Thanks for the advice.  I will try this if the honey in the babyfood jar does not 
work.  I appreciate the help.
:o)   Tobey
------------------------------------------------------
In a message dated Wed, 25 Jul 2001  5:38:00 PM Eastern Daylight Time, Cyndy Linsteadt 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> If there are no geckos in the tank you could use sticky mouse traps. Put
> the traps close to the sides of the tank and put a tiny dot of fruit baby
> food in the middle. the crix will stick to the trap.
> cyndy
> 
> On Wed, 25 Jul 2001 01:15:35 EDT [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> > The last batch of crickets that I had to feed my geckos had 
> > ovipositors, so I 
> > took scissors and cut the ovipositors as close to the base as I 
> > could 
> > thinking this would prevent them from being able to lay eggs.  Well, 
> > I guess 
> > it did not work as planned, because now my beautiful 20 gallon long 
> > tank with 
> > planted plants is infested with close to microscopic cricket babies. 
> >  What 
> > can I do to get rid of them other than dismantling the cage and 
> > starting all 
> > over again?  The plants have been growing in there for quite some 
> > time and 
> > have rooted very nicely, so I don't want to destroy the whole set 
> > up.  I have 
> > taken the two Leopards out of there for the time being and placed 
> > them into 
> > an empty 10 gallon tank until I figure out what to do so that the 
> > crickets 
> > don't get all over them.
> > Any help will be greatly appreciated.
> > :o|   Tobey
> > 

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