Quote Originally Posted by Deborah View Post
It will depends on the size difference simply because like most animals if the size difference is to big one animal will bully the other and can cause injuries, so you want a small size difference and if there is no difference at all it's even better. I am old school and with it comes to communal housing of geckos, I prefer to do it when both animal have reached their adult size.

You want to have food available for them rather than hand feed or removing them from their enclosure to feed and let them eat on their term, if you move the they might not eat.

Dubias are great also easy to breed and odorless and are pack in protein (a lot of people just hate the idea of them), so if you can do that setting up a colony is very easy and one female will produce 30 dubias each months and for months to come. Superworms should be avoided you can offer as a treat however they are a lot harder to digest and this is the food that bites back.
Ok thanks for the tip about superworms. So all I would be feeding would be dubia roaches and maybe an occasional waxworm?

I will be setting up a dubia roach colony to keep a steady supply of food for my geckos.



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