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Frog too early...Help
I had a serious pond issue that required me to move my fish indoors during this past weekend's warm Chicago weather. A leaking liner left me with about 12 of water and lots of fish and muck...somehow they survived the winter, but I was afraid cats, raccoons, etc would get down in there. Anyway, in the process, a big frog shows up and starts swimming around (coming out of hibernation?). Well, I brought the frog inside and now we're expecting more really cold weather. What can I do for this large, (Leopard?/ Green?) frog? Will it die if I put him back out in the woods? Will he figure out how to survive? We've still got some cold weather and I know there are no insects outside. I bought him some crickets but the frog seems pretty uninterested. I have no experience in this realm and don't really want a pet frog, but also don't want him to die... Kevin |
Frog too early...Help
You can put the frog outside and the sooner the better.
The cold weather will cause him to go into a state of hibernation, he'll be fine. They will wake up in warm times, even if they are out of season, and then go back into hiberation. They are totally temperature driven. If you want to keep it as a pet until the weather really gets nice you can feed it crickets from the pet store. |
Frog too early...Help
wrote in message oups.com... I had a serious pond issue that required me to move my fish indoors during this past weekend's warm Chicago weather. A leaking liner left me with about 12 of water and lots of fish and muck...somehow they survived the winter, but I was afraid cats, raccoons, etc would get down in there. Anyway, in the process, a big frog shows up and starts swimming around (coming out of hibernation?). Well, I brought the frog inside and now we're expecting more really cold weather. What can I do for this large, (Leopard?/ Green?) frog? Will it die if I put him back out in the woods? Will he figure out how to survive? We've still got some cold weather and I know there are no insects outside. I bought him some crickets but the frog seems pretty uninterested. I have no experience in this realm and don't really want a pet frog, but also don't want him to die... =============================== The safest thing to do is put him in a nearby body of water. Here in zone 6 they hibernate on the bottom of ponds or whatever water they can find. I found one in one of the barrels. Unfortunately several didn't make it through the winter in my smaller 800g pond. -- RM.... Frugal ponding since 1995. rec.ponder since late 1996. My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö |
Frog too early...Help
Anyway, in the process, a big frog shows up and starts swimming around
(coming out of hibernation?). Well, I brought the frog inside and now we're expecting more really cold weather. Since you've already brought the frog in, and you're not sure what type it is, I'd keep it in till a good warm day arrives so it has time to get where it needs to be. Not all frogs hibernate at the bottom of ponds. ~ jan |
Frog too early...Help
"~ jan" wrote in message ... Anyway, in the process, a big frog shows up and starts swimming around (coming out of hibernation?). Well, I brought the frog inside and now we're expecting more really cold weather. Since you've already brought the frog in, and you're not sure what type it is, I'd keep it in till a good warm day arrives so it has time to get where it needs to be. Not all frogs hibernate at the bottom of ponds. ~ jan\ ========================= If they don't they'll leave the pond on their own. If they do stay in the water all winter and you put them somewhere dry, they may be too torpid (unless it's warm and water is nearby) to find water to save themselves. -- RM.... Frugal ponding since 1995. rec.ponder since late 1996. My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö |
Frog too early...Help
I really wouldn't worry about frogs hopping about
when we get into this winter/spring/winter cycle. This is part of their natural behavior. I would only worry if your pond is such that the frog can not get out once he got in, especially if he is of a species that overwinter in leaf litter or under logs. Whenever you 'change' nature that's when the critters get into trouble. We don't like shorelines in our ponds as it makes for a great heron buffet - many other critters need them to enter and exit the pond. |
Frog too early...Help
"kathy" wrote in message oups.com... I really wouldn't worry about frogs hopping about when we get into this winter/spring/winter cycle. This is part of their natural behavior. I would only worry if your pond is such that the frog can not get out once he got in, especially if he is of a species that overwinter in leaf litter or under logs. Whenever you 'change' nature that's when the critters get into trouble. We don't like shorelines in our ponds as it makes for a great heron buffet - many other critters need them to enter and exit the pond. ============================== A decorative piece of driftwood at one end would make it easy for them to leave the water at will. -- RM.... Frugal ponding since 1995. rec.ponder since late 1996. My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö |
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