Ants In The Living Room.
Posted: Monday, March 27, 2006
by Peter Legrove
http://www.animalsdinosaursandbugs.com
There seems to be no end in what you can buy through the
mail. Ants, butterflies, frogs and ladybirds can be delivered to your door in
secure packages. Ready to be dropped into your readymade bug habitat brought
from your local toyshop or possible also delivered by the mailman.
As cities get bigger and nature gets further away we are
bringing it back to live in our living rooms. Also it might be something to do
with us, the parents, trying to recapture our childhood, reliving our
experience with our ant farms that we had 20 to 30 years ago.
The ant farms nowadays are amazing contraptions, nothing
like the glass cases with a book on top to keep the ants in. But they still do
the same thing. That is to provide a living experience for our kids. Everything
comes in the mail, ants delivered separately.
The main drawback from buying an ant farm is the time it
takes to get your ants. After buying the farm and setting it up you send your
certificate back to the company and then your ants are delivered. You cannot
buy the whole thing ready to go sort of thing. It is a two-stage process. And
this waiting game kind of takes the excitement out of the project.
As ants are temperature sensitive the companies usually only
post the ants when the weather is favorable. That means if it gets too cold you
end up with a packet of dead ants
Also there is no queen ant with the colony so the ants are
short lived. They can’t reproduce so they die off as there are no baby ants to
take over.
We will look at four different ant farms that you can
receive through the mail.
The first is Uncle Milton’s Ant Farm Village. This is three
separate ant farms hence the name village. They are all joined together with
Antway Connector Tubes and the ants climb up Ant Stairs to get from one farm to
another. But they are all quite small and one is circular so if the ants are
hiding in the middle you can’t see them. The idea behind the three habitats is
to start with one and join the others as the colony gets bigger but there is
only one problem with this and that is, no queen ant.
Like the other farms they all have plastic models of the
standard farm on top so anybody looking at it will work out it is a farm. The
main problems with this model seems to be the construction with some people
having trouble putting it together and others saying there were too many holes
in the containers so the little ants could break free and make a run for the
garden.
The next on the list is the Giant Ant Farm from Toys ‘R’ Us.
This is a bigger separate unit with just one container a bit over 1 inch think,
so it is easy to see the ants. It is ideal for group viewing as it is nearly a
foot high and one and a half feet wide. Plenty of room for the ants to do their
thing.
The main problem seems to be, the base is not wide enough
and it wobbles and sometimes falls over. When that happens the ants usually die
because the tunnels collapse. The idea is to make sure the tunnels do not
collapse.
The ants in this model are Carpenter Ants and they can give
you a really good bite, so keep your fingers out of the cage. Also the color
scheme is pretty bland. Mine was just straight green and no other color. Green
box, green base and green silhouette farm scene on the top. At least Uncle
Milton has some color in his farms.
The next one is another Uncle Milton, the Habitat-Sports
Park and this is a bit better than the Ant Farm Village. It has got good
viewing spheres with a couple of magnifying glasses as windows as you can get a
close up view of the ants.
The construction is pretty sturdy and it is supposed to be
escape proof, but some people had their ants escape. I think it is all in the
way it is put together, so read the instructions carefully. Some others had
their ant farm invaded by other smaller ants. The big red ants are no match for
the little black ants.
This ant farm looks like a take off from one of those mouse
exercise cages with climbing walls, vertical ramps and gravity hoops.
The last one we will look at is the Ant Hill from Insect lore.
This is a very basic ant farm shaped like a cone so you have a
three-dimensional viewing area the same as the Habitat-Sports Park. Here most
of the activity goes on inside the sand dome so you only see the ants running
around the outside of the hill. It has a very wide base so it is pretty stable.
If you are a bit worried about having stinging ants running around the place
this is probably the safest as it has a locking lid.
My suggestion is if you are really into ants, buy one of the
habitats then go and find your own ants. Find a good ant nest and grab the
queen ant and a bunch of others then your ant farm should last a long time. Why
wait for the ant to arrive in the mail. Also there is some debate about what
species of ant you end up with if you order through the post. Just remember
most ants bite so be careful.
Article by copyright © Peter Legrove 2006, at www.animalsdinosaursandbugs.com
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Thank you Peter Legrove