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mealworm mess

Posted: Thu Dec 11, 2008 7:15 pm
by sean
So I have been trying to feed my CB mealworms daily or every two days. The problem is, I don't think that she knows how to eat them. I find 90% of the mealworms that I placed in the treat dish or food bowl on the bottom of the cage.

They appear untouched. It is as if she loves to throw them about the cage but doesn't seem interested in actually eating the things.

does anybody have any advice for presenting mealworms to our finches in a way that limits or avoids this problem? They aren't cheap either! I have the same problem with my Star Finch although not quite to the same extent.

Posted: Thu Dec 11, 2008 9:37 pm
by Matt
Have a close look at the mealworms on the bottom of the cage, you will probably find the head bitten off. Try mini mealworms or preferably termites if you have access to them.

Posted: Thu Dec 11, 2008 10:36 pm
by B CAMP
A lot of mine just suck the juces out of the mealworms and the head,but like matt said next time you might try the mini mealworms

Posted: Thu Dec 11, 2008 11:13 pm
by gomer
Some of mine don't eat meal worms.Some will only eat them when they have young.Some took weeks before they tried them.
Try this since we all know you have a cast iron gut Sean.Cut some up into smaller pieces,scold if needed.And add a few to there favorite treat.
Some people scold them before feeding out so they cant escape and become potential hosts for worms.I don't though as I prefer to use coopex spray on floor to kill any nasty bugs.

Posted: Fri Dec 12, 2008 12:07 am
by B CAMP
I have a nandy conure she will eat anything she sees me eat might work with your finch's sean :lol:

Posted: Fri Dec 12, 2008 1:10 am
by sean
uuhh. i'm a little confused with the syntax and the lingo.

does scorch mean "to cook?"

and are you telling me to eat them and allow my finches to watch in the hopes they will copy me? I MIGHT consider doing that, but my mealworms aren't labeled for human consumption. they say bugs are surprising good for you :D

oh, and they are already dead. they are the canned ones that fairest finches sell.


gomer wrote:Some of mine don't eat meal worms.Some will only eat them when they have young.Some took weeks before they tried them.
Try this since we all know you have a cast iron gut Sean.Cut some up into smaller pieces,scold if needed.And add a few to there favorite treat.
Some people scold them before feeding out so they cant escape and become potential hosts for worms.I don't though as I prefer to use coopex spray on floor to kill any nasty bugs.

Posted: Fri Dec 12, 2008 1:48 am
by atarasi
The word that was used was scold, not scorch.
Being quite curious, finches do imitate what they see. A few hundred dried mealworms aren't going to hurt anybody. Besides, who reads labels anymore?

Posted: Fri Dec 12, 2008 4:35 am
by gomer
Theres some good mealworm recipes on the net sean.Heres a change from the cookies you normaly eat.
Mealworm Cookies

Ingredients:
550 ml (1-1/4 cups?) all-purpose flour
5 ml (1 tsp.) baking soda
5 ml (1 tsp.) salt
250 ml (1 cup) softened butter
175 ml (3/4 cup) white sugar
125 ml (1/2 cup) crumbled dried mealworms
175 ml (3/4 cup) firmly packed brown sugar
5 ml (1 tsp.) vanilla
2 eggs
360 grams (1-1/2 cups) chocolate chips

Place the cleaned and prepared insects on a cookie sheet and dry in the oven for 1 -2 hours at 100¡C (200¡F). Preheat oven to 190¡C (375¡F). In a bowl, mix the flour, baking soda and salt. In another bowl, cream butter, white sugar, brown sugar, and vanilla. Stir in eggs. Gradually add the flour mixture. Stir in chocolate chips and mealworms. Drop by teaspoonfuls onto a cookie sheet, and bake 8- 10 minutes.

Posted: Fri Dec 12, 2008 5:15 am
by mickp
cordons tend to eat only the heads from their mealworm. show them termites though and they eat the lot and still look for more.

Posted: Fri Dec 12, 2008 10:25 am
by Sally
sean, it may take a little while to get the birds to eat the canned mealworms. I have read other posts where people chopped them up and mixed them with a little eggfood or even seed. If you do the live mealworm route, they do eat just the head and toss the rest--little buggers! As others said, if you do live mealworms, the mini size is best, and your local petshops usually carry mealworms that are too large.

Posted: Fri Dec 12, 2008 1:35 pm
by franny
My GBs wouldn't touch them at first. Michelle at Fairest Finches suggested what Sally says, to chop them up very fine and put in the eggfood, then each day make the pieces progressively bigger. After the 3rd day or so my finches suddenly figured it out. They were food! Then at first they just ate the head.. then another day they were squeezing them like tubes of toothpaste to get the insides out. The only time they ate the whole thing was when they had babies still in the nest. :)

Posted: Sat Dec 13, 2008 1:42 am
by sean
if i can find mealworms grown for human consumption i will do this and post the results on youtube. i'm sure you'll get a kick out of it gomer.




gomer wrote:Theres some good mealworm recipes on the net sean.Heres a change from the cookies you normaly eat.
Mealworm Cookies

Ingredients:
550 ml (1-1/4 cups?) all-purpose flour
5 ml (1 tsp.) baking soda
5 ml (1 tsp.) salt
250 ml (1 cup) softened butter
175 ml (3/4 cup) white sugar
125 ml (1/2 cup) crumbled dried mealworms
175 ml (3/4 cup) firmly packed brown sugar
5 ml (1 tsp.) vanilla
2 eggs
360 grams (1-1/2 cups) chocolate chips

Place the cleaned and prepared insects on a cookie sheet and dry in the oven for 1 -2 hours at 100¡C (200¡F). Preheat oven to 190¡C (375¡F). In a bowl, mix the flour, baking soda and salt. In another bowl, cream butter, white sugar, brown sugar, and vanilla. Stir in eggs. Gradually add the flour mixture. Stir in chocolate chips and mealworms. Drop by teaspoonfuls onto a cookie sheet, and bake 8- 10 minutes.

Posted: Sat Dec 13, 2008 12:51 pm
by atarasi
Sean, look no further....

This link contains Gomer's original recipe and some good information on raising mealworms.

Mealworms for human consumption

Posted: Sat Dec 13, 2008 1:45 pm
by L in Ontario
Excuse me while I go be sick! :roll:

Posted: Sat Dec 13, 2008 3:45 pm
by fairestfinches
All I can say is that they don't taste like chicken. . . :lol:

Sounds like she has never been exposed to them to know what they are.

Do your other birds eat them? Do you have her in with the other birds?

You may find that if other birds eat them they will learn from them that are good eats.

We find that our BC Cords will eat most of the worm and suck the guts out of the part they don't finish.

Sean