Kevin--- Thanks for your idea. Next time I feed the leos that's exactly what I'll do.
Elizabeth "Kevin Bullick - MJD Patient Communications" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: >if you wiggle them around a little bit in the calcium a little bit will >stick to them. You dont need to much on each one, a little goes a long way >IME. > >----- Original Message ----- >From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >Sent: Friday, August 20, 2004 11:18 AM >Subject: Re: [gecko]Less problematic than before > > >> Hi--- >> >> Maybe your leopard gecko feels safer about eating when no one is watching. >Have you put the food in a shallow dish and then returned several hours >later? � >> >> BTW, how do folks get calcium powder to "stick" to mealworms? �I do have a >small dish of calcium in the cage, but my leopard seems to ignore that. �It >is much easier to dust prey when feeding crickets! >> >> Elizabeth >> >> >My leopard gecko(that wasnt eating, remember?) after >> >two weeks starting eating very well. But it does not >> >eats in the dish, only when I put some mealworms or >> >roaches in front of him. Its still a problem, because I >> >work with consulting, so I travel a lot. Any sugestions? >> >Thanks _______________________________________________ Global Gecko Association http://www.gekkota.com Classifieds http://www.gekkota.com/cgi-gekkota/classifieds.cgi gecko mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.gekkota.com/mailman/listinfo/gecko

