump out of my hand while the vet is looking at them. I know they are going to crab their little heads off too! :)




I have not been able to spend as much time with them to bond as I'd like due to Drill SGT school, but that will be over in a little over a monbth. With me talking so much about these guys, my mom went and got her own pair of girls! They are contageous!!!!!!!
Jul 6, 2010

 Tent time #1

Posted by: Megan14
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I had the first tent time with my boys last night. It was awesome!! At first, they had to inspect the tent, but then they slowly started climbing on my feet (Wow, that tickled.), and then they moved up closer and closer and closer. I got a face hug last night!! Two, actually. I was happy. :D
Jul 5, 2010

 I'm getting attached!!!

Posted by: Megan14
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Wow... I am getting SO attached to my little fellows. I love them to death!! Whenever someone else is carrying around the pouch, I get so nervous! I want them with me at all times.... They have my heart!
Jul 3, 2010

 Meal worm mites be gone

Posted by: kazko
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QUESTION: Can you save your mealworm farm from a mite infestation ?

ANSWER: YES YOU CAN!


When I finally got a meal worm mite infestation, I set out to find a solution. 100% of online reading will tell you that the only recourse to a mite infestation is to throw out the entire farm, sterilize and start over from scratch with a new batch of worms. What nobody tells you is that your chances of getting infested again are very high.

THE ODDS ARE AGAINST YOU

Odds are that the place where you purchased your worms has mites and the worms shipped to you have mite eggs. The substrate you are buying has an extremely high chance of having mite eggs in it. A spec of dust carried into the container by you walking by can have a mite on it... There are species of mites everywhere and some are on your body as you are reading this. Fortunately, the only mites we really care about with meal worm farms is the typical grain mite which has a number of species variants.

The mites that infest your meal worm farm are so tiny that you may not even notice them. I had noticed a fine "dust" for some time collecting along the corners and edges of my farming drawer. I figured that static electricity was adhering the dust to the side of the container. Only after some time did I see some of it moving and come to realize that it wasnt dust at all. The grain mites will want to collect where they can get the freshest air which is usually at the edges or air holes of a drawer. So if you see dust collecting, well, you probably have a mite infestation.

When I finally realized mine, I found mites all down the back of the shelf where I had my worms and they were collecting down on the floor in a huge mass. This is gross and can also be dangerous if you happen to have any other pets that can come along and sniff at the mass such as cats and dogs. Breathing a million grain mites into the nasal cavity and lungs is no good for any animal.

So I cleaned. I sanitized. I bleached. I vacuumed and threw away the bag daily. I did anything that came to mind to get rid of the infestation.

I moved my existing farm outside immediately and figured that I would have to toss it but I wanted to at least try to find a way to sanitize it safely and without killing it off.

I researched and experimented and came up with two ways to rid your farm of mites that nobody else will tell you. Both have worked for me. The first method worked quickly and allowed me to restart my farm indoors but it has some tradeoffs whereas the second method took some time but was effective at saving the entire farm and I recommend it.

METHOD 1: Sweating

Grain mites thrive in warmth and humidity, but much like meal worms, there is a line that they cannot cross in which they will simply drown and die. Luckily and simply, the grain mites will die off before the worms will. What I did was screen out all of the adult worms from the rest of the farm, dusted them off with compressed air for good measure, then placed them all by themselves with no substrate or anything else in a small GLAD brand disposable container. I closed the lid tightly and punched a couple of pin holes. Very quickly the container will get wet from all of the respiration of the worms. It will get drippy wet inside. I opened it once in awhile to replace the air and let out some moisture. My goal wasnt to kill the worms but to only drown out the mites but it is a fine line that you need to reach but not cross. Some of the worms at the bottom may die off from this. I did this some months ago and dont quite remember how it went or how long I did it, but I do know that it worked and I was able to immediately start the new inside drawer. Most of the worms were able to survive the high heat and humidity longer than the mites and any remaining eggs. The adult worms were able to pupate and begin to repopulate a clean drawer in which I worked to manage humidity much better than I did before.


METHOD 2: Diatomaceous earth

I read how this is used as a natural "pesticide" of sorts. The microscopic ground diatom shells are jagged and pierce the body of anything small that encounters them and the creature is left to dry out and die. It also acts as a natural desiccant allowing the container to stay drier also inhibiting reproduction. I didnt know if this would work but it was the only thing I could find that I could try with the remaining worm farm. The idea was not to put it into the substrate or in direct contact with the farm, I decided to use it to catch the masses of mites as they left the farm. If you can kill off all of the new bugs, they will stop mating and laying eggs and the brood will die off.

So I found a larger container, loaded the bottom with DE powder that I purchased online , and then put the farm into it and closed it up and kept tabs on it. I immediately noticed the stream of mites climbing out of the farm and into the DE. They were amassing on top of the dead corpses of previous mites. I would occasionally reach a stick inside and stir of the masses hoping that anything left alive would succumb to the DE.










As far as I could ever tell, I never saw the mites going back into the container, so it looked like a one way trip. After about a week or two of non-stop streaming mites, I figured that this wasnt working. I noticed that my container was getting moist under the lid. It appears that the heat of summer and the respiration of the growing mealworm farm had turned this contraption into a mega mite brooder and extermination trap in one.

So I needed to remove the moisture. I chose to cut out some holes, glue in yard fabric as an insect trap and then I mounted a fan to exhaust air out one side. This moved air across the inside of the device and pulled out moisture.






The following week had fewer and fewer mites hatching or climbing out and it eventually got to where none were to be found on the outsides of the farm container. I kept maintaining the farm and it was doing fantastic out in the warmth of summer. I had never had a farm produce so heavily. I fed the sugar gliders out of the outdoor farm for weeks and let the indoor farm recuperate. Apparently meal worms like warmth. With the exhaust fan going, the farm did well up to 100F, then not so good.






I went through one or two complete cleanings of the outdoor farm until I was satisfied that I had gotten rid of the mite problem and then I brought the farm indoors into my new two drawer farm with exhaust fan.

I havent seen any mites, bugs, fungus, mildew, chunky substrate or any kind of moisture build up with this new farm design.

Now, do keep in mind that transferring worms or beetles can also mean transferring mites and mite eggs. The eggs or mites can easily attach to the insect for the ride over. You will never know if what you see is frass, grain, dust, mites or eggs. So beware! Keep your worm farms dry. I recommend installing an exhaust fan to move moist air out and you may never have a problem again.


Jul 3, 2010

 meal worms

Posted by: mbsena
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I have read that feeding our little guys certain things like meat/bugs makes them very smelly. Do you find this is true? What fruits/veggies etc would you suggest to first introduce them to something besides her glide-r-chow? Do mealie worms make them smell more?
Jul 3, 2010

 New Gliders

Posted by: ivyspad
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Hey guys. Im a new owner of a pair of sugar gliders. I adopted them from a rescue yesterday. They are four years old, a male and female. They are my first pair, but I have been reading on them daily for the past few years. Im very excited to have them, but I wish I could bond with them.
Jun 28, 2010

 New Owner of these wonderful little babies.

Posted by: Boba Fett
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I am a new owner of these wonderful little babies. I got Boba Fett a week or so ago. I adopted him from a young lady who had to give him up. Then I adopted Max from someone else who couldn't keep him. We have had Boba Fett for a week and Max for a few days.
I got my first face plant from Boba Fett on Sunday. That was a different experience. I take them everywhere I can. We also introduced them this weekend. They love eachother. Boba fett had a mate but Max has never had anyone else. It's good they get along so well. Thanks to this site so I knew what to expect. Thanks all and I'm very happy to be a part of this wonderful community. Thanks to all!
Jun 24, 2010

 Charlotte top 50...hope she wins!

Posted by: Jaclyn13
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http://www.mix969.com/pages/arizonas-top-pet/vote-entrants.php?type=x

Please continue to vote! We need to get her as top pet of arizona!!! heehee she made the 1st cut: top 200, She made the 2nd cute: top 50, and now i wanna see the 3rd cut: Charlotte wins top pet of arizona!!

You can vote once a day PER e-mail, so you can use as many emails as you want. THANK YOU ALL SOOOO MUCH xoxox
Jun 15, 2010

 nail clipping

Posted by: DevonChuck
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Hi, we have 2 gliders: a male bandit and a female lilly. We normally get their nails clipped, but would like to do it ourselves any suggestions would be grately appreciated. Thx
Jun 13, 2010

 Another Facebook suggie group

Posted by: suggiemom02
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There are only 2 that i know of. one of the 2, i created. Please join! I need More Admins. Please post phots as Members are Allowed but only admins can post videos.

www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=134957506518885&v=app_2373072738#!/group.php?gid=134957506518885&v=wall

If you want to add Information go on ahead Members are allowed to post information. please post with care, any un-necessary (Spelling?) Remarks, or comments from members shouldnt be posted. If allowed, will probably be deleted. Like i said please join! The group needs more members AND Admins!!

[gibbs]
Suggiemom02
Thanks in advance
Jun 12, 2010

 She made Top 200, i can't believe it!

Posted by: Jaclyn13
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I still can't believe she made it to round two! I really think we may have a chance to win this! :D You can vote once a day per email. So use as many emails as you can. Thank you all for helping use into round two, I am really hope'n to make it to round 3, and then take the win!!

http://www.mix969.com/pages/arizonas-top-pet/vote-entrants.php?type=x&gid=1&id=3

here is the link to vote, Thanx again *hugs*

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